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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63546 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63546)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Undefeated, by J. C. (John Collis)
-Snaith
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Undefeated
-
-Author: J. C. (John Collis) Snaith
-
-Release Date: December 05, 2020 [EBook #63546]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by the Library of Congress)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE UNDEFEATED ***
-
-
- _The_
- UNDEFEATED
-
- BY
-
- J. C. SNAITH
-
- AUTHOR OF "THE SAILOR," "BROKE OF COVENDEN," ETC.
-
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
- NEW YORK 1919
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
-
-
- Printed in the United States of America.
-
-
-
-
- DEDICATED RESPECTFULLY
- TO
- "A DECENT AND A DAUNTLESS PEOPLE"
-
-
-
-
-THE UNDEFEATED
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-It was hot.
-
-It was so hot that a certain Mr. William Hollis sitting on an old bacon
-box in the lee of a summerhouse in his lock-up garden had removed coat
-and waistcoat tie and collar, rolled up the sleeves of his shirt and
-loosened his braces. The presence of a neighbor's elbows on the party
-hedge forbade a complete return to nature, but the freedom of Old Man
-Adam from the restraints imposed by society was envied just now by one
-at least of his heirs.
-
-By the side of Bill Hollis was a stone jar of Blackhampton ale, a
-famous brew, but even this could not save him from gasping like a carp.
-It was a scorcher and no mistake--thick, slab and hazy, the sort of
-heat you can almost cut with a knife.
-
-Leaning gracefully across from the next plot was a large, rotund
-gentleman with the face of a well-nourished ferret. Draped in an artful
-festoon beneath an old straw hat, a wreath of burdock leaves defended
-him from the weather. "Mr. Hollis"--he addressed the man on the bacon
-box with conversational charm--"if you want my opinion they're putting
-in a bit of overtime in Hell."
-
-"Mr. Goldman, you've got it." His neighbor, a man of somber
-imagination, was struck by the force of the image. First he glanced up
-to a sky of burnished copper and then he glanced down over the edge of
-sheer hillside upon which he and his friend were poised like a couple
-of black ants on the face of a hayrick. Below he saw a cauldron in
-which seethed more than a quarter of a million souls. Floating above
-the cauldron and its many thousands of chimneys was a haze of soot
-thick enough to conceal what in point of mere size was the fourteenth
-city of Great Britain. But speaking geographically, and Blackhampton's
-inhabitants were prone to do that, it was the exact center of England,
-of the United Kingdom, of the British Empire, and therefore--
-
-Somewhere in the mind of William Hollis lurked a poet, a philosopher
-and an artist. He pointed over the dip of the hill into the middle of
-the cauldron. "Reminds me," he said, half to himself, for he was not
-consciously an artist, "of the Inferno of Dant, with Lustrations by
-Door."
-
-Mr. Goldman frowned at the simile. What else could he do? He was a
-solid citizen, of a solid city, of a solid empire: he was not merely a
-Philistine, he was proud of being a Philistine. He suddenly remembered
-that his neighbor was a failure as a man of business. And in a flash
-Mr. Goldman knew why.
-
-"Yes, Hollis--hot." The ferret-faced gentleman spoke with more caution
-and less charm. Commercially and socially he was secure, but the same
-could hardly be said for the man on the bacon box who spoke of the
-Inferno of Dant with Lustrations by Door--whatever the Inferno of Dant
-with Lustrations by Door might be.
-
-"Hot enough, Mr. Goldman, to melt those three brass balls of yours." It
-was a graceful allusion to a trade symbol, yet a prosperous pawnbroker
-felt that in making it a semi-bankrupt greengrocer was verging upon the
-familiar. He had just reached that conclusion when a boy selling papers
-came along the narrow lane that ran past the end of the garden, and
-thrust a tousled head over the fence.
-
-"Four o'clock, mister?"
-
-Bill Hollis produced a halfpenny. A minute later he produced a note of
-disgust. "County's beat. Yorkshire won by an innings an' four runs.
-Funny thing, our chaps can't never play against Yorkshire--not for sour
-apples."
-
-Mr. Goldman gave a slow deep grunt and then artistically readjusted his
-garland.
-
-"Hirst six for twenty-two. Them Tykes can _bahl_ a bit. Rhodes four for
-nineteen."
-
-Mr. Goldman grunted again. And it was now clear by the look in his
-small eyes that disapproval was intended. The Inferno of Dant with
-Lustrations by Door was still in his mind. That was the key to his
-neighbor's financial failure, but this squandering of money, time and
-brain power on things of no value was just as significant.
-
-"Cricket." The tone was very scornful. "One o' these days cricket is
-going to be the ruin of the country."
-
-William Hollis stoutly dissented. "It's cricket that makes us what we
-are."
-
-"It's business, Hollis, that makes a country." There was an accession
-of moral superiority in the pawnbroker's tone. "That's the thing that
-counts. All this sport is ruination--ruination, Hollis--the road to
-nowhere."
-
-William Hollis was unconvinced, but a man so successful had him at a
-hopeless disadvantage. In theory he was sure that he was right, but the
-pawnbroker knew that he had just made a composition with his creditors,
-so that it didn't matter how sound the argument or how honest the
-cause, he was out of court. Truth doesn't matter. It is public opinion
-that matters. And public opinion is conditioned by many subtleties,
-among which a banking account is foremost.
-
-Bill Hollis covered his retreat from a position that should have been
-impregnable, by turning to another part of the paper which was the
-Blackhampton _Evening Star_.
-
-"Ultimatum to Serbia. Ugly situation. I don't think."
-
-Mr. Goldman asked why he didn't.
-
-"A dodge to sell the paper."
-
-"I expect you're right," said the pawnbroker judicially. "They've
-always got some flam or other."
-
-"Civil war in Ireland," announced Bill Hollis.
-
-"I daresay. And next week we shall have the sea serpent and the giant
-gooseberry. And all for a halfpenny, mark you. We're living in great
-days, Hollis."
-
-The little greengrocer was silent a moment and then he said
-thoughtfully, "I sometimes think, Mr. Goldman, what this country wants
-is a really good war."
-
-Mr. Goldman smiled in a superior way. "Well, I don't mind telling you,"
-he said, "that I've thought that for the last twenty years. Not this
-country only, but Europe, the whole world."
-
-"You're right, Mr. Goldman." There was a grandeur in the conception
-that in spite of the weather almost moved his neighbor to enthusiasm.
-
-"Stands to reason, my boy, and I'll tell you why. The world is
-overpoppylated. Look at this town of ours." With the finger of an
-Olympian the pawnbroker pointed down the hillside to the smoking
-cauldron below. "Poppylation two hundred and sixty odd thousand at the
-last census. And when I first set up in business, the year before the
-Franco-Prussian War, it was seventy-two thousand. And it's not only
-here, it's all over the world alike."
-
-"That is so, Mr. Goldman. And they say that in America it's even
-worse. In fact, wherever you look the competition is cruel."
-
-"Yes, Hollis, a real good war would do a power of good. We want Old
-Boney back again--then there might be breathing space for a bit. As it
-is this country is overrun with aliens."
-
-William assented gloomily.
-
-"This town of ours, my boy, is crawling with Germans. They come over
-here and take the bread out of our mouths. They work for nothing and
-they live on nothing. They learn all our trades and then they go back
-to the Fatherland, and undersell us."
-
-Said Bill Hollis with the air of a prophet, "I reckon that sooner or
-later we'll be having a scrap with the Germans."
-
-"Not likely." The pawnbroker's tone was a little contemptuous. "The
-Germans can get all they want without fighting. Peaceful penetration's
-their game. They are the cleverest nation in the world. In another
-twenty years they'll own it all."
-
-Upon this last expression of his wisdom Mr. Goldman gave a final touch
-to his straw hat and its cool garland, waddled down a box-bordered path
-and out of the gate at the bottom of his garden.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-The departure of Mr. Goldman left a void in the heart of Mr. William
-Hollis. He was a sociable man, with a craving for the company of his
-fellows, and although for quite a long time now his distinguished
-neighbor had been clearly labeled in his mind as "a pursy old pig," he
-was an interesting person to talk to when he was in the humor. He was
-not always in the humor, it was true, for he was a "warm" man, an owner
-of house property; therefore he was in the happy position of not having
-to be civil to anybody when he didn't feel like it. This afternoon,
-however, he had unbent.
-
-The slowly receding form of Mr. Goldman waddled along by the hedge,
-turned into the lane, passed from view. In almost the same moment
-William Hollis felt a severe depression. He had reached the stage of
-life and fortune when he could not bear to be alone. With a kind of
-dull pain he realized that this was his forty-first birthday and that
-he had failed in life.
-
-He was going down the hill. Unless he could take a pull on himself he
-was done. Already it might be too late. The best part of his life was
-behind him. A year ago that day, in this very garden, his only source
-of happiness, he had told himself that; two years ago, three years
-ago, five years ago, this had been the burden of his thoughts. But he
-was in a rut and there seemed to be no way out.
-
-Twenty years ago he had felt it was in him to do something. He was
-an ambitious young fellow with a mind that looked forward to the day
-after to-morrow. Such a man ought to have done something. But now he
-knew that there had been a soft spot in him somewhere and that a moral
-and mental dry rot had already set in. He was a talker, a thinker, a
-dreamer; action was not his sphere. Unless he took a strong pull on
-himself he was out of the race.
-
-He poured what remained of the jar of ale into the earthenware mug he
-kept for the purpose--Blackhampton ale tastes better out of a mug--and
-drank it slowly, without relish. Then he cut a few flowers to take
-home to his wife--to the wife who hadn't spoken to him for nearly a
-week--arranged them in a bunch, with the delicacy of one unconsciously
-sensitive to form and color, looped a bit of twitch neatly round them,
-put on his coat, a stained and worn alpaca, put on his hat, a battered,
-disreputable straw, cast the eye of a lover round his precious garden,
-locked its dilapidated green door and started down the lane and down
-the hill towards the city.
-
-It was now five o'clock and a little cooler, yet William Hollis walked
-very slowly. There was a lot of time to kill before the day was
-through. But his thoughts were biting him harder than ever as he turned
-into the famous road leading to the city, known as The Rise. This
-salubrious eminence, commanding the town from the northeast, was sacred
-to the city magnates. When a man made good in Blackhampton, really
-good, he built a house on The Rise. It was the ambition of every true
-Blackhamptonian to express his individuality in that way. Until he had
-achieved a house entirely to his own fancy and taste on The Rise, no
-son of Blackhampton could be said really to have "arrived."
-
-William Hollis trudged slowly along a well kept road, between two
-irregular lines of superb villas, gleaming with paint and glass,
-standing well back from the road in ample grounds of their own, with
-broad and trim gravel approaches. The first on the right was Rosemere,
-the residence of Sir Reuben Jope, three times Mayor of Blackhampton,
-a man of large fortune and robust taste, whose last expression was
-greenhouses and conservatories. They were said to produce fabulous
-things--flowers, fruits, shrubs, plants known only to tropical
-countries. Many a time from afar had Bill gazed upon them with rather
-wistful awe.
-
-A little farther along was The Haven, the ancestral home of the Clints,
-a famous Blackhampton family whose local prestige was on a par with
-that of the Rothschilds in the city of London. Across the road was
-The Gables, the modest house of Lawyer Mossop, the town's leading
-solicitor; then on the right, again, the reticulated dwelling of the
-philanthropic Stephen Mortimore, head of the great engineering firm
-of Mortimore, Barrow, and Mortimore. For a true son of Blackhampton
-these were names to conjure with. Even to walk along such a road gave
-one a feeling of worldly success, financial security, aristocratic
-exclusiveness.
-
-Still a little further along on the left was what was clearly intended
-to be the _pièce de resistance_ of The Rise. It was the brand-new
-residence of the very latest arrival and no house had been more
-discussed by Blackhampton society. It was intended to eclipse every
-other dwelling on The Rise, but it was of nondescript design, half
-suburban villa, half mediæval castle. From the æsthetic standpoint the
-result was so little satisfactory that a local wit had christened it
-"Dammit 'All."
-
-As "Dammit 'All" came into view, Bill Hollis found an almost morbid
-fascination in gazing at its turrets and the tower so regally crowning
-them. It was the house of his father-in-law, Mr. Josiah Munt. Sixteen
-years ago, in that very month of July, an ambitious young man had
-married his master's eldest daughter. Melia Munt had espoused Bill
-Hollis in direct defiance of her father's wishes and had lived long
-enough already to rue the day. Josiah, at that time, was not the great
-man he had since become, but he was a hard, unbending parent; and he
-gave Melia to understand clearly that if she married Hollis he would
-never speak to her again. Melia chose to defy him, as he always
-thought out of sheer perversity, and her implacable father had been
-careful to keep his word to the letter. Not again did he mention her
-name; not again did her old home receive her.
-
-In those sixteen years Josiah Munt had gone up in the world, and if
-William Hollis could not be said to have come down in it, he had
-certainly made very little headway. At the time of his marriage he was
-the chief barman at "the Duke of Wellington," an extremely thriving
-public house, at the corner of Waterloo Square in the populous
-southeastern part of the city. He was now a small greengrocer in Love
-Lane, within a stone's throw of the famous licensed house of his
-father-in-law, and he was continually haunted by the problem of how
-much longer he would be able to carry on his business. On the other
-hand, his old master had prospered so much that he had recently built
-for himself a fine house on The Rise.
-
-Mr. Josiah Munt was still the owner of the Duke of Wellington. Over the
-top of its swing doors his name appeared below the spirited effigy of
-the Iron Duke as "licensed to sell wines, spirits, beer and tobacco,"
-but years ago he had ceased to reside there with his family. As far as
-possible he liked to disassociate himself from it in the public mind,
-but he was too shrewd a man to part with the goose that laid the golden
-eggs; besides, in his heart, there was a tender spot for the old house
-which had been the foundation of his fortunes. His womenfolk might
-despise it; in some ways he had outgrown it himself; but he knew better
-than to crab his luck by parting with an extremely valuable property
-which at the present time was not appreciated at its true worth by the
-surveyor of rates and taxes.
-
-As William Hollis trudged along the dusty road and his father-in-law's
-new and amazing house came into view, he became the prey of many
-emotions. The sight of this magnificence was a bitter pill to swallow.
-It brought back vividly to his mind the scene that was printed on it
-forever--the scene that followed his diffident request for the hand
-of Melia. He could still hear the stinging taunts of his employer, he
-could still feel the impact of Josiah's boot. It may have been that
-boot--for women are queer!--which caused the final capitulation of
-Melia. But the hard part was that time had justified the prediction of
-her far-sighted parent. Melia in throwing herself away on "a man of no
-class" would do a bad day's work when she married Hollis.
-
-It had been the son-in-law's intention to give the lie to that
-prophecy. But!--there was a kink in him somewhere. He had always loved
-to dream of the future, yet he had not the power of making his dreams
-come true. If only he had had a good education! If only he had known
-people who could have put him on the right road to success when he was
-young and sharp and the sap was in his brain! If only there hadn't
-been so much competition, so much to fight against; if only he could
-have had a bit of luck; if only Melia had really cared for him; if only
-he hadn't speculated with the hundred pounds she had inherited from
-her Aunt Elizabeth; if only he wasn't so apt to be hurt by things that
-didn't matter a damn!
-
-William Hollis was a disappointed and embittered man. Life had gone
-wrong with him; but a small jar of Blackhampton Old Ale softens failure
-and evokes the quality of self-pity. However, as he approached Mr.
-Munt's gate and gained a clearer view of the newest and most imposing
-house on The Rise, the sense of failure rose in him to a pitch that was
-hard to bear. So this was what Melia's father had done! No wonder she
-despised a man like himself. It was not very surprising after all that
-she hardly threw a word to him now from one day's end to another.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-A man in an apron that had once been white and in a cloth cap that had
-once been navy blue was painting a series of bold letters on Mr. Josiah
-Munt's front gate. Bill Hollis was overwhelmed with depression, but
-at this interesting sight curiosity stirred him. He advanced upon the
-decorative artist who was whistling gently over a job in which he took
-a pride and a pleasure. Upon the ornate front of the large green gate
-was being inscribed the word
-
- STRATHFIELDSAYE
-
-Bill recognized the artist as a near neighbor of his own in Love Lane.
-
-"Working for the Nobs, are you, Wickens?" There was a world of scorn
-in the tone of William Hollis, a world of sarcasm. And yet what was
-scorn and what was sarcasm in the presence of a hard fact, clear,
-outstanding, fully accomplished!
-
-The artist expectorated a silent affirmative.
-
-"Piecework, I suppose? Cut rates?" Mr. Munt had the reputation of being
-a very keen man of business.
-
-The artist was too much absorbed in his labors to indulge in
-promiscuous talk.
-
-William Hollis peered through the gate, to the rows of newly planted
-shrubs on either side the curving carriage drive. "Bleeding upstart" he
-muttered; then he turned on his heel and walked on up the road.
-
-He had gone but a few yards when quite unexpectedly he came upon a
-massive figure in a black and white checked summer suit and a white
-billycock hat worn at a rather rakish angle. It was his father-in-law
-and they were face to face.
-
-Mr. Munt was proceeding with a kind of elephantine dignity along the
-exact center of the sidewalk, and instinctively, before he was aware of
-what he had done, his son-in-law by stepping nimbly into the grassgrown
-gutter had conceded it to him. But in almost the same instant he
-scorned himself for his action; and the gesture of lordly indifference
-with which the proprietor of the Duke of Wellington directed his gaze
-upon the western gables of Strathfieldsaye, without a flicker of
-recognition of the person who had made way for him, suddenly brought
-William Hollis to the bursting point.
-
-The world allows that in a stone jar of Blackhampton Old Ale there are
-magic qualities; and far down in Bill himself was hidden some deep
-strain of independent manhood. The City records proved--vide Bazeley's
-famous Annals of Blackhampton, a second-hand copy of which was one
-of his most cherished possessions--that the name of Hollis had been
-known and honored in the town long before the name of Munt had been
-heard of. The Hollises were an old and distinguished Blackhampton
-clan. A William Hollis was mayor of the Borough in the year of the
-Armada. It was a family of wide ramifications. There was the great
-John Hollis the inventor, circa 1724-1798, there was Henry Hollis the
-poet, circa 1747-1801. Of these their present descendant was a kinsman
-so remote that the science of genealogy had lost track of their actual
-relationship. But beyond a doubt his father's uncle, Troop Sergeant
-Major William Hollis, had fought at Waterloo. He himself was named
-after that worthy, and the old boy's portrait and portions of his kit
-had long embellished the sitting room in Love Lane.
-
-It was then, perhaps, force of ancestry quite as much as the virtue
-of the Blackhampton ale that moved William Hollis to his sudden
-and remarkable act of self-assertion. For as Josiah Munt passed
-him, head in air, and weather eye fixed upon the western gables of
-Strathfieldsaye, his son-in-law stopped, swung round and called after
-him in a voice that could be heard even by the decorative artist at
-work on the gate--
-
-"Sally out of Quod yet?"
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-By not so much as the quiver of an eyelid did Mr. Munt betray that he
-had even heard, much less taken cognizance, of that which amounted to
-a studied insult on the part of William Hollis. The proprietor of the
-Duke of Wellington converged upon the gate of Strathfieldsaye with head
-upheld, with dignity unimpaired. He even cast one cool glance at the
-handiwork of the inspired Wickens, but made no comment upon it, while
-the artist suspended his labors, opened the gate obsequiously, and
-waited for the great man to pass through. But when Mr. Munt had walked
-along the carriage drive to within a few yards of his newly bedizened
-front door, he stopped all of a sudden like a man who has received a
-blow in the face.
-
-Had Bill Hollis at that moment been able to obtain a glimpse of his
-father-in-law he would have seen that his shaft had gone right home. A
-sternly domineering countenance was distorted with passion. There was a
-rage of suffering in the fierce yellow-brown eyes, there was a twist of
-half strangled torment in the lines of the hard mouth. As the lord of
-Strathfieldsaye stood clenching his hands in the center of the gravel
-he was not an attractive figure. Before entering the house he took off
-the white hat and soothed the pressure upon head and neck by passing
-over them a red bandanna handkerchief.
-
-A trim parlor maid, bright as a new pin, received the lord of
-Strathfieldsaye. The smart and shining creature was in harmony with her
-surroundings. Everything in the spacious and lofty entrance hall shone
-with paint and polish, with new curtains, new carpets, new fittings,
-new furniture.
-
-Mr. Munt handed his hat to the parlor maid rather roughly. "Tea's in
-the drawing-room, sir," she said, calmly and modestly. It was the air
-of a very superior servant.
-
-Josiah went into the drawing-room and found two ladies drinking tea and
-consuming cake, strawberries and cream and bread and butter. One was a
-depressed lady in puce silk to whom her lord paid little attention; the
-other was much more sprightly, although by no means in the first blush
-of youth. She had the air of a visitor.
-
-Before heralding his arrival by any remark, Mr. Munt gazed with an air
-of genuine satisfaction round the large cool room smelling of paint and
-general newness, and then he said in a tone of rather grim heartiness
-to the more sprightly of the two ladies, "Well, Gert, what do you think
-on us?"
-
-There was a careful marshaling of manner on the part of the lady
-addressed as Gert. "Almost _too_ grand, Josiah--since you ask my
-opinion. Still I've been telling Maria that she must show Spirit."
-
-The nod of Josiah might be said to express approval. Miss Gertrude
-Preston was a half-sister of his wife, and she was perhaps the only
-woman among his strictly limited acquaintance who was able to sustain
-a claim to his respect. She had character and great common sense
-and having acted for many years as resident companion to no less a
-person than Lawyer Mossop's aunt, the late Miss Selina Gregg, she had
-seen something of the world. Upon all subjects her views were well
-considered and uncommonly shrewd; therefore they were not to be passed
-over lightly. Aunt Gerty was a favorite of Josiah, not merely for the
-reason that "she knew a bit more than most," but also because she was
-clever enough to play up to his rising fortunes and growing renown.
-
-"Maria shown you round?" said Josiah, accepting a cup of tea from the
-graceful hands of his sister-in-law.
-
-The depressed lady in puce silk sighed a limp yes.
-
-"Eggshell china tea service," Gerty fixed a purposeful eye upon
-Josiah's cup.
-
-"Out of old Nickerson's sale," Josiah performed an audible act of
-deglutition. "Four pun ten the set. Slop basin's cracked though."
-
-"I see it is, but you have a bargain, Josiah. You always seem to have a
-bargain, no matter what you buy."
-
-Josiah purred under the subtle flattery.
-
-"Seen that chayney vawse?" He pointed across the room to a pedestal
-upon which was a blue china bowl.
-
-"Looks like genuine Ming," Gertrude opened a pair of long-handled
-tortoiseshell glasses. There was less than a score of ladies in the
-whole of Blackhampton who sported glasses of that ultra-fashionable
-kind, but Miss Preston was one of them.
-
-"That young feller Parish said it was genuine and he ought to know."
-
-"Charming," Gerty sighed effectively; then her eyes went slowly round
-the room. "This room is perfect. And such a view. You stand so high
-that you can look right over the city without knowing that it's there.
-And there's the Sharrow beyond. Isn't that Corfield Weir on the right?"
-
-Rather proudly Josiah said that it was Corfield Weir.
-
-"And that great bank of trees going up into the sky must be Dibley
-Chase."
-
-"Dibley right enough," vouched Josiah. "Have you had a look from the
-tower?"
-
-"Yes, I have. Wonderful. Maria says on a clear day you can see Cliveden
-Castle."
-
-"Aye. And a sight farther than that. You can see three counties up
-there. To my mind, Gert, this house stands on the plumb bit of The
-Rise."
-
-Gertrude fully agreed.
-
-"So it ought if it comes to that. I had to pay seven and sixpence a
-yard for the land, before I could put a brick on it."
-
-Gertrude was impressed.
-
-"What do you think o' that oak paneling in the dining-room?"
-
-She thought it was charming.
-
-"Has Maria shown you the greenus--I should say conservatory--an' the
-rockery--an' the motor garidge? We haven't got the motor yet, but it's
-coming next week."
-
-Gertrude had seen these things. It only remained for her to enter upon
-a diplomatic rapture at the recital of their merits.
-
-"No strawberries, thank you," Josiah's voice was rather sharp as the
-depressed lady tactlessly offered these delicacies at a moment when
-her lord was fully engaged in describing the unparalleled difficulties
-he had had to surmount in order to get the water fountain beyond the
-tennis lawn to work properly.
-
-"Fact o' the matter is, our Water Board wants wackenin' up."
-
-"Well, you are the man to do that, Josiah. You are an alderman now."
-
-"I am." The slight note of inflation was unconscious. "And old
-Scrimshire an' that pettifoggin' crew are goin' to have a word in
-season from Alderman Munt."
-
-"Mustn't get yourself disliked though."
-
-Josiah smiled sourly. "Gel," he said, "a man worth his salt is never
-afraid o' being unpopular. Right is right an' wrong is no man's right.
-Our Water Board's got to be run on new lines. It's a disgrace to the
-city."
-
-Miss Preston was far too wise to offer an opinion upon that matter. She
-knew, none better, the limits imposed by affairs upon the sex to which
-she belonged. But she was very shrewd and perceptive and underneath the
-subtle flatteries she dealt out habitually to this brother-in-law of
-hers was a genuine respect for great abilities and his terrific force
-of character.
-
-Among all the outstanding figures in Blackhampton his was perhaps the
-least attractive. His name, in polite circles, was almost a byword,
-for he never studied the feelings of anybody; he deferred only to his
-own will and invariably took the shortest way to enforce it. There was
-generally a covert laugh or a covert sneer at the mention of his name
-and the house he had recently built on The Rise had set a seal upon his
-unpopularity. Nevertheless, the people who knew him best respected him
-most. His sister-in-law knew him very well indeed.
-
-Maria poured out a second cup of tea rather nervously for Josiah to
-whom Miss Preston handed it archly.
-
-"No cake, thanks. I dussent." He tapped his chest significantly; then
-he cast a complacent glance through the wide-flung drawing-room windows
-to the fair pleasaunce beyond. "So you think, Gert, take it altogether,
-this is a cut above Waterloo Villa, eh?"
-
-Gertrude's only answer to such a question was a discreet laugh.
-
-"Waterloo Villa was _so_ comfortable," sighed the depressed lady in
-puce silk.
-
-"But there's no comparison, Maria, really no comparison." It was
-wonderful how the caressing touch of the woman of the world dispersed
-the cloud upon Josiah's brow almost before it had time to gather.
-
-"Of course there isn't, Gerty. Any one with a grain o' sense knows
-that. Why, only this morning as I went down in the tram with Lawyer
-Mossop, he said, 'Mr. Munt, this new house of yours is quite the pick
-of the basket.'"
-
-"It is, Josiah." The discreet voice rose to enthusiasm. "And no one
-knows that better than Maria."
-
-The lady in puce silk gave a little sigh and a little sniff. "Waterloo
-Villa was quite good enough for _me_," she murmured tactlessly.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-There was silence for a moment and then said Josiah: "Talking of Lawyer
-Mossop--that reminds me. I'm going round to see him. I wonder what time
-he gets back from his office." He looked at his watch. "Quarter past
-five. Bit too soon, I suppose."
-
-Maria ventured to ask what he wanted Lawyer Mossop for.
-
-Josiah did not answer the question immediately. When he did answer it
-his voice had such a depth of emotion that both ladies felt as if a
-knife had been plunged suddenly into their flesh.
-
-"I'm goin' to take our Sally out of my will." There was something
-almost terrible in the sternness and finality of the words.
-
-The depressed lady in puce silk gave a gasp. A moment afterwards large
-tears began to drip freely from her eyes.
-
-Aunt Gerty sat very upright on a satinwood chair, her hands folded
-in front of her, and two prominent teeth showing beyond a line of
-extremely firm lips. She didn't speak.
-
-"Nice thing"--each word was slowly distilled from a feeling of
-outrage that was almost unbearable--"to be made the talk and the
-mark of the whole city. And after what I've done for that gel!
-School--college--France--Germany--your advice, you know, Gerty----"
-
-Aunt Gerty didn't speak.
-
-"And then she comes home and gets herself six weeks' hard labor. Hard
-labor, mark you!"
-
-Both ladies shivered audibly.
-
-"Nice thing for a man who has always kept himself up, to have his
-daughter pitchin' brick ends through the windows of the Houses o'
-Parliament, to say nothin' of assaulting the police. Gerty, that comes
-of higher education."
-
-Still Aunt Gerty didn't speak.
-
-"Fact is, women ain't ripe for higher education. It goes to their
-heads. But I'll let her see. In a few minutes I'll be off round to
-Lawyer Mossop."
-
-"But--Josiah!" ventured a quavering voice.
-
-"Not a word, Mother. My mind's made up. That gel has fairly made the
-name o' Munt stink in the nostrils of the nation. Not ten minutes ago
-that rotten little dog Bill Hollis flung it in my teeth as I came in at
-the front gate. The little wastrel happened to be passing and he called
-after me, 'Sally out of Quod yet?' One o' these days I'll quod him--the
-little skunk--or Josiah Munt J.P. is not my name."
-
-Maria continued to weep copiously but in silence. She dare not make her
-grief vocal with the stern eye of her husband upon her. The tragedy of
-her eldest girl's defiance, now sixteen years old, was still green
-in her memory. Josiah had given Amelia plainly to understand that if
-she married William Hollis he would never speak to her again and he
-had kept his word. Maria had not got over it even yet; and now their
-youngest girl, Sally, on whose upbringing a fabulous sum had been
-lavished, had disgraced them in the sight of everybody.
-
-Josiah was meting out justice no doubt, but mothers are apt to be
-irrational where their offspring are concerned; and had Maria been able
-to muster the courage she would have broken a lance with him, even
-now, in this matter of the youngest girl. But she was afraid of him.
-And she knew he was in the right. Sally's name had appeared in all the
-papers. That morning, by a cruel stroke, they had come out with her
-portrait--Miss Sarah Ann Munt, youngest daughter of Alderman Munt J.P.
-of Blackhampton, sentenced to six weeks hard labor. Yes, it was cruel!
-It would take her father a long time to get over it. And for Maria
-herself, it was like the loss in infancy of the young Josiah; it was a
-thing she would always remember but never quite be able to grasp.
-
-The silence grew intolerable. At last it was broken by Gertrude Preston.
-
-"You'll be having splendid roses, Josiah--next year." Those mincing
-tones, quite cool and untroubled, somehow did wonders. Josiah had
-always been a noted rose grower and as his sister-in-law pointed
-elegantly to the rows of young bushes beyond the drawing-room windows
-something in him began to respond. After all that was his great asset
-as a human entity: the power to react strongly and readily to the many
-things in which he was interested.
-
-"Aye," he said, almost gratefully. "Next year they'll be a sight. I've
-had a double course o' manure put down."
-
-"I hope there'll be some of my favorite Gloire de Dijons," said Gerty
-with fervor.
-
-"You bet there will be. There's a dozen bushes over yond. By the way,
-Gert, you're comin' to the show to-morrow week."
-
-Miss Preston, for all her enthusiasm for roses, was not sure that she
-could get to the show. But Josiah informed her that she would _have_
-to come. And he enforced his command by taking a leather case from his
-breast pocket and producing a small blue card on which was printed:
-
- BLACKHAMPTON AND DISTRICT ROSE GROWERS' ASSOCIATION
- PRESIDENT, ALDERMAN JOSIAH MUNT J.P.
-
- The twenty-seventh annual Show will be held in the Jubilee Park on
- Tuesday, August the Fourth. Prizes will be presented at six o'clock to
- successful competitors by Mrs. Alderman Munt. The Blackhampton Prize
- Brass Band will be in attendance. Dancing in the evening, weather
- permitting.
-
- Admission one shilling.
-
-"That'll get you in, Gert." The card was placed in her hand. "Come and
-stand by Maria and keep her up to it."
-
-Had Maria dared she would have groaned dismally. As it was she had to
-be content with a slight gesture of dismay.
-
-"You see it'll be a bit o' practice for her. In 1916--the year after
-next--she'll be the Mayoress."
-
-The lady in puce silk shuddered audibly.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-In the process of time the clock on the drawing-room chimneypiece
-chimed six and Josiah "stepped round" to Lawyer Mossop's.
-
-That celebrity lived at The Gables, the next house but one along The
-Rise. Outwardly a more modest dwelling than Strathfieldsaye, it was
-less modern in style, more reticent, more compact. As Josiah walked up
-the drive he noted with approval its well kept appearance and its fine
-display of rhododendrons, phlox, delphiniums, purple irises and many
-other things that spoke to him. He was a genuine lover of flowers.
-
-Mr. Munt's pressure of the electric button was answered by a manservant
-in a starched shirt and a neat black cutaway. The visitor noted him
-carefully as he noted everything. "I wonder what he pays a month for
-that jockey!" was the form the memorandum took on the tablets of his
-mind.
-
-"Mr. Mossop in?"
-
-"If you'll come this way I'll inquire, sir."
-
-Josiah was led across a square-tiled hall, covered in the center by a
-Persian rug, into a room delightfully cool, with a large window in a
-western angle opening on to a pergola ablaze with roses, along which
-the westering sun streamed amazingly.
-
-"What name, sir?"
-
-"Hey?" Josiah frowned. As if there was a man, woman or child in
-Blackhampton who didn't know him! Still, it was good style. "Munt--Mr.
-Munt."
-
-"Thank you, sir!" The manservant bowed and withdrew.
-
-Yes, it was good style. And this cool, clean but rather somber room had
-the same elusive quality. Three of its four walls were covered with
-neat rows of books, for the most part in expensive bindings. Style
-again. All the same the visitor looked a little doubtfully upon those
-shining shelves. Books were not in his line, and although he did not
-go quite to the length of despising them he was well content that they
-shouldn't be. Books stood for education, and in the purview of Mr.
-Josiah Munt, "if they didn't watch it education was going to be the
-ruin of the country."
-
-Still to that room, plainly but richly furnished, those rows of shining
-leather lent a tone, a value. A shrewd eye ran them up and down.
-Meredith--Swinburne--Tennyson--Browning--Dickens--Thackeray--all flams, of
-course, but harmless, if not carried too far. Personally he preferred
-a good billiard room, but no one in Blackhampton disputed that Lawyer
-Mossop was the absolute head of his profession; he could be trusted
-therefore to know what he was doing. There was one of these books open
-on a very good table--forty guineas worth of anybody's money--printed
-in a foreign language, French probably, of which he couldn't read a
-word. Il Purgatorio, Dante. Fine bit of printing. Wonderful paper! Yes,
-wonderful! He handled it appraisingly. And then he realized that Lawyer
-Mossop was in the room and smiling at him in that polite way, that was
-half soft sawder, half good feeling. The carpet was so thick that he
-had not heard him come in.
-
-"Good evening, Mr. Munt." The greeting was very friendly and pleasant.
-"Sit down, won't you?"
-
-"No, I'll stand--and grow better." Mr. Munt had a stock of stereotyped
-pleasantries which he kept for social use. They seemed to make for ease
-and geniality.
-
-The two men stood looking at each other, the solicitor all rounded
-corners and quiet ease, the client stiff, angular, assertive, perhaps a
-shade embarrassed.
-
-"Anything I can do for you, Mr. Munt?"
-
-The answer was slow in coming. It was embodied in a harsh growl.
-"Mossop, I want you to take that gel of mine, Sally, out of my will."
-
-The lawyer said nothing, but pursed his lips a little, a way he had
-when setting the mind to work, but that was the only expression of
-visible feeling in the heavily lined face.
-
-"Excuse my troubling you to-night, Mossop. But I felt I couldn't wait.
-Give me an appointment for the morning and I'll look in at the office.
-Nice goings on! And to think what her education cost me!"
-
-The lawyer made a silent gesture, spreading his hands like a stage
-Frenchman, half dismay, half tacit protest.
-
-"Better have a new document, eh?" The outraged parent had been already
-dismissed; the highly competent man of affairs was now in control.
-"My second girl, Ethel, Mrs. Doctor Cockburn, can have it all now,
-except"--Josiah hesitated an instant--"except five thousand pounds I
-shall leave to Gertrude Preston."
-
-Lawyer Mossop was still silent. But the mobile lips were working
-curiously. "Not for me to advise," he said at last, very slowly, with
-much hesitation, "but if I might----"
-
-Josiah cut him short with a stern lift of the hand.
-
-"I know what you're going to say, but if she was your gel what'd you
-do, eh?"
-
-Lawyer Mossop rubbed his cheek perplexedly. "At bottom I might be
-rather proud of her."
-
-"You--might--be--rather--proud--of--her!" It was the tone of Alderman
-Munt J.P. to a particularly unsatisfactory witness at a morning session
-at the City Hall. An obvious lie, yet a white one because it was used
-for a moral purpose. Mossop had no ax to grind; he merely wanted to
-soften things a bit for a client and neighbor. "You can't tell _me_,
-Mossop, you really think _that_."
-
-The solicitor gazed steadily past the purple face of his client through
-the open window to the riot of color beyond. "Why not?" he said. "Think
-of the pluck required to do a thing like that."
-
-Josiah shook his head angrily. "It's the devil that's in her." He spoke
-with absolute conviction. "And it's always been there. When she was
-that high"--he made an indication with his hand--"I've fair lammoxed
-her, but I could never turn her an inch. If she wanted to do a thing
-she'd do it--and if she didn't nothing would make her."
-
-"A lady of strong character."
-
-"Cussedness, my friend, cussedness. The devil. And it's brought her to
-this."
-
-The lawyer, however, shook his head gently. "Well, Mr. Munt, as I say,
-it is not for me to advise, but if she was a daughter of mine----"
-
-"You'd be proud of her." The sneer was rather ugly.
-
-"In a way--yes--perhaps ... I don't say positively ... because one
-quite sees.... On the other hand, I might ... I don't say I should ...
-I _might_ be just as angry as you are."
-
-The thundercloud began to lift a little. "Come now, that's sense. Of
-course, Mossop, you'd be as mad as anybody--it's human nature. Every
-Tom, Dick, and Harry pointin' the finger of scorn"--_Sally out of Quod
-yet_ was still searing him like a flame--"you'd be so mad, Mossop, that
-you'd want to forget that she belonged to you."
-
-"It might be so." Mr. Mossop's far-looking eyes were still fixed on the
-pergola. "At the same time, before I took any definite step, I think I
-should give myself a clear fortnight in which to think it over."
-
-Josiah laughed harshly. "No, Mossop--not if you were as mad as I am."
-
-It was so true that the solicitor was not able to reply.
-
-"When I think on her"--the great veins began to swell in the head
-and neck of the lord of Strathfieldsaye--"I feel as if I'd like to
-kill her. Did you see that picture in the _Morning Mirror_? And that
-paragraph in the _Mail_? It's horrible, Mossop, horrible. And first and
-last her education's cost me every penny of three thousand pound."
-
-Mr. Mossop nodded appreciatively; then, sympathetically, he lifted
-the lid of a silver box on a charming walnut-wood stand and asked his
-visitor to have a cigar.
-
-"No, I never smoke before my dinner," said Josiah sternly. "She hasn't
-been home a month from Germany." The veins in his forehead grew even
-more distended.
-
-"Where--in Germany?"
-
-"Eight months at Dresden. Pity she didn't stop there. Fact o' the
-matter is she's over-educated."
-
-The lawyer looked a little dubious.
-
-"Oh, yes, Mossop. Not having a boy, I don't mind tellin' you I've
-been a bit too ambitious for that gel. And over-education is what
-this country is suffering from at the present time. It's the national
-disease. And women take it worse than men. School--college--Paris--and
-Germany on the top of 'em. I must have been mad. However ... there it
-is! ... let me know when the document's ready and I'll look in at the
-office and sign it."
-
-The lawyer would have liked to continue his protest but the face of his
-client forbade. He crossed to his writing table, took up a pencil and
-a sheet of notepaper and said, "Miss Sarah's portion to Mrs. Cockburn
-except----"
-
-"Five thousand pounds to Gertrude Preston."
-
-The lawyer made a brief note. "Right," he said gravely. "I hope a
-codicil will be sufficient; we'll avoid a new instrument, if we can.
-You shall know when it's ready."
-
-Josiah gave a curt nod.
-
-"Going to be war in Europe, do you think?" said the solicitor in
-a lighter, more conversational tone. It was merely to relieve the
-tension; somehow the atmosphere of the room was heavy and electric.
-
-"Don't know," said Josiah. "But I'll not be surprised if there is--and
-a big one."
-
-Mr. Mossop showed a courteous surprise. This question of a coming big
-war was a perennial subject for discussion in social and business
-circles. It had been for years and it had now come to rank in his mind
-as purely academic. He could not bring himself to believe in "the big
-burst up" that to some astute minds had long seemed inevitable.
-
-"Any particular reason for thinking so just now?" To the lawyer it was
-hardly a live issue; somehow it was against all his habits of thought;
-but it was an act of charity at this moment to direct the mind of his
-client.
-
-"Stands to reason," Josiah spoke with his usual decision. "Germany's
-got thousands of millions locked up in her army. She'll soon be looking
-for some return in the way of dividends."
-
-"But one might say the same of us and our navy."
-
-"That's our insurance."
-
-"That's how they speak of their army, don't they?--with Russia one side
-of them, France the other."
-
-"I daresay, but"--there was a pause which, brief as it was, seemed to
-confer upon Mr. Munt an air of profound wisdom--"mark my words, Mossop,
-they're not piling up all these armaments for nothing. It's not their
-way."
-
-"But they are so prosperous," said the lawyer. "They are hardly likely
-to risk the loss of their foreign markets."
-
-"Nothing venture, nothing win. And they do say the German workingman is
-waking up and that he is asking for a share in the government."
-
-"One hears all sorts of rumors, but in these matters one likes to be an
-optimist."
-
-"I daresay," Josiah looked very dour. "But I'll tell you this. I'm main
-glad I got out of all my Continental investments a year last March."
-
-The solicitor had to own that that was a matter in which his client
-had shown uncommon foresight. The present state of the market was a
-remarkable vindication of his sagacity.
-
-There was another little pause in which the solicitor, himself an able
-man of business, could not help reflecting upon the native shrewdness
-of this client so keen, so hardheaded, so self-willed. And then it was
-broken by Mr. Munt taking a step towards the door and saying, "When are
-you and the wife and daughter coming to see us, Mossop? Come to a meal
-one evening, won't you?"
-
-The invitation was point blank; but behind the lawyer's genial courtesy
-was the trained fencer, the ready-witted man of the world. "Most kind
-of you," he said heartily. "Only too delighted, but, unfortunately, my
-womenfolk are going up to Scotland to-morrow"--he gave private thanks
-to Allah that it was so!--"and I follow on Saturday, so perhaps if we
-may leave it till our return"--the solicitor raised his frank and ready
-smile to the stern eyes.
-
-"Quite so, Mossop!" The client frowned a little. "Leave it open. But
-I'd like you to see the house. And Mrs. M. would like to know your wife
-and daughter."
-
-"They'll like to know her, I'm sure." The air of sincerity was balm.
-"But they've been so busy gadding about just lately"--the laugh was
-charming--"that they've had to neglect their social duties."
-
-Josiah was far too elemental to feel slighted, even if the lawyer had
-not been so disarming. "But you people here on The Rise have the name
-of being a stuck-up lot, especially some of you old standards. And I'm
-bound to say, Mossop, my experience is that you seem to live up to it."
-
-Lawyer Mossop laughed his soft rich note as he followed Mr. Munt across
-the hall. He opened the front door for his client, and then, hatless as
-he was, accompanied the visitor down the short drive as far as the gate.
-
-"Nice things here, Mossop," Josiah pointed to the flower beds on either
-side. "That a Charlotte Fanning?" A finger indicated a glorious white
-rose whose dazzling purity of color stood out beyond all the rest.
-
-Mr. Mossop said it was a Charlotte Fanning.
-
-"Not sure you are going to beat mine, though."
-
-Mr. Mossop said modestly that he did not expect to do that. Mr. Munt
-had long been famous for his roses; and by comparison the lawyer
-declared he was but a novice. The client was flattered considerably by
-the compliment.
-
-At the gate, the proprietor of the Duke of Wellington pointed to the
-distant gables of Strathfieldsaye, and said, "Well, come round when you
-get back. The garden won't be much of a show for twelve months yet, but
-the house is first class. I designed it myself."
-
-With the winning charm which even Josiah, who felt that he paid for it
-on the High Court scale could not resist, Mr. Mossop promised that he
-would come round when he got back.
-
-"An' don't forget the wife and daughter."
-
-The wife and daughter should come round too. And then as the lord of
-Strathfieldsaye said, "Good-night, Mossop," and was about to turn away
-from the open gate, he felt suddenly the hand of the solicitor upon
-his shoulder and the impact of a pair of grave, kind eyes. "I wish, my
-dear friend," said Lawyer Mossop, "you could see your way to taking a
-fortnight to think over that little matter."
-
-It was not mere conventional man-of-the-worldly good feeling. It was
-the human father, and the sheer unexpectedness of the obtrusion through
-the highly polished surface of the city's foremost solicitor caused his
-client to take a sharp breath. But Josiah's strength had always been
-that he knew his own mind. And he knew it now. "No, Mossop." A final
-shake of the dour head. "That gel is comin' out of my will. Good-night."
-
-The solicitor sighed gently and closed the gate. And then he stood a
-moment to watch the slow-receding lurch of the elephantine figure up
-the road.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-"If that boy had lived--which he didn't," reflected the lord of
-Strathfieldsaye as he opened carefully the fresh painted gate of his
-own demesne, "I'd like him to have been educated at Rugby."
-
-Lawyer Mossop had been educated at Rugby. Somehow that gentleman
-always left in the mind of this shrewd, oddly perceptive client an
-impression of being "just right," of not having anything in excess.
-His reputation in Blackhampton was very high. Just as Dr. Perrin had
-been for years its leading physician, Mr. Mossop had been for years
-its leading lawyer. To be a patient of the one, a client of the other,
-almost conferred a diploma of merit. Not only was it a proof in itself
-of social standing, an ability "to pay for the best," but it also
-expressed a knowledge, greatly valued by the elect, that the best was
-worth paying for. Josiah was a firm believer in that maxim.
-
-Still ... he closed the gate of Strathfieldsaye as carefully as he had
-opened it ... when all was said education was dangerous. Up to a point
-a good thing, no doubt. You couldn't be a Lawyer Mossop without it. But
-it was like vaccination: some people it suited, others it didn't.
-
-There was a trim slight figure coming down the path, in a hat not
-without pretensions to fashion.
-
-"Leaving us, Gert?" said Josiah. "Better stop to supper."
-
-Miss Preston reluctantly declined the invitation.
-
-"Why not? Always a knife and fork for you here, you know."
-
-"I'd love to, Josiah, but they'll be waiting for me at home."
-
-"Well, if you won't, you won't--but you'd be very welcome." And then he
-embraced the house and its surroundings in a large gesture. "One better
-than Waterloo Villa, eh?"
-
-"It is," said Gerty, with tempered enthusiasm. She looked at her
-brother-in-law with wary eyes. "You must be a very rich man, Josiah."
-
-He narrowed his gaze a little and scratched his cheek delicately with
-the side of his forefinger, an odd trick he had when thinking deeply on
-questions of money. "So, so," he said. "So, so."
-
-"But a place like this means _heaps_ of money," Gerty waved a
-knowledgeable parasol.
-
-"I daresay." It was the air of a very "substantial" man indeed. "The
-year after next I expect to be mayor. And then"--a note of triumph
-crept into his voice--"we may be able to show some of 'em a thing or
-two."
-
-Miss Preston was diplomatically quite sure of that. And yet as she
-stood with the crude bulk of Strathfieldsaye behind her, she looked
-somehow a little dubious. It was as if, respect this brother-in-law of
-hers as she might, she had certain mental reservations in regard to him.
-
-He was too busy with his own thoughts to detect what was passing in her
-mind; besides the curves of his own mind were too large for him to care
-very much even had he done so.
-
-"You've got to come to the show, Gert," he said abruptly. "To-morrow
-week--don't forget."
-
-Gerty began to hedge a bit, but he would take no denial. It was her
-duty "to bring Maria up to the scratch."
-
-There was no way out, it seemed, so finally she must make up her mind
-to yield and to suffer. It would be a horrible affair--common people,
-brass band, a general atmosphere of vulgarity and alcohol; it would be
-all that her prim soul abhorred. And the heat would be terrific. Her
-spirit quailed, but how could the miserable Maria hope to get through
-without her to lean upon! Besides if she showed the white feather
-Josiah might lose some of his respect for her. And she couldn't afford
-that, especially after it had cost her so much for him to gain it.
-
-"She must get into the habit of showing herself to the public as she's
-going to be mayoress."
-
-Miss Preston quite saw that. She yielded with as much grace as she
-could muster. Josiah took her down to the gate and told her to mind the
-paint. And then as she was about to pass through, her gloved hand was
-laid upon his arm, almost exactly as Lawyer Mossop's had been, and she
-said softly and gravely in a voice curiously similar, "Josiah, if I
-were you, I should not be in a hurry about ... about Sally."
-
-The grimness of the eyes that met hers would have scared most women,
-but Gertrude Preston was not one to be frightened easily. There was
-hesitancy, a slight nervousness, all the same.
-
-Josiah shook his head. "No," he said slowly, "that gel is coming' out
-o' my will."
-
-The look of him as he stood there with the sun's shadow falling across
-his heavy face told her that argument would be worse than useless.
-Rather abruptly she said good-night and marched primly away along the
-road.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-The annual Flower Show and Gala in Jubilee Park was in part a serious
-function, in part a popular festival. But its secondary aspect was
-undoubtedly predominant.
-
-Jubilee Park was sacred to those who thronged the close-packed southern
-and eastern areas of the city. Among many other things, held by the
-people of Blackhampton to be vastly more important, the town and its
-suburbs had a reputation for flowers. It was odd that it should have.
-Except perhaps a subtle quality in the soil, there was little in its
-corporate life or in its physical expression to account for the fact
-that it had long been famous for its roses. Among the hundreds of
-allotment holders on the outskirts of the city, practical rose growers
-abounded and these claimed an apotheosis at the annual show in Jubilee
-Park.
-
-Almost the only vanity Mr. Josiah Munt had permitted himself in his
-earlier days was that he was a practical rose grower. He had competed
-at the show ever since there had been a show, and he had garnered so
-many prizes in the process that he now took rank as an expert. But he
-was more than that. He was now regarded as chief patron of a cult that
-was largely confined to the humbler and the poorer classes. A hard
-man, known throughout the city as very "near" in his business dealings,
-he was a despiser of public opinion and no seeker of popular applause.
-But of late years, having grown remarkably prosperous and a figure of
-ever-increasing consequence in the town, he made a practice just once
-in the year of "letting himself out a bit" at the function in Jubilee
-Park.
-
-For one thing the Park itself was almost within a stone's throw of the
-Duke of Wellington; and in Josiah's opinion its sole merit was its
-contiguity to that famous public house. Personally he despised Jubilee
-Park and the class of persons who frequented it--they were a common
-lot--but now he had taken rank as the great man of this particular
-neighborhood, wherein he had been born and had sown the seeds of his
-fortune, it did him no harm in his own esteem or in that of the people
-who had known him in humbler days, once a year to savor his preëminence.
-
-Tuesday, August the Fourth, was one of the hottest days within the
-memory of Blackhampton. And in that low-lying, over-populated area of
-which Jubilee Park was the center it seemed hotter than anywhere else.
-Being the day after Bank Holiday, a large section of the community "had
-taken another day off," therefore several thousand persons of all ages
-and both sexes assembled on the brown bare grass in the course of the
-afternoon.
-
-To say that the bulk of these had been attracted to those shadeless
-precincts by a display of roses would be too polite a compliment. The
-Blackhampton Prize Brass Band was the undoubted magnet of the many.
-Then there were tea al fresco for the ladies, a baby show and a beauty
-competition, beer and bowls for the gentlemen, dancing to follow and
-also fireworks. When the Show was considered in all its aspects, the
-roses only appealed to a small minority; the roses in fact were hardly
-more than a pretext for a local saturnalia, but in the middle of the
-sward was a large tent wherein the competing blooms were displayed.
-Close by was a tent considerably less in size if intrinsically the more
-imposing, to which a square piece of cardboard was attached by a blue
-ribbon. It bore the legend "President and Committee."
-
-At the entrance to this smaller tent a number of important looking but
-perspiring gentlemen were seated in a semicircle on garden chairs.
-And in the center of these, with rather the air of Jupiter among his
-satellites, was Mr. Josiah Munt. Several members of the committee,
-all badged and rosetted as they were, had removed their coats out of
-deference to the thermometer, but the President was not of these. Under
-the famous white pot hat, which in the southeastern district of his
-native city was as famous as the Gladstone collar and the Chamberlain
-eyeglass, was artfully disposed a cool cabbage leaf, and over all was a
-large white sun umbrella.
-
-The sun umbrella marked a precedent. It was a symbol, a herald of
-the President's ever advancing social status. All the same it was
-not allowed to mar a certain large geniality with which he always
-bore himself at the Rose Show. By nature the proprietor of the Duke
-of Wellington was not an expansive man, particularly in the world of
-affairs, but once a year, at least, he made a point of unbending as far
-as it was in him to do so.
-
-This afternoon the President was accessible to all and sundry as of
-yore. Moreover he had followed his time-honored custom of regaling the
-committee, most of whom were "substantial men" and the cronies of an
-earlier, more primitive phase in the ascending fortunes of the future
-mayor of the city, with whisky and cigars, conveyed specially from
-the Duke of Wellington by George the head barman. But it was clear as
-the afternoon advanced and the heat increased with the ever-growing
-throng, that the subject of roses and even the martial strains of Rule
-Britannia, Hearts of Oak and other accepted masterpieces rendered with
-amazing _brio_ by the B.P.B.B. did not wholly occupy the thoughts of
-these distinguished men.
-
-Among the Olympians who sat in the magic semicircle at the mouth of
-their own private tent and enjoyed the President's whisky and cigars
-and the privilege of personal intercourse with him was a foxy-looking
-man with large ears and large spectacles. Julius Weiss by name, he
-had migrated from his native Germany thirty years before, and by
-specializing in what was technically known as "a threepenny hair-cut"
-had risen to the position of a master hair-dresser with six shops
-of his own in the city. A man of keen intelligence and cosmopolitan
-outlook, there were times in the course of the afternoon when he seemed
-to claim more of the President's attention than the ostensible business
-in hand.
-
-"No, I don't trust our gov'ment," said Josiah for the tenth time,
-when a cornet solo, the Battle of Prague ("Bandsman Rosher") had been
-brought to a triumphant close. "Never have trusted 'em if it comes to
-that."
-
-"That's because you're a blooming Tory," ventured the only hungry
-looking member of an extremely well-nourished looking committee--an
-obvious intellectual with piercing black eyes and fiercely picturesque
-mustache whose hue was as the raven.
-
-"Politics is barred, Lewis!" It was the President's Saturday morning
-manner at the City Hall, but its austerity was tactfully mitigated by
-a dexterous passing of the cigar box. "We ought to go in now ... this
-minute. What do you say, Weiss?"
-
-The master hair-dresser screwed up a pair of vulpine eyes and then
-replied in a low harsh guttural, "It is a big t'ing to fight Chermany."
-
-"We are not afraid of you," interjected a pugnacious Committee-man.
-"Don't you think that."
-
-The President held up a stern finger. "No, no, Jennings." It was a
-breach of taste and the President glared at the offender from under
-his cabbage leaf. He had a deep instinct for fair play, a curious
-impartiality that enabled him to see the merits of Weiss as a taxpayer
-and a citizen. In the lump he approved of Germans as little as any
-one else, but such a man as Weiss with his unceasing industry, his
-organizing capacity, his business ability and his social qualities was
-a real asset to the city.
-
-The little hair-dresser broke a solemn pause. "_We_ are not ready
-for war." He stressed the "we" to the plain annoyance of several
-committee-men, although Josiah was not of the number. "A month from now
-they'll be in Paris."
-
-"I don't think," said the truculent Jennings.
-
-"You'll see, my tear," said Julius Weiss.
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-At five o'clock Maria and Aunt Gerty arrived on the scene.
-Blackhampton's future mayoress had been taken very firmly in hand by
-her step-sister who was fully determined that the social credit of
-Alderman Munt should not be lowered in the sight of the world. Gerty
-had really taken enormous pains with a naturally timid and weakly
-constituted member of society.
-
-After a battle royal, in which tears had been shed, the hapless Maria
-had been compelled to renounce a pair of old-fashioned stays which
-on common occasions foreshortened her figure to the verge of the
-grotesque, in favor of sinuous, long-lined, straight-fronted corsets.
-With such ruthless art had outlying and overlapping portions of Maria
-been folded away within their fashionable confines, that, as she
-breathlessly remarked to her torturer as she looked in the glass, "She
-didn't know herself, she didn't really."
-
-Maria could hardly breathe as she waddled across the parched expanse of
-Jubilee Park. She was more miserably self-conscious than she had ever
-been in the whole course of a miserably self-conscious existence. Her
-corsets, she was sure, filled the world's eye. At her time of life to
-take such liberties with the human form was hardly decent, it wasn't
-really. Moreover Gerty had perched a great hat on the top of her,
-almost a flower show in itself, the sort that was worn, Gerty assured
-her, by the local duchess on public occasions; and it was kept in place
-on a miraculous new-fangled coiffure by a white veil with black spots.
-Then her comfortable elastic-sided boots, the stand-bys of a fairly
-long and very honorable life, had gone by the board at the instance
-of the ruthless Gerty. She had to submit to patent leathered, buckled
-affairs, that could only be coaxed on to the human foot by a shoehorn.
-No wonder that Mrs. Alderman Munt walked with great delicacy across the
-baking expanse of Jubilee Park. And the intensely respectable black
-kid gloves that for more than half a century had served her so well
-for chapel goings, prayer meetings, weddings, funerals, christenings
-and the concerts of the Philharmonic Society had been forced to yield
-to a pair whose virgin whiteness in Maria's opinion carried fashion to
-the verge of immodesty. Nor did even these complete the catalogue of
-Gerty's encroachments. There was also a long-handled black and white
-parasol.
-
-As Maria and Gerty debouched across the grass, Josiah arose from his
-chair in the midst of the committee and strutted impressively past the
-bandstand to receive them.
-
-"Why, Mother, I hardly knew you." There was high approval in the
-greeting. "Up to the knocker, what!" He offered a cordial hand to his
-heroically beaming sister-in-law, "How are you, Gert?"
-
-The ladies had been careful to have tea before they came but this
-precaution did not avail. Josiah insisted on their going into the
-special tent labeled "Refreshments." Here they had to sit on a form
-rickety and uncomfortably narrow which promised at any moment either to
-lay them prone beneath the tea urn or enable them to form a parabola
-over against the patent bread-cutter at the other end of the table.
-
-The tea was lukewarm and undrinkable, the bread and butter was thick
-and so uninviting that both ladies were sure it was margarine, but
-after a moment's hesitation in which she felt the stern eye of Josiah
-upon her, the heroic Gerty dexterously removed one white glove and came
-to grips with a plate of buttered buns. In the buns were undeniable
-currants, and their genial presence enabled Gerty to make a spirited
-bluff at consuming them.
-
-Where Gerty walked, Maria must not fear to tread. The ladies got
-somehow through their second tea and then they were haled into the
-open, past the bandstand and through the crowd surrounding it, to the
-large tent containing the exhibits. Here, in a select corner, draped
-with festoons of red cloth, were the prizes which Maria, half an hour
-hence, would be called upon to distribute with her own white-gloved
-hands to the victorious competitors.
-
-The heat in the tent being unbearable the President's party had it to
-themselves. Therefore Maria's audible groan at the sight of the task
-before her was heard by none save her lord.
-
-"Bear up, Mother," Josiah's tone was a highly judicious blend of
-sternness, banter and persuasion. "It's not as if you had to make a
-speech, you know. And if you did have there's nobody here who'd bite
-you. I'd see to that."
-
-This was encouraging, yet certain gyrations of the black and white
-parasol betrayed to the lynx-eyed Gerty the sinister presence of stage
-fright. "Maria," said the inexorable monitress, "you must show Spirit.
-Hold your sunshade as I've shown you. Keep your chin up. And try to
-smile."
-
-This counsel of perfection was, at the moment, clearly beyond Maria.
-But the President's nod approved it, and Gerty, one of those powerful
-spirits that loves to do with public affairs, proceeded on a flute-like
-note, "Dear me, what lovely prizes!"
-
-It was hyperbole to speak of the prizes as lovely, but it was, of
-course, the correct thing to say, and in the ear of Josiah the correct
-thing was said in the correct way. It would have been difficult for the
-duchess herself to have bettered that pure note of lofty enthusiasm.
-
-"Not so bad, Gert, are they? What do you think o' that little vawse?
-Presented by Coppin, the jeweler."
-
-To assess the gift of Coppin, the jeweler, it was necessary for Miss
-Preston to bring into action her famous tortoiseshell folders. She had
-no need for glasses at all. But Lawyer Mossop's aunt, the late Miss
-Selina Gregg, had aroused in her a passion for their use on appropriate
-occasions. "A ducky little vahse!" That vexed word was pronounced after
-the manner of the late Miss Gregg, from whose practice there was no
-appeal.
-
-"Not so bad--for Coppin. Better anyway than his silver-plated eggstand
-last year."
-
-Gerty made an admiring survey of the bounty of the patrons of the
-Blackhampton Rose Growers' Association. "And here, I see, is the
-President's special prize." She had kept in reserve her appreciation
-of this _chef d'oeuvre_ of public munificence, a much beribboned
-silver gilt goblet to which a card was attached, "President's Special
-Prize for Rose of Purest Color. Donor Alderman Munt J.P." It was the
-first thing her eye had lit on, but she had worked up to it slowly,
-via the lesser gifts of lesser men, so that anything in the nature of
-anticlimax might be avoided.
-
-"Josiah, tell me, who is the fortunate winner?" The archness of the
-tone verged upon coquetry.
-
-"Look and see, my gel." The response was unexpectedly gruff. But, as
-soon as Gerty had looked and seen, the reason for the President's
-austerity grew clear. On a second card, smaller but beribboned like
-the first, was inscribed in a fair clerkly hand, "Presented to Mr. W.
-Hollis for Exhibit 16."
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-Had a pin fallen in the tent at that moment, any one of those three
-people might have expected to hear it do so. Gerty was too wise to ask
-why the husband of the outcast Melia had come to enjoy the special
-gift of his father-in-law; Maria simply dare not. In truth it was an
-odd story. Josiah did his best to put a gloss on an incredible fact of
-which he was rather ashamed; it looked so much like moral weakness, a
-public giving in; but, as he informed Gerty with a half apologetic air,
-Jannock was Jannock. In other words, fair play in the eyes of honest
-men was a jewel.
-
-There could be no question that, in point of color, the fairest bloom
-sent in was Exhibit Sixteen. It was a rose of such a dazzling snowy
-whiteness that it had caught and held the expert eye of the President
-at the morning inspection. "An easy winner, Jennings," he had said, as
-soon as he had seen it, "Nothing to put beside it, my boy."
-
-The astute Jennings, a professional nurseryman along The Rise, made
-no comment. He had taken the trouble to find out the name of the
-grower before bringing a mature judgment to bear on the fruits of his
-craft. "Sound" criticism is always a priori. Critics who value their
-reputation are careful not to pronounce an opinion on any work of
-art until they know who has produced it. Otherwise mistakes are apt
-to occur. None knew better than Jennings that the grower of Exhibit
-Sixteen could not hope to receive the President's prize; indeed
-Jennings was amazed at the little tick's impudence in daring to compete
-at all for his father-in-law's silver gilt goblet. It was an act of
-bravado. Jennings, therefore, shook his head coldly. He declined to
-show enthusiasm in the presence of what to the unsuspecting eye of the
-President was an almost too obvious masterpiece.
-
-"All over a winner, Jennings, that is."
-
-Jennings shook the sober head of a professional expert. "To me," he
-said, "Twenty-one 'as more quality."
-
-"Rubbish, man!" The President threw up his head sharply, a favorite
-trick when goaded by contradiction. "Twenty-one can't be mentioned on
-the same day o' the week. What do you say, Penney?"
-
-Before Mr. Councilor Penney, an acknowledged light of the a priori
-school of criticism, ventured to express an opinion he winged a glance
-at Nurseryman Jennings. And that glance, in the technical language of
-experts, conveyed a clear request for "the office."
-
-"The office" was given sotto voce behind the adroit hand of Jennings,
-"Mester Munt--Twenty-one, Sixteen--Bill Hollis."
-
-Thereupon Mr. Councilor Penney closed one eye and proceeded to examine
-the competing blooms. "Well, Mester Munt," he said solemnly, "I am
-bound to say, to my mind Twenty-one 'as it."
-
-The impetuous president had a short way with the Councilor Penneys
-of the earth. "Have you no eyes, man! Twenty-one can't live beside
-Sixteen. Not the same class. Look at the color--look at the shape--look
-at the size----"
-
-It was realized now that it had become necessary to warn the President.
-And the situation must be grappled with at once. The deeper the
-President floundered, the more perilous the job of extrication. Rescue
-was a man's work, but finally in response to a mute appeal from the
-pusillanimous Jennings, Mr. Councilor Penney took his courage in his
-hands. "Mr. Munt," he said warily, "don't you know that Twenty-one was
-sent in by Joe Mellers, your own gardener?"
-
-It was the best that Mr. Councilor Penney could muster in the way of
-tact. But at all times a very great deal of tact was needed to handle
-the President. Clearly the shot was not a lucky one. "Nowt to do with
-it, Penney." The great man nearly bit off his head. "Ought to know
-that. Sixteen's the best bloom on the bench."
-
-"Sixteen's that Hollis!" It was an act of pure valor on the part of Mr.
-Councilor Penney. Nurseryman Jennings held his breath.
-
-"That Hollis!" The President repeated the words calmly. For a moment
-it was not certain that human dignity could accept their implication.
-But there was a world of meaning in the nervous frown of Mr. Councilor
-Penney, in the tense furtiveness of Nurseryman Jennings.
-
-Was it possible?... Was it possible that the little skunk had dared?...
-Had dared to compete at this show of all shows?... Had dared to win
-honestly that prize of all prizes?...
-
-The story of Bill Hollis and Melia Munt was a commonplace with every
-member of the Committee. They were familiar with all the circumstances;
-and though there might be those among them who felt privately that
-their august President carried family pride rather far, even these
-could not help admiring the rigidity of his attitude. It meant enormous
-strength of character; and character in the shrine at which the true
-Briton worships. But now that the Committee was up against the problem
-Bill Hollis had raised they keenly regretted that they had not taken
-steps to disqualify him from the outset, or had not apprised the
-President beforehand of the state of the case.
-
-The pause that followed was rather irksome for all parties. It was
-ended at last by Nurseryman Jennings. That practical expert, having
-enjoyed an afternoon of free whisky at the President's expense, was now
-able to clothe his judgment becomingly. "Don't suppose the little Snot
-grew it hisself!" said Jennings.
-
-Half the Committee saw at once that a way out had been found for the
-President. But the President was not of the number. "Why don't you?" he
-said curtly.
-
-The practical expert was hardly prepared with reasons. Why should he
-be? His doubts were inspired by the purest altruism. "Why don't you,
-Jennings?" repeated the President.
-
-Really there is no helping some people!
-
-"Because I don't!" It was rather lame, but Jennings was doing his best
-in extremely trying circumstances.
-
-The longer, tenser pause that followed none was stout enough to break.
-Up to a hundred might have been counted before the President said,
-slowly and gruffly, as a large and shaggy bear endowed with a few
-limited human vocables might have done, "Have the goodness, Jennings,
-to mark Exhibit Sixteen for the President's Special."
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-
-Thus it was, that among the successful competitors who lined up by the
-bandstand at six o'clock to receive awards of merit from the fair hands
-of Mrs. Alderman Munt, was her son-in-law Mr. William Hollis.
-
-Wonders never cease to happen in a world of wonders. When in a moment
-of sheer bravado Bill Hollis had paid the necessary shilling and had
-entered the choicest bloom in his garden for the Annual Show he would
-have staked his davy that he stood about as much chance of walking
-off with the Special Prize as he did of going to heaven in a golden
-chariot. The Old Un himself would see to that.
-
-Taken on its merits, this pure white rose that had come as the crown of
-many years of loving labor would be hard to beat. But, as Bill Hollis
-knew, things are not taken on their merits by the a priori school of
-criticism. He knew that its judgments are conditioned by many things
-and that intrinsic worth is apt to weigh least in the scale. He had
-shown his bloom in pride and defiance; he had not expected to get
-anything by it; and now that the despised Committee had acted better
-than itself he was inclined to regret that it had not lived up to its
-reputation.
-
-The table containing the prizes had been carried out on to the grass.
-Beside it stood Mrs. Alderman Munt, white-gloved and anxious, her eyes
-not unlike those of a frightened rabbit. And yet lurking somewhere in
-the folds of a rather redundant frame was a certain dignity, as there
-is bound to be in one who has given four children to the state; in
-one, moreover, who has accompanied such a mate as Josiah step by step
-in his steady rise to wealth and power. Beside Mrs. Munt stood the
-secretary of the society, an important pince-nezed gentleman, with a
-scroll in his hand bearing the names of the prize winners; immediately
-behind these, on a row of chairs, were various notabilities, among whom
-Alderman Munt was conspicuously foremost; and then facing them, in a
-curious, rather impressed semicircle, were the members of that general
-public which not for worlds would miss anything in the nature of a
-giving of prizes by the wife of a real live alderman.
-
-The proprietor of the Duke of Wellington sat glaring fiercely from
-under his white billycock hat, clutching a little convulsively the
-knob of his sun umbrella. A ruthless eye raked the distant corps of
-successful competitors, as one by one they came round the corner of the
-bandstand and converged upon the timid lady whose task it was publicly
-to reward their skill. All were awkward, some were abashed, some tried
-to hide their feelings by an ill-timed facetiousness.
-
-There he was, the little dog! Josiah's grip tightened on the knob
-of the sun umbrella. If the little cur had "had a drop," as he most
-probably had, he was very likely to insult Maria--it was such a great,
-such a golden, opportunity. Josiah was not troubled as a rule by
-vain regrets, but as the Secretary in his far flung voice announced,
-"President's Special Prize for best Single Bloom, winner Mr. W.
-Hollis," and there came an expectant hush in which the meager form
-of Mr. W. Hollis emerged into the full glare of the public gaze, his
-father-in-law would have paid a substantial sum to be able to rescind
-his recent verdict. The little Stoat could not be expected to bear
-himself like a gentleman.
-
-Aunt Gerty, standing prim and tense at the back of the invertebrate
-Maria, grew as white as if she had seen a ghost. But she drew in her
-thin lips sternly and, great warrior as she was, literally transfixed
-poor Melia's declassé husband with her tortoiseshell folders. How
-common he was! It was really very stupid of Josiah to let him have a
-prize in such circumstances. It was very stupid, indeed! He was just
-the kind of man who might be tempted to indulge in some form of cheap
-revenge.
-
-As Melia's husband shuffled across the grass Josiah held himself ready
-to spring upon him. Public or no public he would certainly do so if the
-little beast made any sign of insulting Maria. But as Bill Hollis came
-slowly and doggedly into the picture he was visited by a reluctant
-grace. Half way across the grass, midway between the bandstand and the
-alderman's lady, he took his shabby hands from his shabby pockets; a
-little farther on several degrees of slouch passed from the unpleasing
-curve of his narrow shoulders. And finally, as the silver gilt goblet
-was bestowed upon him by a pair of trembling hands, he ducked solemnly,
-the best he could do in the way of a bow, and then retired modestly,
-silently, respectfully, the trophy under his arm.
-
-Josiah and Aunt Gerty breathed again. Great was their relief. And
-so intensely had they been preoccupied with the bearing of Melia's
-husband, that, very luckily for Maria, they were not able to notice
-hers. It was well this was so. For the alderman's lady had disgraced
-herself on an important public occasion by allowing her eyes to fill
-with tears.
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-
-Bill's first thought was to take the trophy straight home to his wife.
-But for various reasons he didn't obey it. Relations had grown very
-strained between Melia and himself. For months past she had been giving
-him such a bad time that there was little pleasure to be got out of his
-home.
-
-He was a bit of an idealist in his way. Sixteen years ago, at any rate,
-he had begun married life by idealizing his home and Melia. But Melia
-was not an idealist. She was a decidedly practical person, and, like
-her father, endowed with much shrewd sense. In a perverse hour she had
-yielded against her better judgment to the quiet persistency of William
-Hollis; but almost before she married him she knew it wouldn't answer.
-In her heart she wanted somebody better. She felt that a daughter of
-Josiah Munt was entitled to somebody better. And in waiving all her
-rights as the eldest child of a tyrannical, overbearing father, the
-least she could ask of the man to whose star she had pinned her faith
-was that he should prove himself a forcible and successful citizen.
-
-Unhappily Bill had proved to be neither. He was a wordster, a dreamer;
-there was nothing at the back of his rose-colored ideas. It was not
-that he was a vicious man. For such a nature as Melia's it had perhaps
-been better if he had been. She asked for the positive in man, even
-positive badness; anything rather than muddling mediocrity, ignoble
-envy of other men's prosperity and continual whinings against fate.
-
-There were times when Melia was so bored with the inadequacy of this
-mate of hers that she half hoped to goad him into getting drunk enough
-to repay some of her insults with a good beating. At least it would
-have been an event, an excitement. But he was not even a thorough-going
-drinker; at the best, or the worst, he never drank enough beer to rise
-to the heroic, as a real man might have done; his deepest potations did
-not carry him beyond maudlin sentiment or vapid braggadocio, both very
-galling to a woman of spirit. And now, having realized that there was
-nothing to hope for, that they were going steadily down a hill at the
-bottom of which was the gutter--just as her clear-sighted father had
-predicted from the first--years of resentment had crystallized into
-a hard and fixed hostility. She had an ever-growing contempt for the
-spineless fool who was dragging her down in his own ruin.
-
-Bill's instinct was to go home at once with the silver gilt goblet. In
-spite of all the bitterness the last few years had brought him he still
-had a wish to please Melia. In spite of a cat and dog existence they
-were man and wife. They had lived sixteen years together but he still
-wished to propitiate her. But hardly had he borne his prize through the
-throng by the bandstand and begun to steer for the main gate of Jubilee
-Park than there came a change of mind.
-
-It was one of those sudden, causeless changes of mind that was always
-overtaking him. He never seemed able to do anything now for the reason
-that almost before he had decided upon one thing he was overpowered by
-a desire to do another. He had not reached the park gate before he felt
-the humiliation of accepting such a prize from such hands; and Melia
-would probably tell him that he ought to have had more self-respect
-than to take it--if she thought it worth while to express herself on
-the subject.
-
-The President's Special Prize would bring no pleasure to Melia. True,
-there was no need to tell her whence it came. No ... there was no
-need! Suddenly the band broke into a hearty strain. Beyond a doubt the
-atmosphere of Jubilee Park was far more genial than that of Number
-Five Love Lane. Perhaps he ought to have brought Melia to witness
-his triumph. One reason was that he had been far from expecting it;
-another, that he daren't invite her. For many months now she had been
-careful to keep herself to herself, declining always to be seen with
-him in public.
-
-There was a vacant seat by the gate, out of the sun and within sound
-of the gay music. This, after all, was far better than Number Five
-Love Lane. For a few brief moments "The Merry Widow" (selection) made
-him feel happier. It would have been nice for Melia--still it couldn't
-be helped. He ought to have refused the prize--still he had honestly
-won it. But only an oversight on the part of the blinking Committee
-had given it him; he could read that in Josiah's ugly mug and in the
-face of that stuck-up Gerty Preston--so it was one in the eye for them
-after all! And what price Ma! Her son-in-law broke into a guffaw of
-melancholy laughter. The old barrel-bodied image got up like one of the
-Toffs! And yet ... how her hands trembled! ... white gloves on 'em too!
-... and that was a queer look she gave him. The old girl, after all,
-was the best of a rotten bunch.
-
-"The Merry Widow" crashed to an abrupt finale, and a light went out
-suddenly, as it so often did, in the heart of Bill Hollis. Again the
-stern edge of reality pressed upon him from every side, but almost at
-once it was swept away by a new excitement. And yet the excitement
-was not so new as it seemed. All the afternoon it had been present, a
-chorus, a background, thrilling and momentous, to a series of formal
-proceedings to which it had nothing in common, to which it did not bear
-the slightest relation, and yet with a power truly sinister to cast a
-pall over them.
-
-A youth with lungs of brass came through the gate crying the
-Blackhampton _Evening Star_.
-
-Terrible Fighting in Belgium! Awful German Losses! Great Speech by Sir
-Edward Grey!
-
-A sharp thrill ran through the veins of Bill Hollis. It was one more
-lively variation on a theme that had been kindling his senses at short
-intervals throughout the afternoon. War, a real big war, was coming,
-had come. Of course to him personally it wouldn't matter, except that
-it might make life more interesting. Yes, somehow it was bound to
-do that. Whether it would make it interesting enough for a man like
-himself to care to go on living, that was another question.
-
-"Here y'are, boy."
-
-The boy came across the grass, handed Bill an _Evening Star_ and firmly
-declined the halfpenny that was offered him.
-
-"Penny, sir."
-
-A penny for a _Star_ was unheard of. Even the result of the Derby, the
-result of the match with Yorkshire, the result of the Cup Final itself
-could not command a penny. Evidently this war, now that it had come at
-last, was going to be a Record.
-
-Yes, a Record. All the same he was not going to pay a penny for it. One
-halfpenny was the legal price of the Blackhampton _Evening Star_, and
-he told the boy "that if he had any of his sauce he'd have the police
-of him."
-
-
-
-
-XIII
-
-
-William Hollis, having defeated the boy, turned his back to the sun and
-was assured by the Blackhampton _Star_ that he was living in a great
-moment of the world's history. Germany had, it seemed, until twelve
-o'clock that evening to decide whether she would take on England. She
-had taken on France, Russia and Belgium already; a few hours hence, if
-she wasn't careful, she would have to fight the British Empire.
-
-Even to Bill Hollis, dizzied by the sheer magnitude of the headlines
-of his favorite journal which actually surpassed those of the Crippen
-trial, the sinking of the _Titanic_ and the late King Edward's visit
-to Blackhampton, that phrase "the British Empire" was full of magic.
-Lurking somewhere in a compound of half-baked inefficiencies was the
-vision of a poet, and at this moment it was queerly responsive to this
-symbol.
-
-"It's all up with 'em if they take on Us." In strict order of priority
-that was the first message to flash through the sentient being of Mr.
-William Hollis to be duly recorded by the central office. Hard upon it
-came a second message. "They've got a Nerve--them Germans."
-
-In the column for late news were blurred fragments of the speech of
-the Foreign Minister in the House of Commons. Intellectually William
-Hollis was not conspicuously bright, but, as he read the simple words,
-the nature of the terrible misprision against the human race came home
-to him and he could only gasp.
-
-He got up presently and moved away from the band. As always the band
-was very nice, but for some reason or other he didn't want to hear it
-just now. For a short time he walked about on the brown grass, the
-President's cup under his arm, wrapped in the _Evening Star_. But he
-wasn't thinking now of the President, of the cup, of Melia, of the
-injustice of Fate to a private citizen. His thoughts were centered on
-a Thing that made all these other things, painfully intimate as they
-were, of no moment at all. These were but trivial matters, and he was
-now in the presence of the inconceivable, the stupendous.
-
-Coming back to the throng, perhaps for the latent solace these clusters
-of fellow beings afforded him, he saw from their blank eyes, their set
-faces, that his own terrible thoughts were shared more or less by them
-all. The boy had sold his papers already. Other boys had sold theirs.
-The whole place was alive with fluttering news sheets, gleaming white
-and spectral in the sun. Already these people, these stout females
-in farcical clothes, for the most part trundling queer abortions on
-the end of a string, and these hard-faced, grasping men who were
-always overreaching one in trade, were living in a different world.
-They were not thinking now of flowers and vegetables, of bands or
-dancing, although the first couples of juniors had just begun to sway
-rhythmically to the strains of "Hitchy Koo." Something else had come
-into their lives.
-
-Passing the tent sacred to the President and Committee, it gave him one
-more thrill to mark the bearing of the grandees. The famous white hat
-no longer adorned the head of the President. The great man nursed it
-upon his fat loud-checked knees. All the reluctant geniality a public
-function had inspired had passed from his ugly face. Yet in the purview
-of his son-in-law it looked a little less ugly at that moment than he
-ever remembered to have seen it. Those fierce eyes were not occupied
-now with the narrow round of their own affairs, nor with a swelling
-vision of self-importance. The world was on fire. He was simply a man
-among his fellow men; and like them he was wondering what ought to be
-done.
-
-At seven o'clock a vaguely excited but profoundly depressed William
-Hollis made his way out of Jubilee Park. He turned down Short Hill in
-the direction of his home. But by the time he had reached the foot of
-that brief declivity, and was involved in an airless maze of bricks and
-mortar, the thought of his home grew suddenly intolerable. He needed
-freedom and space, he needed an atmosphere more congenial. Melia would
-not understand. Or if she did understand she would be dumb and just
-now he simply longed for a little human intercourse.
-
-At the end of Love Lane, a mean and crooked little street debouching
-from the Mulcaster Road which wound a somber trail to the very heart
-of the city, he stood a moment gazing at the dingy sign a few doors up
-on the left, W. Hollis, Fruiterer. The obvious course was to go and
-deposit the prize he had won on the dresser in the back sitting room,
-or still better, give it into the personal care of Melia. But instead,
-he wrapped up the trophy a little more carefully, resettled it under
-his arm, and then allowed himself to drift slowly with the throng in
-the direction of the Market Place.
-
-As was usual with him now, his actions were aimless and uncertain.
-There was no particular reason why he should be going to the Market
-Place beyond the fact that other people seemed to be going there, as
-somehow they always did seem to be going there at great moments in
-the national life. The factories and warehouses who happened to be
-working that day had disgorged their human cargoes and these under the
-stimulus of hourly editions of the _Evening Star_ were moving slowly
-and solemnly towards the nodal point.
-
-What the Market Place is to the city as a whole, Waterloo Square is
-to the teeming, close-packed population of its southeastern area.
-And at the busiest corner of Waterloo Square, at its confluence with
-Mulcaster Road, that main artery which leads directly to the center
-of all things, is the Duke of Wellington public house. William Hollis,
-drifting with the tide, felt a sudden, uncontrollable desire to "have
-one" at this famous landmark of the local life.
-
-The Duke of Wellington was a "free" house and Mr. Josiah Munt had
-been able to maintain in its integrity the declining art of brewing
-Blackhampton Old Ale. This had a bite and a sting in it, with which the
-more diluted beverages of "tied" houses could not compare. At the Duke
-of Wellington you paid for the best and you got it; therefore it was
-patronized by all in the neighborhood who knew what was what; it had,
-moreover, peculiar advantages of tradition and geography which gave it
-a cachet of its own.
-
-"To have one" at the Duke of Wellington, in the eyes of those who
-lived near by, was almost on a par with "looking in" at Brooks's
-or the Carlton. It conferred a kind of diploma of local worth and
-responsibility. At the same time no form of politics was barred, but
-the proprietor himself was a staunch conservative and it was very
-difficult to find a welcome in the bar parlor without sharing that
-faith.
-
-It could not be said that William Hollis had ever aspired to the good
-graces of the house. There were obvious reasons why this was the
-case. For sixteen years he had not passed through its doors; in that
-long period he had not even entered the humbler part of the premises
-known as "the vaults," sacred to Tom, Dick and Harry, where the more
-substantial patrons of the establishment disdained to set foot.
-
-To-night, however, new and strange forces were at work in Bill. Borne
-along a tide of cosmic events as far as those fascinating doors he was
-suddenly and quite irrationally mastered by a desire to go in.
-
-Partly it may have been bravado; certainly it was a daring act to
-cross that threshold. But Josiah himself, for whose personal prowess
-his son-in-law had a wholesome respect, was safe at the Show; besides,
-the proprietor was too great a man these days to visit the house very
-often. Years ago he had ceased to reside there with his family; and in
-his steady social ascent he was careful not to emphasize a dubious but
-extremely lucrative connection with that which regarded in perspective
-was but a common public house.
-
-The chances were that Bill Hollis would be spared this evening an
-encounter with his father-in-law and former master. But why he should
-decide so suddenly to take the risk was hard to say, unless it was
-the half fantastic reaction of an exceedingly impressionable mind to
-a crisis almost without a precedent in human experience. By nature a
-sociable fellow, he had now an intense desire to exchange ideas with
-responsible, knowledgeable people, with those possessing more light
-than himself. The Duke of Wellington was the headquarters of such
-in that part of the city; it was the haunt of the quidnuncs and the
-well informed; and it may have been for that reason that Bill dived
-suddenly through the swing doors, an act he had not performed for
-sixteen years, and crossed the dark, cool passage with its highly
-spiced but not unattractive odors.
-
-It may have been the magnitude of the situation in Europe which had
-suddenly rendered all private matters ridiculous, or it may have
-been the talisman under his arm which inspired him with an unwonted
-hardihood, but instead of turning into the taproom, the first on the
-left, which would have satisfied the claims of honor and wisdom, he
-pushed boldly on past the glass-surrounded cubicle of the celebrated
-but haughty Miss Searson, into the Mecca of the just and the good,
-sublimely guarded by that peri.
-
-In a kind of dull excitement he entered the famous Bar Parlor. To his
-surprise, and rather perversely, to his relief, it was empty, except
-that, behind a counter in a strategical angle that commanded the room
-as well as the passage, Miss Searson was overwhelmingly present, but
-absorbed apparently at that moment in crocheting a two-inch lace border
-to an article of female attire sacred to the pages of the realists.
-
-Nothing seemed to have altered in sixteen years, even to the fly-blown
-advertisement of Muirhead's Pale Brandy facing the door, and
-surrounding Miss Searson the double row of brass taps, it had once been
-a part of his duties to keep clean. And that lady herself, sixteen
-years had altered her surprisingly little, if at all. She was what is
-known technically as a chemical blonde, a high-bosomed, high-voiced,
-large-featured, large-earringed lady, with remarkable teeth and an
-aloofness of manner which might almost be said to enforce respect at
-the point of the bayonet.
-
-When Miss Searson looked up from her crochet she could hardly believe
-her eyes. William Hollis, in his former incarnation, had been known
-to her as Bill the Barman, and she in that distant epoch had been
-known to him as a Stuck-Up Piece. Unofficially of course. Outwardly
-everybody paid deference to Miss Searson; even the proprietor himself,
-if he could be said to pay deference to any human being, had always
-adopted that attitude to Miss Searson; as for Bill the Barman, he had
-been hardly more than a worm in her sight. And then had come the Great
-Romance. It had come like a bolt out of clear sky, knocking a whole
-world askew as Miss Searson understood it; a whole world of sacred
-values by which Miss Searson and those within her orbit regulated their
-lives.
-
-The entrance of Bill Hollis into the bar struck Miss Searson dumb with
-surprise. In a mind temporarily bewildered sixteen years were as but a
-single day. This was the first occasion in that long period that the
-incredible adventurer who had suborned the eldest daughter of his stern
-master into marrying him had dared to revisit the scene of his crime.
-To weak minds a great romance, no doubt, but the lady behind the bar
-had not a weak mind, therefore she was not in the least romantic. She
-saw things as they were, she knew what life was. It was very well for
-such things to happen in the pages of a novel, but in the daily round
-of humdrum existence they simply didn't answer.
-
-It seemed an age to Miss Searson before William the Incredible girded
-his courage to the point of ordering a pint of bitter. She drew it in
-stately silence, handed it across the counter and accepted threepence
-with superb hauteur.
-
-He drank a little. It was no mean brew; and he felt so much a man for
-the experience that he was able to ask Miss Searson what she thought of
-the news.
-
-"News," said Miss Searson loftily. "News?"
-
-"War with Germany."
-
-"Oh, that!" A Juno-like toss of Miss Searson's coiffure. But there she
-stopped. War with Germany was none of her business, nor was it going to
-be her business to be forced into conversation with a character whose
-standing was so doubtful as the former barman. Miss Searson was not a
-believer in finesse. Her methods had a brutal simplicity which made
-them tremendously effective.
-
-However, this evening they were less effective than usual. The world
-itself was tottering, and a deep, deep chord in the amazing Bill Hollis
-was responsive to the cataclysm. This evening he was not himself, he
-was more than himself; his appearance in the Private Bar was proof of
-it.
-
-Miss Searson was but a woman, a human female. She meant nothing, she
-meant less than nothing in this hour of destiny. "Yes, that!" He
-filled in the pause, after waiting in vain for her to do so. "War with
-Germany. Do you realize it?" His voice was full of emotion.
-
-But Miss Searson did not intend to be drawn into a discussion of
-anything so fanciful as war with Germany. She was practical. A
-censorious mouth shut like a trap. She regarded Bill with the eye of a
-codfish.
-
-"D'you realize what it means?"
-
-By an adroit turn of the head towards the farther beer-engine she gave
-William Hollis the full benefit of a pile of stately back hair. And
-then she said slowly, as if she were trying to bite off the head of
-each blunt syllable, "Do you realize that the Mester sometimes looks in
-about this time of a Thursday?"
-
-
-
-
-XIV
-
-
-A normal Bill Hollis would not have been slow to analyze this speech
-and to find a lurking insult. But he was not a normal Bill Hollis this
-evening; it was the last place he was likely to be in if he had been.
-Therefore he shook his head gently at Miss Searson without submitting
-her to any more destructive form of criticism. What a fool the woman
-was, what a common fool not to understand that in the presence of a war
-with Germany nothing else could possibly matter.
-
-"I don't think I'd stop here--if I was you." Yes, there was a
-bluntness about Miss Searson which at ordinary times had a unique
-power of "getting there." But Bill merely smiled at her now. The
-chrysanthemum-topped fathead! Suddenly he reached the limit of his
-endurance; he expressed a boundless contempt for her and all her tribe
-by recourse to a spittoon.
-
-How _could_ Melia ever have married him ... Melia Munt who might have
-married an architect!...
-
-Bill Hollis defensively went on with his bitter. He was consumed with
-scorn of a person whom he had once respected immensely. She was found
-out, the shallow fool, fringe and back hair included! When he came to
-the end of the pint, he paused a moment in the midst of the pleasant
-sensations it had inspired and then decided that he would have another,
-not because he wanted another, but because he felt that it would annoy
-this Toplofty Crackpot.
-
-The second pint did annoy the T.C., annoyed her obviously; emotionally
-she was a very obvious lady. But it was odd that Bill Hollis, shaken to
-the depths by a world catastrophe, should desire a cheap revenge and
-stoop to gratify it. Perhaps it was a case of multiple personality.
-There were several Bill Hollises in this moment of destiny.
-
-There was the Bill Hollis who gave the defiant order for another pint
-of bitter, the Bill Hollis who paid for it with truculent coolness,
-the Bill Hollis who bore it to the window the better to regard the
-somber stream of fellow citizens flowing steadily in the direction of
-the Market Place, the Bill Hollis who took a beer-stained copy of the
-Blackhampton _Tribune_ from a table with a marble top and glanced at
-the portentous headings of its many columns. And finally there was
-the Bill Hollis who suddenly heard with a sick thrill that came very
-near to nausea a footfall heavily familiar and a voice outside in the
-passage.
-
-Could it be...! Could it be that...!
-
-There was a look of obvious triumph on the almost unnaturally fair
-countenance of Miss Searson. In her grim eyes was "I told you so!"
-
-The ex-barman, in the peril of the moment, glanced hastily around, but
-the eyes of Miss Searson assured him that he was a rat and that he was
-caught in a trap. Moreover they assured him that if ever rat deserved
-a fate so ignominious, William Hollis was the name of that rodent. And
-the loathsome animal had time to recall before that voice and those
-footsteps were able to enter the private bar that sixteen years ago
-Miss Searson had been the witness of a certain incident. And if her
-warlike bearing meant anything she was now looking for a repetition,
-with modern improvements and variations.
-
-Escape was impossible, that was clear. And on the strength of a fact so
-obvious all the various kinds of Bill Hollises promptly came together
-and decided to hand over the body politic to the only Bill Hollis who
-could hope to deal with the crisis. This was the Bill Hollis who had
-had a pint and a half of his father-in-law's excellent bitter and felt
-immeasurably the better for it.
-
-As a measure of precaution this Bill Hollis spread wide the _Tribune_
-and by taking cover behind it greatly reassured his brethren. None of
-the others would have had the wit to think of that. Even as it was only
-a pint and a half of a very choice brew enabled the device to be put
-coolly and quietly into practice.
-
-He had hardly taken cover when Josiah came in. Following close behind
-were Julius Weiss and Councilor Kersley. It was a tense moment, but
-these grandees were occupied with a matter more important than the
-identity of the man behind the newspaper in the corner by the window.
-
-"Miss Searson!" The tone of the proprietor was like unto that of Jove.
-"Ring up Strathfieldsaye and tell them I am going to eat at the Club."
-
-Bill Hollis was sensible of a thrill. He was a mere cat in the presence
-of a king, except that this was a king whom he dare not look at. It was
-a disgusting feeling yet somehow it was exalting. And this sense of
-uplift grew when Josiah and his friends disposed themselves augustly at
-one of the tables with a marble top, and three tankards of an exclusive
-brew were brought to them and they began to talk.
-
-It was "inner circle talk" and in the ear of William Hollis that lent
-it piquancy. Really it was what he was there for. The newspapers
-were unsatisfying. He craved to hear the matter discussed by men of
-substance, standing, general information, by men of the world. Sitting
-there behind his paper in the private bar, he felt nearer to the heart
-of things than he had ever been in his life.
-
-"Is it going to make so much difference?" Councilor Kersley, the
-eminent retail grocer, asked the question.
-
-"It's going to alter everything, Kersley--you mark me." The tone of
-Josiah was as final as an act of parliament and Julius Weiss slowly
-nodded in deep concurrence with it.
-
-"Of course we shall down 'em," said Councilor Kersley.
-
-"Yes, we shall down 'em, but----" Josiah's "but" left a good deal to
-the imagination.
-
-"Don't be too sure, my friends," said the master-hair-dresser.
-
-"Our Navy'll settle it at the finish," Josiah's growl was that of a
-very big dog.
-
-Julius Weiss shook his head solemnly but he didn't speak again. An odd,
-uneasy silence settled on the three of them while they drank their
-beer. But of a sudden there came a wholly unexpected obtrusion into the
-conversation.
-
-The man by the window lowered his paper. "We're not going to have a
-walk over, so don't let us think we are." For a reason he could not
-have explained had his life depended on it, William Hollis revealed his
-presence and plunged horse, foot and artillery into the matter in hand.
-
-
-
-
-XV
-
-
-Josiah gave him a look. But it was not the look he might have expected
-to receive. It was less the look of a vindictive parent and employer
-than the gesture a Chamberlain might have bestowed on a Jesse Collings
-or a Gladstone on a John Morley.
-
-"You're right, my lad--not a walk over."
-
-For a few minutes these great men talked on and William Hollis by sheer
-force of some innate capacity, now first brought to life in the stress
-of an overwhelming affair, talked with them as an equal. These were
-proud moments in which the power of vision, the understanding heart
-seemed to come by their own. The world was on fire, and if the flames
-were to be brought under control many estimates must be revised, many
-standards must go by the board. Self-preservation, the primal instinct,
-was already uppermost. Brains, foresight, mental energy were at a
-premium now. Any man, no matter who or what he might be, who had it
-in him to contribute to the common stock was more than welcome to do
-so. The conflagration had only just begun but a new range of ideas was
-already rife. Men were no longer taken on trust, institutions no longer
-accepted at their face value.
-
-But all too soon for William Hollis the proceedings came to an
-end. He would have liked to sit there all night, tossing the ball
-among his peers, listening politely and now and again throwing in
-a word. Suddenly, however, the door of the private bar opened and
-a flaming-haired, shirt-sleeved appearance in a green baize apron
-abruptly thrust in its head. At the sight of the grandees it was thrust
-out again even more abruptly.
-
-"That George?"
-
-George it was.
-
-"Go out and step that there Bus." In the command of Josiah was all the
-power of the man of privilege, the almost superhuman authority of a
-city alderman. Bill Hollis, who had once worn the green apron himself,
-was thrilled by the recollection that even in his day, when Josiah was
-first elected to the town council, the public vehicle plying for hire
-between Jubilee Park and the Market Place was always at the beck and
-call of Mr. Councilor Munt. Few had a good word for him, but even in
-those days in that part of the city his word was law.
-
-Josiah rose and his friends rose with him. But as he moved to the
-door he turned a dour eye upon Bill Hollis. Whole volumes were in it,
-beyond tongue or pen to utter. To-night even he, in the stress of what
-was happening to the world in which he had prospered so greatly, was
-less than himself and also more. An eye of wary truculence pinned the
-ex-barman to the wainscot while the master of the house uttered his
-slow, unwilling growl. "Not a bad bloom ye sent in, my lad."
-
-It was a very big dog to a very little dog, but somehow it told far
-more than was intended. Almost in spite of himself, the man who on a
-day had abused the confidence of his master by marrying his eldest
-daughter was forced to realize that no matter what Josiah Munt might
-be, he was ... well, he was Jannock!
-
-
-
-
-XVI
-
-
-Twenty minutes later William Hollis, feeling inches taller, and more in
-harmony with himself than for many a day, went forth to grapple with
-the situation in Europe.
-
-Half Blackhampton, at least, if its streets meant anything, was bent on
-a similar errand. From every part of the city, its people were slowly
-filtering in twos and threes to the Great Market Place, that nodal
-point of the local life and of the life of the empire. Blackhampton
-claims to be the exact center of England, speaking geographically,
-and its position on the map is reflected in its mental outlook. It
-combines a healthy tolerance for the ways and ideas of places less
-happily situated with a noble faith in itself. Time and again history
-has justified that faith; time and again it has chosen the famous town
-as the scene of a memorable manifestation, as its castle, its churches,
-its ancient buildings, its streets and monuments bear witness. Here
-an ill-starred king declared war on his people, here a great poet was
-born, to give but a single deed and a single name among so much that
-has passed into history. Many of its sons have shed luster on their
-birthplace. Here is a street bearing the name of one who revolutionized
-industry; yonder the humble abode of the prizefighter who gave his
-name to one of the most important towns of Australia; over there the
-obscure conventicle of the plain citizen who founded a world religion;
-"up yond" the early home of one whose name is a household word on five
-continents; across the road the public house where a famous athlete has
-chosen to live in a modest but honored retirement.
-
-Biologists say that all forms of organic life are determined by
-climate. Blackhampton owed much, no doubt, to its happy situation as
-the exact center of the Empire, but no city in the kingdom could have
-lived more consciously in that fact. London was not without importance
-as places went; the same might be said for New York; but in the eyes
-of the true Blackhamptonian, after all, these centers of light were
-comparatively provincial.
-
-This evening the streets of the city were alive with true
-Blackhamptonians. In the sight of these only Blackhampton mattered. Its
-attitude was of decisive consequence in this unparalleled crisis. No
-matter what other places were doing and thinking, Blackhampton itself
-was fully determined to pull its weight in the boat.
-
-The press of citizens was very great by the time Bill Hollis arrived
-in the Market Place. In particular, they were gathered in serious
-groups before the City Hall, the Imperial Club and the offices of the
-Blackhampton _Tribune_, which continued to emit hourly editions of the
-_Evening Star_ with fuller accounts of the proceedings in Parliament
-and the latest telegrams concerning the fighting in Belgium.
-
-The British Cabinet had given Germany until midnight, but Blackhampton
-had fully made up its mind in the matter by five minutes past nine,
-which was the precise hour that Mr. William Hollis arrived to bear
-his part in the local witenagemot. His part was the relatively humble
-one of standing in front of the Imperial Club and gazing with rather
-wistful eyes into that brightly tiled and glazed and highly burnished
-interior as it was momentarily revealed by the entrance of a member.
-
-Even so early in the world's history as five minutes past nine it was
-known to those privileged sons of the race who had assembled in front
-of the sandstone and red brick façade of the Blackhampton Imperial
-Club that Germany "was going to get it in the neck." There must be a
-limit to all things and Germany had already exceeded it. The Cabinet
-having unluckily omitted to provide itself with even one Blackhampton
-man was yet doing its best to keep pace with informed Blackhampton
-opinion, but events were moving very quickly in front of the Imperial
-Club. At a quarter past nine Sir Reuben Jope, the chairman of _the_
-Party, drove up in his electric brougham, a bearded fierce-eyed figure
-whose broadcloth trousers allied to a prehistoric box hat seemed to
-make him a cross between a rather aggressive Free Kirk elder and an
-extraordinarily respectable pirate. At twenty minutes past nine Mr.
-Whibley, the Club porter, an imposing vision in pale brown, gold braid,
-and brass buttons, came down the steps and informed a friend on the
-curb "that the Fleet was fully mobilized."
-
-Other luminaries continued to arrive. It was like the night of a very
-hotly contested election, except for the fact that every one of the
-thousands of human beings thronging the Market Place were of one mind.
-But there was neither boasting nor revelry. This was a sagacious, a
-keen-bitten, a practical race. A terrible job was on hand, but it was
-realized already that it would have to be done. The thing had gone
-too far. There were no demonstrations; on the contrary, a quietude
-so intense as to seem unnatural gave the measure and the depth of
-Blackhampton's feeling upon the subject.
-
-Had Bill Hollis used the forty-one years of his life in a way to
-justify his early ambitions he would have been inside the Club on this
-historical evening, sitting on red leather and smoking a cigar with the
-best of them. As it was he had to be content with a foremost place in
-the ever-growing throng outside the Club portals, from which point of
-vantage he was able to witness the arrival of many renowned citizens
-and also to gaze through the famous bow window which abutted on to the
-Square at the array of notables within. In the intensity of the hour
-the Club servants had omitted to draw down the blinds.
-
-At ten minutes to ten Mr. Alderman Munt, sustained by roast saddle
-of mutton and green peas, fruit tart and custard, appeared in the
-embrasure with a large cigar. Seen from the street he looked a
-tremendously imposing figure. Even in the midst of the men of light
-and leading who surrounded him he was a Saul towering among the
-prophets. Not even his admirers, and in the city of his birth these
-were singularly few, ventured to call him genial, but there was power,
-virility, unconscious domination in the far flung glance that marked
-the press beyond the Club windows. Somehow there was a bulldog look
-about him that was extraordinarily British. Somehow he looked a good
-man in a tight place and a bad one to cross.
-
-Had the question been asked there was not one among that throng of
-hushed spectators who could have explained his own presence in the
-Market Place, nor could he have said just what he was doing there. A
-powerful magnet had drawn the many together into a limited space on an
-airless evening in August to gaze at one another and to wonder what
-was going to happen, yet well knowing that nothing could happen as
-far as that evening was concerned. But in this strange gathering, in
-the solemn hush that came upon it from time to time, was the visible
-evidence that the people of Blackhampton were standing together in a
-supreme moment. Perhaps it gave a feeling of security that each was
-shoulder to shoulder with his neighbor in this hour so fateful for
-themselves, for Blackhampton, for the human race.
-
-Nothing happened, yet everything happened. The throng grew denser
-inside and outside the Imperial Club, but casual remarks became even
-less frequent, newsboys ceased to shout, and presently the hour of
-midnight boomed across the square from the great clock on the Corn
-Exchange and from many neighboring steeples. Nothing happened. But it
-was Wednesday, August the fifth. The silent multitude began slowly to
-disperse. A new phase had opened in history.
-
-It was not until a quarter past one, by which time four-fifths of the
-crowd had gone away as quietly as it had assembled, that Bill Hollis
-slowly made his way home to Love Lane. In his hand was the prize he had
-so unexpectedly gained, wrapped in the _Evening Star_, but somehow the
-Show and all the other incidents of a crowded, memorable, even glorious
-day seemed very far off as his boots echoed along the narrow streets.
-An imaginative man in whom psychic perception was sometimes raised to
-a high power, he was oppressed by a stealthy sense of disaster. It was
-as if an earthquake had shaken the world from pole to pole. It was as
-if all the people in it were a little dizzy with a vibration they could
-hardly feel which yet had shivered the foundations of society.
-
-
-
-
-XVII
-
-
-Blackhampton was in the war from the first moment. Never its custom
-to do things by halves, this body of clear thinking Britons did its
-best to rise to the greatest occasion in history. Its best was not
-enough--nothing human could have been--but as far as it went it was
-heroic.
-
-In the first days of the disaster none could tell its magnitude. Forces
-had been set in motion whose colossal displacement was beyond human
-calculation. Something more than buckets of water are required to cope
-with a prairie fire, but at first there seemed no other means at hand
-of dealing with it.
-
-Within the tentative and narrow scope of the machinery provided by the
-state wonders were performed in the early weeks of the holocaust. Every
-bucket the country could boast was called into use, but the flames
-seemed always to gain in power and fury.
-
-From the outset this midland city, like the kingdom itself, betrayed
-not a sign of panic. In the presence of fathomless danger it remained
-calm. British nerves lie deep down, and in those first shattering weeks
-the entire nation stood stolidly to its guns under the threat of night
-and disruption.
-
-The energy shown by Blackhampton in organizing hospitals and in
-raising men to fill them was truly amazing, yet in this it was no more
-than the mirror of the whole country. City vied with city, shire vied
-with shire, in voluntary service to a state, that, no matter what
-its defects, was able to maintain a sense of proportion which may be
-claimed as the common measure of the republic. The curious anachronism,
-magniloquently miscalled the British Empire, rose at once to a moral
-height without a precedent in the history of the world. It would have
-been fatally easy in the circumstances of the case for a brotherhood of
-free peoples to have turned a deaf ear to the voice of honor. The mine
-was sprung so quickly, the issues at stake were so cunningly veiled,
-that only "a decent and a dauntless people," unprepared as they were
-and taken by surprise, would have cast themselves into the breach at
-an hour's notice, fully alive to the nature of the act and by a divine
-instinct aware of its necessity, yet without fully comprehending what
-it involved.
-
-Governments and politicians, like books and writers, exist to be
-criticized, and it is their common misfortune that impudence is now the
-first function of wisdom. History is not likely to deny the great part
-played in a supreme moment by certain brave and enlightened men. In the
-end the mean arts of the party journal will not rob of their need those
-who have made still possible a decent life.
-
-Within a fortnight of the outbreak arose a crying need for men.
-Few, even at that moment, were bold enough to breathe the word
-"conscription." Britain was a maritime power. Armies on the Continental
-scale were none of her business. Russia and France bred to European
-conditions, with a fundamental man power fully equal to that of the
-Central Empires could be trusted to hold their own. But these fallacies
-were soon exposed.
-
-Still, even then, the country hesitated to take the plunge.
-Conscription seemed to many the direct negation of what it had stood
-for in the past. These still pinned their faith to the system of
-voluntary levies. The rally of the country's manhood to a cause only
-indirectly its own was beyond all precedent. Field Marshal Viscount
-Partington mobilized his very best mop and sent it to deal with the
-Atlantic. For all that the flood did not subside and it gradually
-dawned on the public mind that more comprehensive methods might be
-needed.
-
-In the meantime the Hun was at the gate of Paris. The Channel ports, if
-not actually in the hands of the enemy, were as good as lost. Belgium
-was being ground under the heel of a savage conqueror. And in the city
-of Blackhampton, as elsewhere in Britain, these things made a very deep
-impression.
-
-Among the many forcible men that a new world phase revealed
-Blackhampton to possess, none stood out more boldly in those first
-grim weeks than Josiah Munt. The proprietor of the Duke of Wellington
-was a man of peculiar gifts, and it was soon only too clear that not
-only Blackhampton, but England herself, had need of them. His was the
-ruthless energy that disdains finesse. It sees what to do, or believes
-it does--almost as important in life as we know it!--and goes straight
-ahead and gets it done.
-
-One evening in the middle of September Josiah came home to dinner in a
-very black mood. It was not often that he yielded to depression. But
-he had had a hard day on local war committees in the course of which
-he had been in contact with men nearer to the center of things than
-he was himself. Moreover, these were men from whom this shrewd son of
-the midlands was only too ready to learn. They were behind the scenes.
-Sources of information were open to them which even a Blackhampton
-alderman might envy; and they were far from echoing the airy optimism
-of the public press. The fabric of society, stable but elastic, by
-means of which Josiah himself and so many like him had been able in
-the course of two or three decades to rise from obscurity to a certain
-power and dignity was in urgent danger. The whole of the western world
-was in the melting pot. That which had been could never be again.
-Cherished institutions were already in the mire. And all this was but
-the prelude to a tragedy of which none could see the end.
-
-Josiah's mood that evening was heavy. Even the presence at the meal of
-his sister-in-law, as a rule a natural tonic, did little to lighten it.
-
-"They won't get Paris now," she affirmed.
-
-"We don't know that." He shook his head with the gesture of a tired
-man. "Nobody knows it."
-
-"No, I suppose they don't." Miss Preston read in that somber manner the
-need for mental readjustment. "But the papers say that General Joffre
-has the situation in hand."
-
-Josiah renounced a plate of mutton broth only half consumed. "Mustn't
-believe a word you see in the papers, my gel. They don't know much, and
-half of what they do know they are not allowed to tell." Miss Preston
-discreetly supposed that it was so. "But things are going better,
-aren't they?"
-
-"We'll hope they are." Josiah's fierce attack upon the joint in front
-of him seemed to veto the subject.
-
-The silence that followed was broken by Maria, whose entrance into the
-conversation was quite unexpected and rather startling. "Did you know,"
-she said, "that Melia's husband has joined the army?"
-
-Josiah suspended operations to poise an interrogatory carving knife.
-"Who tells you that?" he said frostily.
-
-"The boy from Murrell's, the greengrocer's,"--somehow the infrequent
-voice of Maria had an odd precision--"said to Alice this morning that
-he heard that Mr. Hollis had gone for a soldier."
-
-Josiah returned to the joint, content for the time being with the
-remark, "that it was a bad lookout for the Germans," a sally that won a
-timely laugh from his sister-in-law. On the other hand, Maria, who had
-never been known to laugh at anything in all her anxious days, began to
-wonder somberly whether Melia would be able to carry on the business.
-
-"From all that I hear," growled Josiah, "there ain't a sight o'
-business to be carried on."
-
-In the silence which followed Maria gave a sniff that was slightly
-lachrymose, and then the strategic Gerty after a veiled glance towards
-the head of the table, ventured on "Poor Amelia."
-
-Josiah was in the act of giving himself what he called "a man's
-helping" of beans. "She made her own bed," he said in a tone that
-gained in force by not being forcible, "and now she's got to lie in it."
-
-For the first time in many years, however, Maria seemed to be visited
-by a spark of spirit. "Well, I think it's credible of that Hollis, very
-creditable."
-
-Josiah raised a glass of beer to the light with a connoisseur's
-disparagement of its color, and then he said, "In my opinion he's
-running away from his creditors. I hear he owes money all round."
-
-"He's going to risk his life, though," ventured Aunt Gerty. "And that's
-something."
-
-"It is--if he risks it," Josiah reluctantly allowed.
-
-Maria became so tearful that she was unable to continue her dinner.
-
-
-
-
-XVIII
-
-
-The next morning, about a quarter to ten, Josiah boarded a Municipal
-tram at the foot of The Rise, earning in the process the almost
-groveling respect of its conductor, and paid twopence for a journey to
-Love Lane. Five doors up on the left was a meager house that had been
-converted into a greengrocer's shop. By far the most imposing thing
-about it was a signboard, which, although sadly in need of a coat of
-paint, boldly displayed the name William Hollis Fruiterer, in white
-letters on a black ground. For the last sixteen years, whenever the
-proprietor of the Duke of Wellington had occasion to pass this eyesore
-which was clearly visible from the busy main thoroughfare that ran by
-the end of the street, he made it a fixed rule to look the other way.
-But this morning when he got off the tram car at the corner, he set his
-teeth, faced the signboard resolutely and walked slowly towards it.
-
-A stately thirty seconds or so of progress brought him to the shop
-itself. For a moment he stood looking in the window, which was neither
-more nor less than that of a visibly unprosperous greengrocer in a very
-small way of business. He then entered a rather moribund interior, the
-stock in trade of which consisted in the main of baskets of potatoes
-and carrots and an array of stale cabbages laid in a row on the counter.
-
-The shop had no one in it, but the first step taken by an infrequent
-customer across its threshold rang a bell attached to the underside
-of a loose board in the floor, thereby informing a mysterious entity
-beyond a glass door draped with a surprisingly clean lace curtain that
-it was required elsewhere.
-
-The entity did not immediately respond to Josiah's heavy-footed
-summons. When it did respond it was seen to be that of a thin faced,
-exceedingly unhappy looking woman of thirty-five whose hair was
-beginning to turn gray. Her print dress, much worn but scrupulously
-clean and neat, had its sleeves rolled back beyond the elbows; and this
-fact and a coarse sackcloth apron implied that she had been interrupted
-in the task of scrubbing the floor of the back premises.
-
-The interior of the shop was rather dark and Josiah, having taken up a
-position in its most sunless corner, was not recognized at once by his
-eldest daughter.
-
-They stood looking at each other, not knowing what to say or how to
-carry themselves after a complete estrangement of sixteen years.
-Josiah, however, had taken the initiative; he was a ready-witted man
-of affairs and he had been careful to enter the shop with a formula
-already prepared to his mind. It might or might not bridge the gulf,
-but in any case that did not greatly matter. He had not come out of a
-desire to make concessions; he was there at the call of duty.
-
-"They tell me your man's joined th' army." That was the formula, but
-it needed speaking. And when spoken it was, after a moment uncannily
-tense, it was not as Alderman Munt J.P. had expected and intended to
-utter it. Instead of being quite impersonal, the tone and the manner
-were rude and grim. Somehow they had thrown back to an earlier phase of
-autocratic parenthood.
-
-Melia turned very white. It did not seem possible for her to say
-anything beyond a defiant "yes." Breathing hard, she stood looking
-stonily at her father.
-
-"When did he go?"
-
-"Monday." The tone of Melia was queerly like his own.
-
-Josiah rolled the scrub of whisker under his chin between his thumb and
-forefinger, and then slowly transferred the weight of his ponderous
-body from one massive foot to the other. "Don't seem to be doing much
-trade."
-
-"Not much." But the tone of Melia rather implied that it was none of
-his business even if such was the case.
-
-"Will ye be able to carry on?"
-
-Melia didn't know. Her father didn't either. He was inclined to think
-not, but without expressing that opinion he stood with narrowed eyes
-and pursing his lips somberly. "Where's the books?" he said abruptly.
-
-The desire uppermost in Melia was to tell him in just a few plain
-words that the books were no concern of his and that she would be much
-obliged if he would go about his own affairs. But for some reason she
-was not able to do so. She was no longer afraid of him; years ago she
-had learned to hate and despise him; but either she was not strong
-enough, not a big enough character to be openly rude to him, or the
-subtle feelings of a daughter, long since rejected and forgotten, may
-have intervened. For after a horrible moment, in which devils flew
-round in her, she said impassively, "Don't keep none."
-
-"Not books! Don't keep books!" The man of affairs caught up the
-admission and treated it almost as a young bull in a paddock might have
-treated a red parasol. "Never heard the like!" He cast a truculent
-glance round the half denuded shop. "No wonder the jockey has to make
-compositions with his creditors."
-
-Melia flushed darkly. She would have given much had she been able at
-that moment to order this father of hers out of the shop, but every
-minute now seemed to bring him an increasing authority. The Dad, the
-tyrant and the bully whom she had feared, defied and secretly admired,
-was now in full possession. At bottom, sixteen years had not changed
-him and it had not changed her. Had the man for whom she had wrecked
-her life had something of her father's quality she might have forgiven
-his inefficiency, his tragic failure as a human being, or at any rate
-have been more able to excuse herself for an act which, look at it as
-one would, was simply unforgivable.
-
-"I don't know what you mean." Her hard voice trembled and then broke
-harshly--but anger and defiance could not go beyond that. "He paid the
-quarter's rent before he went. He owes a few pounds but he's going to
-send me a bit every week until it's paid."
-
-"I suppose you've got a list of his liabilities." Even his voice shook
-a little, but he treated the scorn, the anger, the hard defiance in her
-eyes as if they were not there.
-
-Again the paramount desire was to insult this father of hers, had it
-been humanly possible to do so. But again was she bereft of the power
-even to make the attempt. "Yes, I have," she said sullenly.
-
-"Let me see it, gel."
-
-For nearly a minute she stood biting her lips and looking at him,
-while for his part he coolly surveyed the shop in all its miserable
-inadequacy. She still wanted to order him out. His proprietary air
-enraged her. Yet she could not repress a sneaking admiration for it
-and that enraged her even more. But she suddenly gave up fighting and
-retired in defeat to the mysterious region beyond the curtained door,
-whence she returned very soon with a piece of paper in her hand.
-
-Josiah impressively put on his gold-rimmed eyeglasses, a recent
-addition to his greatness, and examined the paper critically. The
-amount of William Hollis's indebtedness, declared in hurried, rather
-illiterate pencil, as if the heart of the writer had not been in his
-task, came to rather less than twenty pounds.
-
-"This the lot?" He spoke as if he had a perfect right to ask the
-question.
-
-"It is." Her eyes and her voice contested the right, yet in spite of
-themselves they admitted it.
-
-"Who owns this here property?" Again the half truculent glance explored
-every nook and cranny of the meager premises.
-
-"Whatmore the builder."
-
-Josiah rubbed a thick knuckle upon his cheek. "Ah!" That was his only
-comment. "Owns the row, I suppose?"
-
-Melia supposed he did.
-
-"What rent do you pay?"
-
-"Twenty-five." She resented the question, but the growing magnetism of
-having again a real live man to deal with was making her clay in his
-hands.
-
-He took a step to the shop door, the paper still in his hand, and stood
-an instant looking up the dreary length of narrow street. It was only
-an instant he stood there, but it was long enough to enable him to make
-up his mind. Suddenly he swung round on his heel to confront the still
-astonished and resentful Melia.
-
-"Want more window space," he said. "Casement ought to be lower
-and larger. Those flowers"--he pointed to a bowl of stocks on the
-counter--"ought to be where people can look at 'em. But this isn't a
-neighborhood for flowers. Offer vegetables and fruit at a low price,
-but more shop room's needed so that folks can see 'em and so that you
-can buy in bigger quantities. Who is your wholesaler?" He looked down
-the list. "Coggins, eh? Coggins in the Market Place?"
-
-Melia nodded. Should she tell him that Coggins had that morning refused
-to supply anything else until the last delivery of potatoes, bananas
-and tomatoes had been paid for? Pride said no, but a force more
-elemental than pride had hold of her now.
-
-"Owe him six pound, I see. What does he let you have in the way of
-credit?"
-
-"He won't let me have anything else until I've paid his account," said
-the reluctant Melia. "And he says it's all got to be cash for the
-future."
-
-"When did he say that?"
-
-"He's just been up to see me."
-
-"Can you pay him?"
-
-"I promised him two pounds by Saturday."
-
-Josiah made no comment. Once more his eyes made the tour of the shop.
-And then he said with the slow grunt that Melia knew so well:
-
-"Very creditable to your man to join up ... if he sticks it."
-
-The four last little words were almost sinister. And then in the
-unceremonious way in which he had entered the shop the great man
-walked out. The place was as distasteful to him as his presence in it
-was distasteful to his eldest daughter. Yet for both, and in spite of
-themselves, their meeting after long years had had an extraordinary
-grim fascination.
-
-
-
-
-XIX
-
-
-At Christmas Private Hollis was granted forty-eight hours' leave. He
-had been a member of the Blackhampton Battalion rather less than three
-months, but this was a piece of luck for which he felt very grateful.
-
-Those three months had been a grueling time. His age was forty-one,
-and, in order to comply with the arbitrary limit of thirty-eight
-imposed by Field Marshal Viscount Partington in the first days of
-strife, it had been necessary to falsify his age. Many another had done
-likewise. Questions were not asked, and if a man had physical soundness
-and the standards of measurement demanded by the noble Viscount there
-seemed no particular reason why they should be. All the same the sudden
-and severe change from a soft life found some weak places in Private
-Hollis.
-
-How he stuck it he hardly knew. Many a time in those trying early weeks
-he was sorely tempted to go sick with "a pain in his hair." But ever at
-the back of his mind hovered the august shade of Troop Sergeant Major
-William Hollis, the distinguished kinsman who had fought at Waterloo,
-whose spurs and sword hung in the little back sitting room of Number
-Five, Love Lane; and that old warrior simply would not countenance any
-such proceeding. Therefore, Christmas week arrived without Private
-Hollis having missed a single parade. Although not one of the bright
-boys of the Battalion, he was not looked upon unfavorably, and on
-Christmas Eve, about four o'clock, he returned to his home from the
-neighboring town of Duckingfield.
-
-His home in the course of the sixteen years he had lived in it had
-brought him precious little in the way of happiness. More than once
-he had wondered if ever he would be man enough to break its sinister
-thrall; more than once he had wished to end the ever-growing aversion
-of man and wife by doing something violent. He had really grown to hate
-the place. And yet after an absence of less than three months he was
-returning to it with a thankfulness that was surprising.
-
-All the same he was not sure how Melia would receive him. When at last
-he had made the great decision and had told her that he was going
-to join up he had said she must either carry on the business in his
-absence, or that it could be wound up and she must be content with the
-separation allowance. Her answer had been a gibe. However, she proposed
-to carry on in spite of the fact that W. Hollis Fruiterer as a means
-of livelihood was likely to prove a stone about her neck. Still there
-was a pretty strong vein of independence in her and if she could keep
-afloat by her own exertions she meant to do so.
-
-During his three months' absence in camp their correspondence had been
-meager; it had also been formal, not to say cold. The estrangement into
-which they had drifted was so wide that even the step he had recently
-taken could not bridge it. He had told her on a picture postcard with
-a view of Duckingfield Parish Church that he was quite well and he
-hoped that she was and that things were going on all right; and with a
-view of the Market Place she replied that she was glad to know that he
-was quite well as it left her at present. However, he was careful to
-supplement this marital politeness with a few words every Saturday when
-he sent her five shillings, all he could spare of his pay. The money
-was always acknowledged briefly and coldly. No clew was given to her
-feelings, or to her affairs, but when he told her he was coming home at
-Christmas for two days she wrote to say that she would be pleased to
-see him.
-
-As he stepped off the tram into the raw Blackhampton mirk which awaited
-him at the end of Love Lane that formal phrase came rather oddly into
-his mind. It gave him a sort of consolation to reflect that Melia was
-one who said what she meant and meant what she said. But, whether or
-not she would be pleased to see him at the present moment, he was
-genuinely pleased to be seeing her.
-
-It was strange that it should be so. But Melia with all her grim
-humors stood for freedom, a life of physical ease and cushioned
-independence, and this was what a slack fibered man of one and forty
-simply longed for after three months' "grueling." For a man past his
-physical best, of slothful habits and civilian softness, the hard
-training had not been child's play. Besides, his home meant something.
-It always had meant something. That was why in the face of many
-difficulties he had struggled in his spasmodic way to keep it together.
-It had seemed to give him no pleasure, it had seemed to bring nothing
-into his life, but somehow he had felt that if once he let go of it, as
-far as he was concerned it would mean the end of all things. He would
-simply fall to pieces. He would sink into the gutter and he would never
-be able to rise again.
-
-Getting off the tram at the end of Love Lane he felt a sensation that
-was almost pride to think that he had a place of his own to come home
-to. After all it stood for sixteen years of life and struggle. And
-at that moment he was particularly glad that he had sent that five
-shillings a week regularly. Unless he had done so he would not now have
-been able to go and face Melia.
-
-There was not much light in the little street, but it was not yet quite
-dark. And the first sight of his home gave him a shock. The outside
-of the shop had changed completely. Not only was the signboard and
-the rest of the woodwork resplendent with new paint, but the window
-was more than twice the size it had been. Moreover it was brilliantly
-lighted; there was a fine display of apples, oranges, prunes, nuts,
-even boxes of candied fruits and bonbons; and in the center of this
-amazing picture was a large Christmas tree, artfully decorated, in a
-pot covered with pink paper.
-
-William Hollis gave a gasp. And then a slow chill spread over him as
-he realized the truth. Somebody had taken over the business, somebody
-with capital, brains, business experience. But that being the case why
-had Melia kept it all so dark? And why, if the business belonged to
-somebody else, was his name still on the signboard? And why had it had
-that new coat of paint?
-
-The sheer unexpectedness struck him internally, as if a bucket of water
-had been dashed in his face. It was the worst set-back he had ever had
-in his life. Not until that moment did he realize how much the shop
-meant to him. He was bitterly angry that such a trick had been played.
-It showed, as hardly anything else could have done, the depth of
-Melia's venom; it showed to what a point she was prepared to carry her
-resentment.
-
-It took him a minute to pull himself together, and then he walked into
-the shop, not defiantly, not angrily, but with a sense of outrage.
-There was nobody in it, but, as he cast round one indignant glance at
-its new and guilty grandeur and then crossed heavily to the curtained
-door, he held himself ready to meet the new proprietor.
-
-Beyond that mysterious portal the small living room was very spick and
-span. Almost to his surprise he found Melia there. She matched the
-room in appearance and at the moment he came in she was putting a log
-of wood on the fire. Great Uncle William's sword and accouterments,
-hanging from the wall, were decorated with holly, the pictures also and
-a new grocer's almanac, and a small bunch of mistletoe was suspended
-from the gas bracket in the middle of the ceiling. Everything was far
-more cheerful and homelike than he ever remembered to have seen it. The
-note of Christmas was there, which in itself meant welcome and good
-cheer.
-
-He stood at the threshold of the curtained door, a neat soldierlike
-figure with a chastened mustache, looking wonderfully trim and erect
-in his uniform. She greeted him with a kind of half smile on her hard
-sad face, but he didn't offer to kiss her. Not for long years had they
-been on those terms; they were man and wife in hardly more than name.
-And if in his absence, as there was reason to suspect, she had played
-him a trick in revenge for her years of disappointment, he somehow felt
-man enough at that moment to make an end of things altogether so far as
-she was concerned. There were faults on both sides, no doubt. Perhaps
-he hadn't quite played jannock; but if the business now belonged to
-somebody else, he would simply walk straight out of the place and he
-would never enter it again.
-
-She stood looking at him, as if she expected him to speak first. But he
-didn't know what to say to her, with that doubt in his mind. Braced by
-the stern discipline which he felt already had made him so much more a
-man than he had ever been in his life, he had come home fully prepared
-to make a fresh start. In spite of her embittered temper, he had not
-lost quite all his affection for her. He was the kind of man who craves
-for affection; absence and hardship had made him realize that. He had
-looked forward to this homecoming, not merely as a relief from the
-grind of military routine, which galled him at times so that he could
-hardly bear it, but as an assertion of the manhood, of the husbandhood,
-that had long been overdue.
-
-"Evenin', Melia," he said at last.
-
-"Evenin', Bill," as she spoke she dropped her eyes.
-
-"Happy Christmas to you." Somehow his voice sounded much deeper than
-ever before.
-
-"Same to you. Bill." There was almost a softness in the fall of the
-words that took his mind a long way back.
-
-"How goes it?" Her reception was thawing him a little in spite of
-himself, but he hesitated about taking off his overcoat. If this fair
-seeming was intended to mask a blow there was only one way to meet it.
-There was a pause and then he took the plunge. "Business good?" He
-held himself ready for the consequences.
-
-"Pretty fair." The tone told nothing.
-
-"Seems to be that," he said mordantly. "Had a coat o' paint, I see,
-outside." He steeled himself again. "Had a new window put in an' all."
-
-She nodded.
-
-"How did you manage it?" Again the plunge.
-
-"Got a new landlord."
-
-Ha! they were coming to it now. He held himself tensely. "Old Whatmore
-gone up the spout or something?" He remembered that some time back
-there had been rumors of an impending bankruptcy on the part of
-Whatmore the builder.
-
-"No, Whatmore's all right, but he's sold this shop and the whole row
-with it."
-
-"Sold it, eh?" His excitement was so great that in spite of a cool
-military air it was impossible to disguise it. All the same she waited
-for him to ask the all-important question, but he was slow to do so.
-
-"Who's bought it?" he said at last.
-
-"Father's bought it." She did her best to speak quite casually, but she
-didn't succeed.
-
-
-
-
-XX
-
-
-It was a knife. Yet it had not dealt exactly the kind of blow that he
-had looked for. Even if the stab was softer, and of that at the moment
-he was not quite sure, undoubtedly there was poison in the wound. In
-a flash he saw that, somehow, it had strengthened her position and
-weakened his. "You never told me he'd bought the business." The tone
-was a confession of impotence.
-
-"He hasn't bought it."
-
-But, in face of the facts, the fine exterior and the large and
-expensive stock this was a quibble and it was too palpable. "How did
-you come by all that stuff in the window then?"
-
-"He's helping me to run it."
-
-"Helping you to run it!" His face was a picture of simple incredulity.
-
-"He paid up all we owed so that we could start fair. And he looks in
-every Monday morning and tells me what to buy and where to buy it."
-
-"Does he pay for it?"
-
-"He does." There was something like pride in her voice. "He pays cash.
-And I have to keep books--like I used to at the Duke of Wellington. Of
-course he's only lending the money. I pay him back at the end of the
-month when I balance the accounts."
-
-He was dumfounded by this precise statement. The hand of his mean,
-narrow father-in-law was not recognizable. Somehow it seemed to alter
-everything, but not at once was he able to turn his mind to the new and
-unexpected situation.
-
-One thing was clear, however; it would be vain to resent Josiah's
-interference. He had bought the property over their heads and he could
-do what he liked with his own. Again Melia had been left in debt and
-her husband knew well enough that unless some special providence had
-intervened she might not have been able to carry on. Exactly why Josiah
-had done as he had done neither his daughter nor his son-in-law could
-fathom. They hated to receive these belated favors, yet as things were
-there was no way of escaping them.
-
-A little reluctantly, yet with a feeling of intense relief, Bill took
-off his good khaki overcoat and hung it on the nail provided for the
-purpose on the curtained door. Melia toasted a pickelet at the clear
-fire, buttered it richly, set it in a dish in the fender to keep warm;
-then the kettle began to boil and she brewed the tea.
-
-As she did all this Bill noticed that there was a new air of alertness,
-of competence about her; there was a light in her eyes, a decision
-in her actions; she seemed to have more interest in life. And for
-himself, as he sat at the table with its clean cloth and shining knives
-and spoons and bright sugar bowl and she handed him his tea just as
-he liked it, with one lump of sugar and not too much milk, he felt
-something changing in him suddenly. In a way of speaking it was a kind
-of rebirth.
-
-They didn't talk much. Melia was not a talking sort, nor was he except
-when he had "had a drop," and he didn't get "drops" now. Besides, in
-any case, the army seemed to have taken anything superfluous in the way
-of talk out of him, as it did with most. But he was honestly glad to be
-back in the peaceful four walls of his home. And it was not certain,
-although Melia carefully refrained from hinting as much, that she was
-not honestly glad to see him there. At all events she got his slippers
-for him presently out of the boot cupboard; and then, unasked, she
-made a spill of paper for him and laid it on the table by his elbow, a
-sufficient intimation that he was expected to light his pipe.
-
-
-
-
-XXI
-
-
-They went to bed at a quarter to ten. For a time they talked and
-then Bill fell asleep. And he slept as perhaps he had never slept in
-that room in all the years of their married life. How good the old
-four-poster seemed! It was a family heirloom in which he had been born
-forty-one and a half years ago. Many a miserable, almost intolerable
-night had he passed in it, but this Christmas Eve in the course of ten
-minutes or so it was giving him one of the best sleeps he had ever
-known.
-
-He woke in pitch darkness. Melia was breathing placidly and regularly
-by his side. He didn't venture to move lest he should disturb her, and
-he lay motionless but strangely comfortable; somehow it had never given
-him such exquisite pleasure to lie in that old bed.
-
-Everything was very still; there was none of the intolerable fuss and
-clatter of barrack life at all hours of the day and night. It was so
-peaceful that he was just about to doze again when a distant clock
-began to strike. It was the familiar clock of Saint George's Church,
-along Mulcaster Road, a hundred yards or so away, and it told the hour
-of seven.
-
-Two or three minutes later bells began to ring. It was Christmas
-morning; they were proclaiming peace on earth and good will towards
-men. How rum they sounded! Yet as he lay motionless in that bed, with
-a slow succession of deeply harmonious breaths near by, he wished harm
-to no man, not even to the Boche. Peace on earth and good will towards
-men ... yes, and women! Then it was, just in that pulse of time, the
-inspiration came to him to make Christmas morning memorable.
-
-The idea was very simple. He would steal out of bed without harm to
-the slumbers of Melia, slip on his clothes in the dark, go downstairs,
-light the kitchen fire, boil the kettle and presently bring her a cup
-of tea. Never before had it occurred to him to pay her such a delicate
-attention, but this morning he appeared to have a new mind and a new
-heart; somehow, this morning he was seeing things with other eyes.
-
-Without disturbing her he was able to carry out his plan. But twenty
-minutes later when he returned to the room with a cup of tea on a small
-tray, Melia was awake and wondering what the time was.
-
-"Needn't get up yet," he said. "I've lit the fire. Happy Christmas to
-you!" Then he handed her the tea.
-
-She seemed much surprised and just for a moment a little embarrassed.
-But she drank the tea gratefully, yet wondering all the time what had
-made him bring it to her. Then she announced her intention of getting
-up, but he bade her lie quiet as it was Christmas morning and he was
-well able to cook the breakfast.
-
-Quite a pretty passage of arms developed between them on the subject,
-but in the end she prevailed in spite of his protests, and came
-downstairs to deal in person with the vital matter of the bacon and
-eggs.
-
-Somehow their half playful contention made a good beginning to the day.
-And, take it altogether, it was quite the best they had ever known in
-that ill-starred house. There had been times when week had followed
-week of such hostility that they had hardly exchanged a look or a
-word, times in fact of soul-destroying antipathy in which they almost
-loathed the sight of one another. But there was nothing of that now. So
-much had happened in three short months of separation that there were
-a hundred things to talk about; both of them seemed to be living in a
-different world.
-
-Their outlook on life had altered. Everything they did now had a
-purpose, a meaning; it was not merely a question of getting through a
-day that had neither reason nor rhyme. He was a soldier in a uniform,
-he felt and looked a man in it, he stood for something. She was proud,
-in a way she had never been proud, of having a husband in the army. It
-was her duty and her privilege to keep his home together against his
-return to civil life.
-
-Soon after breakfast they were visited by a second inspiration, but
-this time it came to Melia. Suppose they attended the eleven o'clock
-service at Saint George's Church? In their early married life they had
-gone there together once or twice, but for many years now when Melia
-went there on Sunday evenings she had invariably been alone.
-
-It may have been a desire to let the neighbors see how well his
-khaki suited him, or life in the army had aroused an odd craving for
-religion, or perhaps it was simply a wish to give pleasure to Melia; at
-any rate Bill fell in with the idea. She had just time to arrange with
-the lady next door, Mrs. Griggs by name, who had once been a cook in
-good service, to give an eye to the turkey which was set cooking in the
-oven, then to put on her best dress, not much of a best, it was true,
-but to have gone to church in any other would have been unthinkable,
-to put on her only decent hat and a sorely mended pair of black cotton
-gloves, and to get there on the stroke of eleven, just as the bells
-ceased and the choir were moving down to their stalls. Melia, at any
-rate, had seldom enjoyed a service so much as this one, and her friend
-the Reverend Mr. Bontine, who called to see her regularly once a
-quarter, preached the finest sermon she had ever heard in the course of
-long years of worship.
-
-For all that, it was not certain that Private Hollis was not bored
-a little by the Reverend Mr. Bontine. He could not help a yawn in
-the middle of the homily, but this may have been a concession to his
-length of days as a civilian when "he didn't hold with persons," but
-as Melia was too much absorbed to notice him, her sense of a manly and
-fruitful discourse was not marred; and she was able to enjoy the same
-happy oblivion of martial restiveness during the long prayer. Taking
-one consideration with another Private Hollis may be said to have borne
-extremely well an ordeal to which he had not submitted for many years;
-and at the end of the service as he came out of church he grew alive to
-the fact that in the sight of the congregation he was a person of far
-more consequence than he had ever been in his life.
-
-More than one pair of eyes, once hostile or aloof, were upon him and
-also upon Melia. People looked at him as if they would have been only
-too proud to know him, substantial people like Wilmers, the insurance
-agent, and Jenkinson the tailor; but the climax came as he stepped on
-to the flags of Mulcaster Road and no less a man than Mr. Blades, the
-druggist of Waterloo Square, took off his tall hat to Melia and said,
-"Happy Christmas to you, Mr. Hollis."
-
-A year ago that was an incident that simply could not have happened.
-But after all it was just one among many. He was an equal now with the
-best of his neighbors, no matter what their substance and standing.
-He was a man who counted. In the Blackhampton Battalion he was merely
-Private Hollis, and not much of a private at that, as many loud voiced
-and authoritative people made a point of telling him, but in civilian
-circles apparently the outlook was different.
-
-When they turned into Love Lane they were met by further evidence of
-the new status of W. Hollis Fruiterer. A flaming-haired youth in a
-green baize apron had been knocking in vain on the shuttered door of
-the shop. There was a parcel in his hand whose shape was familiar but
-not on that account the less intriguing.
-
-"Mester Munt's compliments--sir." It was against the tradition of
-the green baize apron to indulge the general public with promiscuous
-"sirs," but, in handing ceremoniously the parcel to Private Hollis,
-democracy in its purest form deferred a little to his martial aspect.
-
-Bill never felt less in need of his father-in-law's compliments than
-at that moment, but the abrupt departure of George the Barman somehow
-forced them upon him. All the same, as Private Hollis fitted the key
-into the shop door he wondered what the Old Swine was up to now.
-
-Divested of its trappings on the sitting room table the parcel turned
-out to be a handsome bottle of port wine. It would not have been human
-for William Hollis to remain impervious to this largesse from the
-famous cellar of the Duke of Wellington. And he knew by the screen of
-cobwebs that it was out of the sacred corner bin.
-
-Bill was puzzled. What had come over the Old Pig! However.... With
-the care of one who knew the worth of what he handled he put the royal
-visitor in the cupboard, among plebeian bottles of stout and beer, and
-then proceeded, chuckling rather grimly at certain thoughts, to help
-Melia "set the dinner."
-
-It was a modest feast, but when in the course of time he sat down to
-carve a roast turkey, a plump and proper young bird, flanked with
-sausages and chestnuts, he informed Melia "that he wouldn't give a
-thank you to dine with the King of England." She could not help smiling
-at this disloyal utterance, which so ill became his uniform, as she
-freely ladled out bread sauce, that purely Anglo-Saxon dainty, for
-which his affection amounted almost to a passion, and helped him hugely
-to potatoes and Brussels sprouts, so that it should be no fault of
-hers if he was unable to plead provocation for his lapse. Plum pudding
-followed. It was of the regulation Blackhampton pattern and Melia, no
-mean cook when she gave her mind to it, had given her mind to this one,
-so that it expressed her genius and the festive genius of her native
-city in a hearty time of cheer.
-
-At the end of the meal, in spite of the fact that he was told rather
-sternly "to set quiet," he insisted like a soldier and a sportsman
-in helping to clear the table and in bearing a manly but subordinate
-part in the washing up. And when the table had once more assumed the
-impersonal red cloth of its hours of leisure, a couple of wine glasses
-were produced, which, although polished twice a week, had not seen
-active service for fifteen years, and then William drew the cork of the
-cobwebbed bottle.
-
-"Not a drop for me, Bill."
-
-"You've got to have it, Mother."
-
-"No, Bill."
-
-"Yes. Fairation!" He gave one deep sniff at the glass he had measured
-already with a care half reverent, half comic. "By Gum, it's prime." In
-spite of protests he poured out another glass. "Fairation! Better drink
-the health, eh, of the Old Un as it's Christmas Day."
-
-They honored the Old Un discreetly, in a modest sip of a wine which of
-itself could not have denied him a claim to honor, and then with equal
-modesty they drank to each other.
-
-Melia then had an inspiration, though not subject to them as a rule,
-and due in this case, no doubt, to the juice of the grape. She procured
-a plate full of walnuts from beyond the curtained door and they
-entered on a further phase of discreet festivity. Bill insisted on
-cracking three nuts and peeling them for her with his own delicately
-accomplished fingers; and in the process he complimented her on the
-Christmas fare and hoped piously that "the Chaps had had half as good."
-
-Mention of the Chaps moved him for the first time to reminiscence. As
-was to be expected, the Blackhampton Battalion was one of the wonders
-of the world. To begin with, its members were nearly all gentlemen.
-All the nobs of the town under forty were tommies in the B.B. It was
-very remarkable that it should be so, but there the fact was. And it
-made men of his sort who liked to think a bit when they had the time
-to spare feel regular democratic when they saw real toffs like Lawyer
-Mossop's nephew, Marling the barrister, carting manure, or the son of
-Sir Reuben Jope on his knees scrubbing the floor of the sergeants' mess.
-
-To mix in such company was a rare opportunity for a man who knew how
-to use it. Melia had noted already that Bill had learned to express
-himself better, that his conversation was at a higher level and that it
-was full of new ideas. And these facts were never so palpable as when,
-slowly and solemnly, a furtive light of humor in his blue eyes, he went
-on to tell of his great Bloomer.
-
-It seemed that the cubicle next to his was occupied by a man named
-Stanning, and he had got to be rather pals with him. Stanning was a
-serious sort of cove with hair turning gray at the temples, but Private
-Hollis had been attracted to him because he was one of the right sort
-and because it was clear from his talk that he had thought and seen a
-bit. He was a good kind of man to talk to, a sympathetic sort of card,
-one of those who made you feel that you had things in common.
-
-Private Hollis gradually got so "thick" with Private Stanning that
-they began to discuss things in an intellectual way, politics one
-time, education another, so on and so on, until one evening they found
-themselves talking of Art. As Melia knew, Private Hollis had a feeling
-for Art. Many an hour had he spent in the City Museum, looking at its
-collection of famous pictures; and he told Private Stanning of the
-water color he had done of the Sharrow at Corfield Weir, inspired by
-the great work on the same subject of his celebrated namesake Stanning,
-R.A., which had been bought by the City Authorities for the fabulous
-sum of a thousand guineas....
-
-Over the walnuts and the wine Private Hollis began to chuckle hugely
-as his great Bloomer came back to his mind in all its entrancing
-details....
-
-P.H. When I first see the price mentioned in the _Evening Star_ I says
-to my Missus that's the way they chuck public money about. No picture
-was never painted, not a Hangelo nor even a Lord Leighton that was ever
-worth a thousand guineas. It's a fancy price.
-
-P.S. 'Tis in a way. A matter of sentiment, I suppose.
-
-P.H. Just what I said to the Missus. However, being a bit of a critic
-I went to examine that picture for myself. And would you believe it,
-Stanning--I'm not saying this to flatter you because the chap who done
-it has the same name as yours--when I see that picture it fair knocked
-me endways. You see I know every yard of Corfield Weir; in my time
-I've had more than one good fish out of it; and as soon as I set eyes
-on it, I said to myself, "Stanning R.A.'s a fisherman. He's chosen one
-of them gray days that's good for barbel." I give you my word, he'd got
-just the proper light coming out of the valley and stealing along the
-Sharrow. Only an artist and a fisherman could have done it.
-
-P.S. Did you ever get bream there?
-
-P.H. I should say so. And I've had trout in my time.
-
-P.S. Trout?
-
-P.H. I'm talking of twenty years back. But to resume. I see at a glance
-why the City Authorities had paid a thousand guineas for that picture.
-It was not because Stanning, R.A., was a local man; it was pure merit
-and I felt very glad it was so.
-
-P.S. Glad you thought so.
-
-P.H. You know, of course, that Stanning, R.A., is Blackhampton born?
-
-P.S. So I've heard.
-
-P.H. Born in that old house with the high-walled garden along Blue Bell
-Hill that was pulled down to widen the road.
-
-P.S. That so?
-
-P.H. By the way, Stanning, is he a relation of yours? Of course, it's a
-very common name in the City.
-
-P.S. Ye--es, I suppose he is in a way.
-
-P.H. That's something to be proud of. I'm not saying it to flatter you,
-but at this minute I'd rather be Stanning, R.A., than any one else in
-the wide world.
-
-Private Stanning laughed like a good one.
-
-P.H. Honest. I'm not talking out of the back of my neck. Stanning,
-R.A., for me. You can have all my share of the Kitcheners and the
-Joffres and the von Klucks. If I could be born again and born somebody
-as mattered I'd like to be Stanning, R.A. Why, what the hell are you
-grinning at?
-
-P.S. That's rheumatism. And if you'll only take it over, old son, you
-can have all the remainder of my interest in Stanning, R.A., as a going
-concern.
-
-P.H. What! do you mean to say----!
-
-"I told you, Mother," concluded Private Hollis in his port-wine-inspired
-narrative, "that he was going gray at the temples. And there he set
-like a himage at the foot of his shakedown all twisted with rheumatics,
-groaning like one o'clock. And then he began to laugh. Queer world,
-ain't it, what?"
-
-Melia, however, was one of those precise but rather immobile intellects
-with which her tight little native island is full to overflowing. "You
-don't mean to say, Bill, it was Stanning, R.A., himself?"
-
-"You bet your life it was." Private Hollis handed a peeled walnut, his
-masterpiece so far, across an expanse of red tablecloth. "One of the
-youngest R.A.'s on record, but a bit long in the tooth for the Army.
-And we're pals, I tell you. One of these days I'm going to take him
-barbel fishing at Gawsey's Pool. And he's given me a couple of lessons
-in drawing already. If only I'd begun sooner I think I might have done
-something."
-
-It was such an incredible story that Melia was fain to smile, but
-Private William Hollis, inspired by port wine and enthusiasm, lingered
-lovingly over his portrait of one who stood forth in his mind as the
-greatest man the city of Blackhampton had yet produced.
-
-
-
-
-XXII
-
-
-Forty-eight hours is not a long time even as time is reckoned in a
-world war, when the infinitely much can happen in a little space. Only
-one-fourth of that term, a meager twelve hours, was permitted to Russia
-by Germany in which to decide whether she should yield unconditionally
-to an unheard of demand, on pain of provoking that conflict, the end
-of which even some of the most penetrating minds in Blackhampton were
-hardly able to predict with certainty. So much may happen in a little
-while. Yet Private Hollis had just four times as long to re-establish
-terms of conjugal felicity with his wife Melia. In that period he
-kissed her twice.
-
-Whether that Christian practice would have continued as a regular thing
-is difficult to say. This was a special occasion and these were not
-demonstrative natures. Even in the heyday of their romance, when Love
-not being quite strong enough to turn the door handle, peered once or
-twice through the keyhole, yet without ever proving quite bold enough
-to come in and make himself at home on that childless hearth, they were
-too practical to acquire a permanent taste for that particular kind of
-nonsense.
-
-Still, it hardly does to dogmatize in time of war. For as the
-forty-eight hours went on, Melia seemed to grow more and more impressed
-by Private Hollis, his martial bearing. Or it may have been the
-uniform. Why is it that any kind of uniform has such a fatal attraction
-for the ladies?
-
-In this case, at any rate, it seemed to make a remarkable difference.
-There is no doubt it suited Bill. He looked so much more a man in it;
-his chest was bigger, his back was straighter, his hair was shorter,
-his chin was cleaner and the ragged mustache that used to be all over
-his face was now refined to the extreme point of military elegance.
-Really he came much nearer to the ideal of manhood there had been in
-Melia's mind when she had first married him. Besides he was so much
-surer of himself, his voice was deeper, his bearing more authoritative,
-his talk was salted with infinitely more knowledge and wisdom.
-
-When the time came for Private Hollis to return to his regiment, the
-boy who delivered the vegetables was left in charge of the shop,
-while Melia in Sunday attire went to see her man off at the Central
-Station. It was a compliment he had hardly looked for; all the same it
-was appreciated. Somehow it made a difference. Other wives, mothers,
-sisters, sweethearts were thick on the ground for a similar purpose,
-but Private Hollis was of opinion that Melia with her serious face and
-a figure you couldn't call stout and in a hat she had trimmed herself
-with black and white wings was somehow able to hold her own with the
-best of them.
-
-Moreover they parted at the carriage door as if they meant something
-to each other now. It was a public place but he kissed her solemnly
-and she said, "You'll write me a bit oftener, Bill, won't you?" in the
-manner of the long ago. Then the train began to move, he waved a hand
-and she waved hers; and each trundled back alone to a hard life with
-its many duties, yet somehow, in a subtle way, the stronger and the
-happier for that brief interregnum.
-
-Life had altered for them both in that short time. They saw each other
-with new eyes or perhaps with old eyes reawakened. Sixteen years had
-rubbed so much of the bloom off their romance that it was a miracle
-almost that they were able to renew it. Yet the delicate process was
-only just beginning. It was very odd, but the trite and difficult
-business of existence was colored now continually with new thoughts
-about each other. Neither had ever been a great hand at writing
-letters, but Bill suddenly burgeoned forth into four closely written
-pages weekly, and Melia, flattered but not to be outdone, burst out in
-equal volume.
-
-His letters were really very interesting indeed and so were hers,
-although of course in an entirely different way. She was kept abreast
-of the military situation and the latest Service gossip, with spicy
-yarns of the Toffs with whom he rubbed shoulders as an equal in the
-B.B., not omitting the details of an ever-ripening friendship with
-Private Stanning, who, however, was soon to acquire the rank of a full
-corporal. Melia, of course, had not the advantage of this range of
-information or contiguity to high affairs, nor did her letters sparkle
-with soldierly flashes of wit and audacity, but week by week they gave
-a conscientious account of the state of the business, of sales and
-purchases, of current prices and money outstanding, all in the manner
-of a careful bookkeeper, who, now she had been put on her mettle, was
-able and willing to show that the root of the matter was in her.
-
-Bill, in consequence, had to own that the business in all its luckless
-history had never been so flourishing. They didn't like admitting it,
-but in their hearts they knew that this new prosperity was directly
-due to "the damned interference" (military phrase) of the august
-proprietor of the Duke of Wellington. Some men are hoo-doos, they are
-born under the wrong set of planets; whatever they do or refrain from
-doing turns out equally unwise. W. Hollis Fruiterer had always been one
-of that kind. If he bought a barrel of Ribstone Pippins they went bad
-before he could sell them, if he bought William pears they refused to
-ripen, if he bought peas or runner beans he would have done better with
-gooseberries or tomatoes; anything he stocked in profitable quantities
-was bound to be left on his hands. But the lord of Strathfieldsaye was
-another kind of man altogether. He simply couldn't do wrong when it
-came to a question of barter. Up to a point a matter of judgment, no
-doubt, but "judgment" does not altogether explain it. There is a subtle
-something, over and beyond all mundane wisdom, that confers upon some
-men the Midas touch. Everything they handle turns to gold. Josiah Munt
-was notoriously one of that kind.
-
-Certainly from the day he touched the moribund business of W. Hollis
-Fruiterer with his magic wand, it took a remarkable turn for the
-better. Mr. Munt's own explanation of the phenomenon was that for the
-first time in its history it was run on sound business lines. That had
-something to do with the mystery of course; not only was Josiah a man
-of method and foresight, he was also a man of capital. Money makes
-money all the world over; and of that fact Josiah's ever-growing store
-was a shining proof.
-
-Not until the middle of the summer did Bill get leave again. And then
-there was a special reason for it. The Battalion had been ordered to
-France. That was an epic Saturday evening in July when he came home
-with full kit, brown as a bean, hard as a nail, in rare fighting trim.
-Time was his own until the Thursday following, when he had to go to
-Southampton to join the Chaps.
-
-Martial his bearing at Christmas, but it was nothing to what it was
-now. There seemed to be a consciousness of power about him. For one
-thing he was wearing the stripe of a lance corporal. Then, too, he was
-a small man, and, as biologists know, small men always have a knack of
-looking bigger than they are really. Physically speaking, great men are
-generally on the small side, perhaps for the reason that they have more
-vitality. Certainly Corporal Hollis, on the eve of his Odyssey, looked
-more important than the neighbors ever thought possible. Poor Melia
-began to wonder if she would be able to live up to him.
-
-Melia had never been to London and when Bill proposed that she should
-accompany him to the metropolis and see him off from Waterloo the
-suggestion came as quite a shock to a conservative nature. It meant
-almost as much as a journey to the middle of Africa or the wilds of the
-Caucasus to more traveled people. She was not easily fluttered; hers
-was a mind of the slow-moving sort, but it was only after a night and a
-day, fraught with grave questionings, that she finally consented to do
-so.
-
-For one thing the shop would have to close for twenty-four hours,
-at least; besides, and a more vital matter, even her best dress was
-nothing like fashionable enough for London, the capital city of the
-empire. Both these objections were promptly overruled. An obliging
-neighbor--during the last few months the neighbors had proved
-wonderfully obliging--consented to take charge of the shop in Melia's
-absence; while at the psychological moment a paragraph appeared in the
-_Evening Star_ saying that as the Best people were making a point of
-wearing old clothes, any attempt at fashion in war time was bad taste.
-This interesting fact left so little for further discussion that at a
-quarter past nine on the morning of an ever-memorable Wednesday they
-steamed out of Blackhampton Central Station, London bound.
-
-It was the beginning of a day such as Melia had never known. Looking
-back upon it afterwards, and she was to look back upon it many times
-in the days to follow, she felt it would have been impossible to
-surpass it in sheer human interest. Even the journey to such a place as
-London was thrilling to one whose travels by train had been confined
-to half a dozen visits to Duckingfield, two to Matlock Bath and one to
-Blackpool at the age of seven, nice places yet relatively unimportant
-in comparison with the capital city of the British Empire.
-
-As the train did not leave for Southampton until well on in the evening
-they had about eight hours in which to see the sights. And so much
-happened in those eight hours that they made a landmark in their lives.
-Indeed they began with so signal an event that the muse of history
-peremptorily demands a past chapter in which to relate it.
-
-
-
-
-XXIII
-
-
-As soon as he arrived in the metropolis, Corporal Hollis with Melia
-rather nervously gripping his arm stepped boldly into the Euston Road
-to have a look at London. Almost the first thing he saw was a Canteen,
-a token that at once reminded him that his rifle and kit were heavy,
-that the wife and he had breakfasted rather early and rather hurriedly
-and that nothing at that moment could hope to compare with a couple of
-ham sandwiches and a cup of coffee.
-
-When the question was put to Melia she was inclined to think so too,
-although far too bewildered by the mighty flux around her to give any
-special thought to the matter. However very wisely, nay providentially,
-as it turned out, after a moment's hesitation they decided to cross
-the road and follow the promptings of nature. As they passed through
-the inviting doors of the Canteen there was nothing to tell them that
-anything particular was going to happen, yet perhaps they ought to
-have remembered that this was London where the Particular is always
-happening.
-
-They had not to fight their way through a crowd in order to get in
-or anything of that sort. Nor were people walking on one another's
-heads when they did get in. There was plenty of room for all. Full
-privates were in the majority, but the non-commissioned ranks were also
-represented, among whom was a Scotsman who had risen to be a sergeant.
-But Corporal Hollis appeared to be the only warrior who had brought
-his lawful wedded missus. It was a breach of the rules for one thing,
-but there was any amount of room, and he managed to stow her away in a
-quiet corner where they could have a table to themselves; and then he
-moved across to a cubbyhole where a nice fatherly old sportsman with
-side whiskers and brown spats relieved him of his rifle and kit and
-gave him a card with a number in exchange. Then the gallant Corporal, a
-composite of well-bred diffidence and martial mien, sauntered up to the
-counter at the end of the room where a Real Smart Piece in a mob cap
-and jumper gave him the smile interrogative. After a moment's survey of
-the good things around him, he magnificently went the limit. The limit
-was ninepence: to wit, two fried eggs, a rasher of bacon, bread and
-butter and a cup of tea; in this case ditto repeato, once for himself,
-once for Melia.
-
-The Corporal was by no means sure that the R.S.P. would stand for a
-Twicer but she was one of the noble breed that prefers to use common
-sense rather than raise obstacles. After one arch glance in the
-direction of Melia she booked the order without demur.
-
-In the process of time the order was executed and they set to upon
-this second breakfast with a breadth of style which almost raised it to
-the dignity of luncheon. By the time they were through it was half-past
-midday already, and they were discussing this fact and its bearing on
-the general program when the great Event began to happen.
-
-It came about unobtrusively, in quite a casual way. Neither the
-Corporal nor his lady paid much attention at first, but of a sudden
-the nice fatherly old sportsman who had relieved the former of his
-rifle and kit came out of his cubbyhole and a dashing trio of R.S.P.'s
-emerged from a mysterious region at the back of beyond, proving
-thereby that the counter had no monopoly of these luxuries, and the
-Scotch sergeant moved a pace or two nearer the door, where the London
-daylight seemed a bit better in quality, and then Bill's R.S.P., who
-was absolutely the pick of the bunch, although such comparisons are
-invariably as idle as they are to be deplored, was heard to use a word
-that appeared to rhyme with Mother.
-
-Of course it could not have been Bother or any word like it. And
-whatever it may have been, was not, at that moment, as far as the
-Corporal and his lady were concerned, of the slightest importance. To
-them it meant nothing. It meant less than nothing. For a startling
-rumor was afoot....
-
-The Queen was coming.
-
-William was a military man and fully determined to bear himself with
-the coolness of one on parade, but his air of stoicism was but a
-poor cloak to his feelings. As for Melia, if not exactly _flustered_,
-she was excited more than a little. Still in this epic moment it was
-a strengthening thought that she had had that yard and a half of new
-ribbon put on her hat.
-
-That was an instance of subconscious but prophetic foresight. There was
-nothing to tell her that the first lady in the land would nip across
-from Buckingham Palace as soon as she heard that Bill was in London.
-It was hardly to have been expected. In the first place it was truly
-remarkable that she should so soon have heard of his arrival. And of
-course it was by no means certain that this casual and informal visit
-of hers was inspired by William. In fact if you came to think of it----
-
-But there was really no time to weigh the pros and the cons of what
-after all was a superfluous inquiry, for a commotion had arisen already
-beyond the farther door. And even at this late moment, and in spite of
-a general stiffening of the phalanx of R.S.P.'s and other details, and
-the stately advance of the nice old warrior through the swing doors
-into the Euston Road, even then Corporal Hollis, with true military
-skepticism, was not sure that it was not an Oaks.
-
-However the question was soon settled. The commotion increased, the
-throng of important looking people surprisingly grew, and in the
-midst of it appeared a lady whom William and Melia would have known
-anywhere. She was remarkably like her portraits except that the reality
-surpassed them. There was a great deal of bowing and walking backwards
-and the serried rows of R.S.P.'s made curtsys, and then all ranks stood
-up and removed their hats. William and Melia stood up too, but only
-William doffed his helmet.
-
-It was the Scotsman who claimed the first share of the august
-visitor's notice. Her eye lit at once on this son of Caledonia, who
-unconsciously, by sheer force of climate, began to tower above all
-the rest, returning answer for question with inimitable coolness and
-mastery. All the Saxons present were lost in envy, but they were fain
-to acquiesce in the stern truth that nature has made it impossible to
-keep back a Scotsman. In spite of top hats and swallow-tails it was
-clear at a glance that he was the best man there.
-
-All the same the august visitor, helped by a simple and friendly lady
-who accompanied her, contrived to distribute her favors impartially.
-The son of Caledonia was so compelling that it would have been a
-pleasure to talk to him for an hour, but duty and justice forbade, and
-she found a smile and a word for humbler mortals. Among these, and last
-of all in her tour of the large room were Bill and Melia.
-
-Corporal Hollis could not be expected to display the entrain of a
-sergeant of the Black Watch. Besides he had yet to cross the water
-whereas Caledonia's son was a hero of Mons and the Marne. But the
-gallant corporal did his regiment no discredit in that great moment,
-likewise his wife Melia, nor famed Blackhampton, his fair natal city.
-
-
-
-
-XXIV
-
-
-When about twenty minutes later William and Melia, haloed with history,
-emerged from the precincts of the Canteen, and as they did so treading,
-in a manner of speaking, the circumambient air, they were at once
-confronted by the spectacle of Bus 49 next the adjacent curb. And Bus
-49, according to its own account of the matter, was going amongst other
-places to Piccadilly Circus.
-
-It was the first visit of the Corporal to the metropolis, but in his
-mind was lurking the sure knowledge that Piccadilly Circus was the
-exact and indubitable center thereof; and by an association of ideas,
-he also seemed to remember that Piccadilly Circus was where the King
-lived. Such being the case, the apparition at that moment of Bus 49 was
-about as providential as anything could have been.
-
-It was the work of an instant to get aboard the gracious engine, so
-swift the workings of the human mind in those dynamic moments when Fate
-itself appears, as the sailors say, to stand by to go about. Moreover
-the conductor had politely informed the Corporal that there was room
-for two on the top.
-
-That was a golden journey, a kind of voyage to silken Samarcand and
-cedared Lebanon, allowing of course for reduction according to scale.
-So miraculously were their hearts attuned to venturing, that for one
-rapt hour they drank deep of poetry and romance this glorious midday of
-July.
-
-Bus 49 knew its business thoroughly, no bus better. Instead of turning
-pretty sharp to the left into that complacent purlieu Portland Place,
-as a bus of less experience might have done in order to follow the line
-of flight of some mythical crow or other, it chose to go on and on,
-past Madame Tussaud's, the Hotel Great Central, and then by a series
-of minor but hardly less historic landmarks along Edgware Road to the
-Marble Arch, thence via Park Lane to Hyde Park Corner.
-
-No doubt Bus 49 had ideas. The ordinary machine of commerce would have
-got from Euston to Piccadilly Circus in two shakes of a duck's tail.
-Not so this accomplished metropolitan, this gorgeous midday of July.
-From Hyde Park Corner it proceeded to Victoria, thence via the Army
-and Navy Stores to the Houses of Parliament, down Whitehall, past the
-lions and Horatio, Viscount Nelson, past the Crédit Lyonnais, up the
-Haymarket and so at last to Swan and Edgar's corner, where William and
-Melia dismounted, thrilled as never before in all their lives.
-
-Piccadilly Circus, all the same, was a shade disappointing. It was not
-quite so grand as they expected. The Criterion was just opposite, but
-they looked in vain for the King's residence. There did not appear to
-be a sign of that. Bill, however, noticed a policeman, and decided to
-make inquiries.
-
-"I want Buckingham Palace, please," said the wearer of the King's
-uniform.
-
-Constable X 20, an intelligent officer, told the gallant corporal to
-walk along Piccadilly, to which famous thoroughfare he pointed with
-professional majesty, to turn down the street of Saint James, to keep
-right on until he got to the bottom and then to ask again.
-
-The constable was thanked for his lucidity and William and Melia
-proceeded according to instructions. Along Piccadilly itself their
-progress was a triumph. For, as Melia was quick to observe, all the
-best people saluted Bill. Of course they could tell by the stripe on
-his sleeve that he had been made a corporal, but such open, public
-and official recognition of his merit was intensely gratifying.
-Brass-hatted, beribboned, extraordinarily distinguished looking
-warriors were as punctilious as could be in saluting Bill. Those
-placed less highly, the rank and file, the common herd, paid him less
-attention, but what were these in the scale of an infinitely larger
-and nobler tribute? By the time William and Melia turned down Saint
-James's street, had an observant visitor from Mars had the privilege of
-walking behind them he would have been bound to conclude that the most
-important man in the Empire was Corporal Hollis.
-
-He would not have been alone in that feeling for Melia was in a
-position to share it with him. In fact by the time they had traversed
-the historic thoroughfare and had reached Pall Mall the feeling
-dominated her mind. On every hand the great ones of the earth mustered
-thicker and thicker, but they kept on saluting Bill. Such a reception
-was hardly to have been expected at the center of all things, yet in
-those thrilling moments so proud was Melia of her man that it did not
-seem very surprising after all.
-
-They crossed the road to the fine and ancient building with the clock
-on it, and after making quite sure that the King didn't live there--a
-pardonable delusion under which for a moment they had labored--they
-proceeded past it, leaving Marlborough House on the port bow, and then
-suddenly, as they came into the Mall, they caught a first glimpse of
-that which they were out for to see.
-
-Converging slowly upon the King's residence Melia's courage began to
-fail.
-
-It was a very warm day for one thing. And the sentry in his box, not to
-mention his brethren marching up and down in front of the railings, may
-have daunted her. Moreover, the Palace itself was an exceeding stately
-pile. Besides, she had seen the Queen already. And Bill had passed the
-time of day with her. Thus it was, gazing in silent awe through those
-stern railings across that noble courtyard, Melia suddenly made up her
-mind.
-
-"No, Bill, I don't think I'll see the King to-day--not in this dress."
-
-Corporal Hollis looked solemnly at the dress in question and then at
-its wearer. "It's as _you_ like, you know, Mother," he said.
-
-
-
-
-XXV
-
-
-After that they walked about for a while, but the day was terribly
-hot, and all too soon the process of seeing London on foot amid the
-dust of a torrid July began to lose its charm for Melia. Besides, had
-they not seen the best of London already? Piccadilly Circus, it was
-true, was a washout; but they had seen Buckingham Palace, the Houses
-of Parliament, Westminster Abbey, Trafalgar Square, and the outside of
-Madame Tussaud's. Even in such a place as London what else was there to
-compare with these glories?
-
-Such skepticism, however, was not according to the book, and the
-Special Providence which had been detailed to look after them on this
-entrancing day was soon able to bring that fact to their notice. For
-when they had come to the quadriga at the southwestern extremity of
-the Green Park, an equestrian piece which in the opinion of Corporal
-Hollis would have done no discredit to the recognized masterpieces in
-Blackhampton's famous gallery, and they had sincerely admired it and
-the Corporal had placed his judgment on record, lo! beyond the arch, a
-short stone's throw away, a certain Bus, 26 by name, the exact replica
-of Bus 49, that immortal machine, was miraculously awaiting them.
-
-Bus 26 was going to the Zoölogical Gardens. And the highly efficient
-Special Providence who had the arrangements in hand had contrived to
-book two places on the top. That is to say its conductor informed the
-Corporal with an indulgent smile that there was just room outside for
-one and a little one. Whether the conductor would have extended the
-same accommodating politeness to a mere civilian belongs to the region
-of conjecture, but room was undoubtedly found for the Corporal's lady,
-and by taking upon his knee a future Wellington--under the shadow of
-whose effigy the pleasing incident occurred--in the person of a Boy
-Scout in full panoply of war, the gallant Corporal contrived to make
-room for himself also.
-
-At the Zoölogical Gardens they admired George, although rather glad to
-find that he was only a distant relation. They pitied the polar bears,
-they shuddered at the pythons, the parrots charmed them, the larger
-carnivora impressed them deeply! and then the Corporal looked at his
-watch, found it was a quarter to four and promptly ordered an ample
-repast for two persons.
-
-The Genie in attendance made no bones at all about finding a small
-private table for them, beneath the shade of a friendly deodar which
-gave a touch of the Orient to the northwestern postal district and
-there they sat for one sweet and memorable hour. Perhaps it was the
-sweetest, most memorable hour that life so far had given them. She
-admired this man of hers in a way she had long ceased expecting to
-admire him; she was proud of him, she was grateful to him for the
-great sacrifice he was making. And when the inner Corporal had been
-comforted, a crude fellow who has to be humored even in moments of
-feeling, and he had lit a Blackhampton Straight Cut, a famous sedative
-known from Bond Street to Bagdad, he took the hand of the honest woman
-opposite.
-
-Somehow he was glad to think that she belonged to him. The rather pale
-face, the careworn eyes, the tired smile were all he had to nerve him
-for the task ahead. These his only talisman in this grim hour. Yet, a
-true knight, he asked no more. She was his, a homely thing but a good
-and faithful one, who had once believed in him, who had come to believe
-in him again. He was able to recall the sacrifices she had made for
-him, for her faith in him, for her vision of him. As he looked across
-at her he felt content to bear the gauge of this honest, doggedly
-courageous woman who had helped to buckle on his armor. He must see
-that he didn't disgrace her.
-
-There was not much to say to one another. At the best of times they
-were seldom articulate. But she was able to tell him that she would be
-very lonely without him. And she made him promise solemnly to do his
-best to come back to her safely.
-
-"You mean it?" He knew she meant it, but he allowed himself the luxury
-of embarrassing her. There was a subtle pleasure in it, even if it was
-not quite fair.
-
-"You know I do, Bill. I'll be that lonely."
-
-Poor old girl! Of course she would be lonely. It made him sigh a little
-when he thought how lonely she would be. He looked at her with a rather
-queer softness in his eyes. Their marriage seemed to have brought them
-no luck in anything. A time there had been, a time less than a year
-ago, when he had felt very thankful that there had been no children to
-hasten their steady, hopeless drift downhill. Now, however, it was a
-different story. Poor Melia! Her hand responded to the pressure of his
-fingers; and a large tear crept slowly into eyes that had known them
-perhaps too seldom.
-
-"Never mind, Mother," he said softly. "I mean to come back."
-
-"Yes, Bill." The words had a curious intensity. "I mean you to.
-I've set my mind on it. And if you really set your mind on a thing
-happening----"
-
-He loved the spirit in her, even if he felt obliged to touch wood as a
-concession to the manes of wisdom. It didn't do to boast in times like
-these.
-
-Presently they noticed that the heat was less. Bill looked again at
-his watch and then they realized that the hour of parting had drawn
-much nearer. Reluctantly they got up and left the gardens, so putting
-an end to an hour of life they would never forget. Then arm in arm
-they walked to Euston which was not far off, where the Corporal
-retrieved his kit from the Canteen and exchanged a valedictory smile
-with a R.S.P., although he didn't feel like smiling. Thence by Tube
-to Waterloo. It was their first experience of this medium of travel.
-Even in Blackhampton, in so many ways the home of modernity, Tubes were
-unknown; they seemed exclusively, rather bewilderingly, metropolitan.
-
-The attendant Genie had to be watchful indeed to prevent their going
-all round London en route from Euston to Waterloo, but it was so
-alive to its duties that they were only once baffled and then but
-temporarily. Thus in the end they found themselves on a seat on
-Platform Six with a full hour to wait for the Southampton train.
-
-She left him at the carriage door, a few minutes before he was due out
-on his own grim journey, so that she might have plenty of time to catch
-the train for the north. Minute instructions had to be given to enable
-her to do this, for London is a bewildering maze to those not up to its
-ways. But the Corporal's lady had a typical Blackhampton head, a thing
-cool, resolute, hardy in the presence of any severe demand upon it; and
-he was quite sure, and she was quite sure, that she would be able to
-catch the 8:55 from Euston, no matter what traps were laid for her.
-
-It was a very simple good-by, but yet they were torn by it in a way
-they had hardly expected. She with her worn face and tired eyes was all
-there was to hold him to life--she and a terrible, impersonal sense
-of duty which seemed to frighten him almost. As he watched the drab
-figure disappear among the crowd on the long platform he couldn't help
-wondering....
-
-But it was no use wondering. He must set his teeth and get his head
-down and try to stick it no matter what the dark fates had in store.
-
-
-
-
-XXVI
-
-
-The Corporal even at his best was not a great hand at writing letters.
-And the series he wrote from France did not flatter his powers. Really
-they told hardly anything and that which they did tell might have
-been far more vividly rendered. Still in the eyes of Melia they were
-precious; and they did something to soften months of loneliness and
-toil.
-
-One other gleam there was in that sore time; a fitful one, no doubt,
-and the ray it cast upon her life so dubious, that, all things
-considered, it meant small comfort. Yet, perhaps, it may have been
-wrong not to accept this doubtful boon more gratefully.
-
-One morning, about a fortnight after Bill's departure for France, her
-father paid one of his periodical visits to Love Lane. Since W. Hollis
-Fruiterer had taken a turn for the better he was content with a monthly
-survey instead of a weekly one in order to assure himself that the
-enterprise was shipshape and its affairs in order.
-
-Melia's reception of her father was invariably cool. She had a proud,
-unyielding nature, and Josiah's tardy concession to the sternness of
-the times even if it had thawed the ice a little had not really melted
-it. Neither was quite at ease in the presence of the other; in both
-was a smoldering resentment and the spirit of unforgiveness.
-
-The books, on inspection, proved to be in very fair order. They were
-carefully and neatly kept and, in comparison with the state of affairs
-before a business man came on the scene to direct them, they showed a
-refreshing change for the better. The accounts had been made up to the
-half year. And as a result of eight months trading under new conditions
-there was a clear profit of forty-five pounds after a full allowance
-for expenses.
-
-Josiah expressed himself well satisfied. In common with the great
-majority of his race, material success was the shrine at which he
-worshiped. Success in this case, moreover, was doubly gratifying; it
-lent point to his own foresight and judgment and it exhibited a latent
-capacity in his eldest daughter. Time alone would be able to disperse
-the bitterness he cherished against her in his heart, but it did him
-good to feel that she was not wholly a fool and that in some quite
-important particulars she was a chip of the old block.
-
-He congratulated her solemnly in the manner of a Chairman of Directors
-addressing a General Manager and hoped she would go on as she had
-begun. Resentful as she still was, she was secretly flattered by the
-compliment; and she hastened to offer to repay the sum he had advanced
-for the satisfaction of the former creditors.
-
-"Let it stand over," he said, "until your position's a bit firmer."
-
-She insisted, but he was not to be shaken; and then, as was his way
-when at a loss for an argument, he gave the contest of wills a new,
-unexpected turn. "Doing anything particular Sunday afternoon?"
-
-No, she was not doing a thing particular.
-
-"Better come up home and have a cup of tea with us." Then in a tone
-less impersonal: "Your mother would like to see you."
-
-The blood rushed over Melia's face. At first she feigned not to hear,
-but that did not help her. Dignity had many demands to make, but the
-brusque insistence of this father of hers seemed to cut away the ground
-on which it stood.
-
-"Say what time and I'll send the car for you."
-
-The tone was so final that anything she could raise in the way of
-protest seemed weakly ridiculous. But the car for _her_! She didn't
-want the car and she mustered force enough to say so.
-
-"Might as well have it. Doing nothing Sunday. Save you a climb up the
-hill this hot weather."
-
-Of one thing, however, she was quite sure. She didn't want the car.
-This recent and remarkable expression of her father's wealth and
-ever-growing social importance had taken the form of a superb motor
-and a smart lady chauffeur in the neatest of green liveries which
-already she had happened to see on two occasions in Waterloo Square.
-No, such a vehicle was not for her; and she contrived to say so with
-the bluntness demanded by the circumstances, yet tempered a little by a
-certain regard for anything her father might be able to muster in the
-way of feelings.
-
-"Might as well make use of it," he said. "Eating its head off Sunday
-afternoon."
-
-But she remained quite firm. The car was not for her.
-
-"Well, it's there for you if you want it." His air was majestic.
-"Better pay that money into the bank. And I shall tell your mother to
-expect you Sunday tea time."
-
-It was left at that. He had gained both his points. The third was
-subsidiary; it didn't matter. All the same it was like Josiah to raise
-it as a cover for those that did.
-
-
-
-
-XXVII
-
-
-Melia was frankly annoyed with herself for not having put up a better
-resistance. The sight of her father strutting down the street with
-the honors of war upon him was a little too much for her. He had been
-guilty of sixteen years of tyrannical cruelty and she was unable to
-forgive. In those sixteen years she had suffered bitterly and her
-stubborn nature had great powers of resentment.
-
-Who was he that he should walk down Love Lane not merely as if he owned
-it--in sober truth he now owned half--but also the souls of the people
-who lived there? She could not help resenting that invincible flare,
-that overweening success, particularly when she compared it with the
-fecklessness of the man she had so imprudently married. After all, she
-was the first-born of this vain image and she knew his shortcomings
-better than he knew them himself. He had had more than his share of
-luck. No matter what the world might think of him, however fortune
-might treat him, he was not worthy of the position he had come to
-occupy.
-
-As soon as the ponderous broadcloth back had turned the corner of Love
-Lane and was lost in that strong-moving stream, Mulcaster Road, she
-made up her mind that she would not go up to tea on Sunday afternoon.
-It was not that he really cared whether she went or not; had he done so
-he would have asked her sooner. Maybe his conscience was pricking him
-a bit, but he was not one to be much troubled in that way. In any case
-let it hurt him--so much the better if it did. This was a matter in
-which she would like him to be hurt as he had never been hurt before.
-
-Here again, however, her father had an unfair advantage. If she stayed
-away on Sunday she might punish him a little--and even that was
-doubtful--but she would certainly punish her mother far more. And she
-had not the slightest wish to do that. She was sorry for her mother,
-whose sins of omission sprang from weakness of character. Nature had
-placed her in a very different category. She had fought this tyrant as
-hard as it was in her to fight any one, but she was one of nature's
-underlings whose lot was always to be trampled on.
-
-Alas, if Melia didn't turn up on Sunday it was her mother who would
-suffer. And it was a matter in which she had suffered too much already.
-Melia had no particular affection now remaining for her mother; she
-even despised her for being so poor a creature, but at least her only
-crime was weakness and it was hardly fair that she should endure more
-than was necessary. Melia's was rather a masculine nature in some ways;
-at any rate her father and she had one trait in common. They had a
-sense of justice. Hence she was now on the horns of a dilemma.
-
-It was not until Sunday itself, after morning service at Saint
-George's, that the decision was finally made. And then fortified by
-Mr. Bontine, a clergyman for whom Melia had a regard, she decided much
-against her inclination to go up to The Rise in the afternoon. It was
-a reluctant decision, made in soreness of heart; the only satisfaction
-to be got out of it would arise from the dubious process which the
-reverend gentleman described as "conquest of self."
-
-She set out rather later than she meant to, in a decidedly heavy mood.
-And it was not made lighter by the fact that the afternoon was sultry
-with the promise of thunder, and that the long and tedious climb to
-The Rise had to be made without the help of the tram on which she had
-counted. Long before the trams from the Market Place had reached the
-end of Love Lane they were full to overflowing, as she ought to have
-known they would be on a fine Sunday afternoon in the middle of the
-summer. In the process of painfully mounting the stuffy length of mean
-streets to achieve the space and grandeur of The Rise she grew vexed
-and hot. When at last she reached the famous eminence she was far
-indeed from the frame of mind proper to the paying of a call in its
-exclusive society. But it served her right. She should have stayed at
-home, or at least have allowed the motor to be sent for her.
-
-As it was, it was nearly five o'clock when, limp and fagged, she
-came at last in view of the many-windowed, much-gabled elevation of
-Strathfieldsaye. In spite of herself the sight of it made her feel
-nervous. It was the home of her father and mother, but its note
-of grandeur gave her a cruel sense of her own inadequacy. At the
-brilliantly painted gate she lingered a moment. Courage was called for
-to walk up the broad gravel path as far as the porch with its fine oak
-door studded with brass nails.
-
-At last, however, she went up and rang the bell. An extremely grand
-parlor maid received her almost scornfully, and led her across
-a slippery but superb entrance hall which was disconcertingly
-magnificent. It was hard to grasp at that moment that such an interior
-was the creation of her commonplace parents, harder still to believe
-that this servant whose clothes and manners were superior to her own
-was at their beck and call.
-
-However, she would go through the ordeal now she had got so far. But
-this afternoon luck was heavily against her. The ordeal proved to be
-more severe than even her gloomiest moments had foreshadowed. She was
-ushered just as she was, in her shabby hat and much mended gloves,
-straight into the drawing-room into the midst of company. And the
-company was of the kind she would have given much to avoid.
-
-She had hoped that she might find her mother alone, or at the worst,
-drinking tea with her father. Instead, the first person she saw was
-the insufferable Gertrude Preston, that mass of airs and graces which
-always enabled their wearer to stand out in Melia's mind as all that
-a woman ought not to be. And as if the sight of Gertrude was not
-sufficiently chilling and embarrassing, the second person she realized
-as being present was her own stuck-up sister Ethel, invariably known
-in the family as Mrs. Doctor Cockburn. She was accompanied, however,
-by her two children, little peacocks of six and seven, spoiled fluffy
-masses of pink ribbons and conceit.
-
-Last of all was her mother. She was always last in any assembly.
-Somehow she never seemed to count. In the old days even in her own
-home she could always be talked down, or put out of countenance or
-elbowed to the wall; and now, after the flight of years, in these grand
-surroundings, she had not altered in the least. She still had the eyes
-of a rabbit and a fat hand that wobbled; and on Melia's entrance into
-the room Gerty and Ethel at once took the lead of her in the way they
-had always taken it.
-
-"Why, I do declare!" Gerty rose at once with cleverly simulated
-surprise tempered by a certain stock brand of archness, kept always on
-tap, and unfailingly effective in moments of sudden crisis or emotional
-tension. "How are you, Amelia?" She would have liked to offer her
-cheek, but the look in Amelia's eyes forbade her risking it. Therefore,
-a hand had to suffice, an elegant hand, but a wary one which met with
-scant ceremony.
-
-Ethel, Mrs. Doctor Cockburn, also rose, but not immediately. "Glad to
-see you, Amelia."
-
-Melia knew it was a lie on Ethel's part, and had she had a little more
-self-possession might have been moved to say so.
-
-The three daughters of Mr. Josiah Munt marked three stages in his
-meteoric career. Melia, the eldest, was the child of the primitive
-era. Compared with her sisters she was almost a savage. Between her
-and Ethel had been a boy, Josiah, whose birth had nearly killed Maria
-and who had died untimely in his babyhood. She was not allowed in
-consequence to bear any more children for ten years, and Ethel was the
-natural fruit of the interregnum. Ethel was generally allowed to be
-the masterpiece of the family. Five years after her had come Sally who
-perhaps in point of time and opportunity should have put out the light
-even of Ethel; but in her case it seemed the blessed word progress had
-moved a little too fast. Sally, as the world knew only too well, was
-over-educated; from the uplands of high intellectual development Sally
-had slipped over the precipice into a mental and moral abyss.
-
-From the social and even the physical standpoint Ethel was indubitably
-the pick of Mr. Josiah Munt's three daughters. And Mrs. Doctor's rather
-frigid reception of her eldest sister showed a nice perception of
-the fact. Amelia had thrown her back to a prehistoric phase. She had
-something of the air and manner of a charwoman. When she entered the
-room, little shivers had crept down Ethel's sensitive spine. She could
-hardly bear to look at her.
-
-Melia also felt very uncomfortable. She couldn't find a word to say
-and the children stared at her. But she sat on the edge of a chair
-that Gerty provided; tea, bread and butter and cake were given her;
-she began to eat and drink mechanically, but still she felt strangely
-hostile and unhappy. She resented the bright plumage, the amazing
-prosperity of those among whom she had been born; above all, she
-resented Ethel's superciliousness and Gerty's patronage. Ethel, of
-course, had a right to be supercilious, and that fact was an added
-barb. Her light shone. SHE was the only one who had shed any luster
-on the family; her marriage with a doctor rising to eminence in the
-town was a model of judicious ambition. Ethel "had done very well for
-herself," and even the set of her hat, black tulle and white feathers
-and the opulent lines of her spotted muslin dress, seemed to proclaim
-it. Her bearing completed the picture. She had not been in the same
-room with Amelia for many years, although she had passed her once or
-twice in the street without speaking; and at the moment her judicious
-mind was fully engaged with the problem as to whether Gwenneth and
-Gwladys could or could not call her "Auntie." Finally, but not at
-once, the answer was in the negative.
-
-Amelia, without a word to say for herself, and suffering acutely from
-a social awkwardness which a lonely life in sordid circumstances had
-made much worse, was altogether out of it. Ethel and Gerty had charm
-and elegance; they spoke a different language; they might have belonged
-to a different race. Amelia's natural ally should have been her mother.
-They had much in common but that depressed and inefficient woman was
-nearly as tongue-tied as her eldest daughter. Ethel and Gerty were
-almost as far beyond the range of Maria as they were beyond the range
-of Amelia; their expensive clothes and their correct talk of This and
-That and These and Those, with clear, high-pitched intonation filled
-her with dismay. Maria, even in her own drawing-room, was in such awe
-of them that she could make no overtures to Amelia, although she simply
-longed to point to the vacant sofa beside her and to say, "Come and sit
-over here, my dear."
-
-The eldest daughter of the house bitterly regretted the folly that had
-brought her among them again after so many years of outlawry. But in
-a few minutes her father came in and then she got on better. He was
-the real cause of her present sufferings, but his own freedom from
-self-consciousness or the least tendency to pose amid surroundings
-which seemed to crave that form of weakness was exactly what the
-situation called for.
-
-"Hulloa, Melia," he said heartily. "Pleased to see you, gel." His lips
-saluted her cheek with a loud smack. There was not a suspicion of false
-shame about him. He was master in his own house at any rate. And when
-he made up his mind to do a thing he did it thoroughly. "What do you
-think on 'em?" He pointed to his grandchildren rather proudly. "That's
-Gwennie. And that's Gladdie. This is your Auntie Melia."
-
-The ears of Mrs. Doctor Cockburn began to burn a little as the eyes of
-Gwennie and Gladdie grew rounder and rounder.
-
-"Gladdie favors her ma. Don't you think so, eh? And they've both got a
-look of Grandma--what?"
-
-"I see a look of you, you know, Josiah," said Auntie Gerty with an air
-of immense discretion.
-
-"Um. Maybe. Have they had any strawberries, Grandma?"
-
-Their mother thought they ought not to have strawberries, but their
-grandfather was convinced that a few would not hurt them and chose half
-a dozen himself from a blue dish on the tea table and presented them
-personally.
-
-"There, Gwenneth, what do you say?" Mrs. Doctor Cockburn's own mouth
-was full of prunes and prisms. "Thank you what--thank you, Grandpa."
-
-"That's a good little gel." There was a geniality, an indulgence, in
-the tone of Josiah that he had never thought of extending to his own
-children in their nursery days. "And I tell you what, Ma--if they get a
-pain under their pinnies they must blame their old grand-dad."
-
-Altogether, a pleasant episode, and to everybody, Gwenneth and Gwladys
-included, a welcome diversion.
-
-"Have some more tea, Melia." Her father took her cup from her in spite
-of the protest her tongue was unable to utter and handed it to the
-inefficient lady in charge of the teapot. "And you must have a few
-strawberries. Fresh picked out of the garden. Ethel, touch that bell."
-
-Mrs. Doctor, with an air of resolute fineladyism, pressed the electric
-button at her elbow. The grand parlor maid entered with a smile of
-imperfectly concealed cynicism.
-
-"Alice, more cream!"
-
-Melia wondered how even her father was able to address Alice in that
-way; but his coolness ministered to the reluctant respect he was
-arousing in her by his manly attitude to his own grandeur.
-
-The cream appeared. Gwenneth and Gwladys were forbidden to have
-any--their lives so far had been a series of negations and
-inhibitions--but Melia had some, although she didn't want it, but the
-will of her father was greater than her powers of resistance. And then
-he said to her, "When you've had your tea, I'll show you the greenus."
-
-"Conservatory, Josiah," said Aunt Gerty with an arch preen of features
-and a show of plumage. "Much too big for a mere greenhouse."
-
-"Greenus is more homelike, Gert. What do you say, Mother?" He laughed
-almost gayly at Maria. The eldest daughter was amazed at the change
-that seemed to be coming over her father. In the dismal days of
-drudgery and gloomy terrorism at the public house in Waterloo Square
-which now seemed so far away in the past, there was not a trace of this
-large and rich geniality. Prosperity, power, worldly success must have
-mellowed her father as well as enlarged him. He seemed so much bigger
-now, so much riper, he seemed to care more for others.
-
-Ethel and Gertrude were quite put into the shade by the force and the
-heartiness of Josiah, but Mrs. Doctor was not one lightly to play
-second fiddle to any member of her own family. "I hear," she said,
-pitching her voice upon an almost perilous note of fashion--there
-was even a suspicion of a drawl which brought an involuntary curl to
-Melia's lip--"that young Nixey, the architect, has been recommended for
-the M.C."
-
-"Has he so?" Josiah's eye lighted up over his suspended teacup. "I've
-always said there was something in that young Nixey. And I'm not often
-mistaken. He designed that row of cottages I built down Bush Lane."
-
-"A row of cottages in Bush Lane, have you, Josiah?" said Aunt Gerty
-with an air of statesmanlike interest. "You seem to be what they call
-going into bricks and mortar."
-
-"You bet I am--for some time now. And bricks and mortar are not going
-to get less in value if this war keeps on, take it from me."
-
-"I suppose not," said Mrs. Doctor Cockburn, a judge of values.
-
-"I've one regret." It was not like Josiah to harbor regrets of any
-kind, and Aunt Gerty visibly adjusted her mind to hear something
-memorable. "That young Nixey's as smart as paint. I nearly let him
-have the contract for this house. In some ways he might have suited us
-better."
-
-"But this house is splendid," said Gerty with flagrant optimism. She
-knew in her heart that the house was too splendid.
-
-"Young Nixey's idea was something neater, more in the Mossop style. I
-didn't see at the time, so I got Rawlins to do it to my own design. Of
-course, what I didn't like about Nixey was that he would have it that
-he knew better than I did, and I'm not sure----" Josiah hovered on the
-brink of a very remarkable admission.
-
-"I don't agree, Josiah. This house is almost perfect." The specious
-Gertrude was amazed that he of all men should be so near a confession
-that he might have been wrong. Dark influences were at work in him
-evidently.
-
-"I agree with you, Father." Mrs. Doctor had nothing of Gerty's finesse.
-"The Gables is so refined, a house for a gentleman."
-
-"Don't know about that," Josiah frowned. "Never heard of a house being
-refined. Comes to that, this place is good enough for me, any time." If
-he went so far as to own that he might have been wrong it was clearly
-the duty of others to hasten to contradict him. "But The Gables is more
-compact. More comfort somehow, and less show."
-
-"Stands in less ground, must have cost less," said Gerty softly.
-"Compared to Strathfieldsaye, The Gables to my mind is rather
-niggardly."
-
-"That is so, Gert." He nodded approvingly. She was always there with
-the right word. "All the same I believe in that young Nixey. Started,
-you know, at the Council School. Won a scholarship at the University.
-Why, I remember his mother when she used to come to the Duke of
-Wellington and sew for Maria. Done everything for himself. And now he's
-a commissioned officer in the B.B. Give honor where honor's due, I say."
-
-Gerty and Ethel agreed, perhaps a little reluctantly. Maria expressed
-a tacit approval. And then Melia made the discovery that her mind had
-wandered as far as France; and for a moment or so the world's pressure
-upon her felt a little less stifling.
-
-"Wonderful, how that young man's got on!" There was reverence in the
-tone of Gerty whose religion was "getting on."
-
-"It is." Josiah was emphatic. "You can't hold some people back. I give
-him another ten years to be the first architect in this town ... if he
-comes through This."
-
-"It's a big 'if.'" Before the words were out of Gerty's mouth she
-remembered Amelia's husband and wished them unsaid. She had not had the
-courage to mention William Hollis with poor Amelia so rigidly on the
-defensive, but she had hoped that some one would introduce the subject
-so that a tribute might be paid him. But no one had done so, and now
-that Josiah was there the time seemed to have gone by. His views in
-regard to Amelia's husband were far too definite to be challenged
-lightly.
-
-Interest in young Nixey, the architect, began to wane and then suddenly
-Ethel startled them all by the statement that she had just had a letter
-from Sally.
-
-Josiah's geniality promptly received a coating of ice. His mouth closed
-like a trap. Sally had not been forgiven by her father and those who
-knew him best had the least hope that she would be. Her conduct had
-struck him in a very tender place, and Gerty could not help thinking
-that it was most imprudent of Ethel to mention Sally in his presence
-in any circumstances.
-
-Ethel, however, had long ceased to fear her father. For one thing, in
-the eyes of the world her position was too secure. Besides, she was
-obtuse. Where angels, etc., Mrs. Doctor could always be trusted to
-walk with a certain measure of assurance, mainly because she didn't
-see things and feel things in the way that most people did. For that
-reason she was not at all disconcerted by the silence that followed
-her announcement. And she supplemented it with another which compelled
-Gerty, the adroit, to steal a veiled glance at the sphinx-like face of
-her brother-in-law.
-
-"She writes from Serbia, giving a long and wonderful account of her
-doings with the Red Cross. I think I have her letter with me." Ethel
-opened a green morocco bag that was on the sofa beside her. "Yes ...
-here it is ... a long account. Care to read it, Father?" She offered
-the letter unconcernedly to Josiah.
-
-He shook his head somberly. "I'll not read it now."
-
-"Let me leave it with you. Well worth reading. But I'd like to have it
-back."
-
-"No, take it with you, gel." The words were sharp. "Haven't much time
-for reading anything these days. Happen I'll lose it or something." It
-was lame and obvious, but Josiah had been taken too much by surprise
-to do anything better. Gerty was annoyed with Ethel. She had no right
-to be so tactless. None knew so well as Ethel the state of the case
-in regard to Sally. At the same time Gerty's respect for Josiah which
-amounted to genuine regard was a little wounded. He ought to have been
-big enough to have read the letter.
-
-Ethel had contrived to banish the ease and the sunshine from the
-proceedings. The light of genial humor in the eyes of her father
-yielded to the truculence of that earlier epoch so familiar to Amelia.
-It was a great pity that it should be so; and after a tense moment the
-gallant Gerty did her best to pour oil on the vexed waters. "The other
-day in the _Tribune_ they were praising you finely, Josiah."
-
-"Was they?" The King's English was not his strong point in moments of
-tension. But in any moment, as Gerty knew, he had his share of the
-legitimate vanity of the rising publicist. "What did they say?"
-
-"The _Tribune_ said you deserved well, not only of your fellow
-townsmen, but of the country at large for the excellent work you had
-done in the last nine months for the national cause. They said your
-work on the Recruiting and Munitions Committees had been most valuable."
-
-Josiah was visibly mollified by this piping. "Very decent of the
-_Tribune_."
-
-"You'll make an excellent mayor, Josiah. Your turn next year, isn't it?"
-
-Josiah nodded. The light came again into his eyes. "There's no saying
-what sort of a mayor I'll make. It's a stiff job when you come to
-tackle it. Big responsibility in times like these."
-
-"You are not the man to shirk responsibility."
-
-Josiah allowed that he was not, but the office of mayor in a place like
-Blackhampton in times like these was no sinecure for a man with a sense
-of civic duty. Once more he clouded. From what he heard things were
-looking pretty bad. If England was going to win the war she should have
-to find a better set of brains.
-
-"But surely the Allies are quite as clever as the Germans?"
-
-"They may be, but they haven't shown it so far. We are a scratch lot of
-amateurs against a team of trained professionals. The raw material is
-just as good, if not better, but it takes time to lick it in to shape.
-And we've got to learn to use it." His gloom deepened. "Still we shall
-never give in to the Hun ... not in a hundred years."
-
-Ethel concurred in this robust sentiment. And then again she obtusely
-referred to Sally's letter. It was such a wonderful letter that her
-father really ought to read it. He was clearly annoyed by her tactless
-persistence. In order to cloak his feelings he called upon Melia in the
-old peremptory way to come and look at his tomatoes.
-
-As they rose for that purpose, Mrs. Doctor Cockburn rose also. She must
-really be going; it was the cook's evening out. Gwenneth and Gwladys
-were bidden to say good-by to Grandpa. They did so shyly but rather
-prettily.
-
-"Now let me see you shake hands with your Auntie Melia," said Josiah.
-
-Gwenneth and Gwladys accomplished this task less successfully. They
-were half terrified by this shabby, gloomy, silent woman who had not a
-word to say.
-
-
-
-
-XXVIII
-
-
-Weeks went by and Melia settled down to a hard and lonely winter in
-Love Lane. She missed Bill sadly now he was no longer there. Absence
-had conferred all sorts of virtues upon him. She quite forgot that for
-many years and up till very recently she could hardly bear the sight of
-him about the place. Their relations as man and wife had entered upon a
-new and very remarkable phase.
-
-About once a fortnight or so life was made a bit lighter for her
-by a penciled scrawl from somewhere in France. Bill's letters told
-surprisingly little, yet he maintained a kind of grim cheeriness and
-seemed more concerned for the life she might be leading than for
-anything that was happening to himself. He was very grateful for the
-small comforts she sent him from time to time, he was much interested
-in the continued prosperity of the business, and he mentioned with
-evident pleasure that her mother had sent him a pair of socks and a
-comforter she had knitted herself, also a "nice letter."
-
-From his mother-in-law, whom Bill had always suspected of being a
-good sort at heart, "if the Old Un would give her a chance," he had
-an account of Melia's visit to Strathfieldsaye. Her mother said what
-pleasure it would give her father if she would go there every Sunday.
-The statement was incredible on the face of it; Bill frankly didn't
-know what to think, but there it was. No doubt the old girl meant
-kindly. Perhaps it was her idea of bucking him up.
-
-In his letters to Melia he made no comment on the life he was leading,
-but in one he told her that they had moved up into the Line; in another
-that "the Boche had got it in the neck"; in another that "he had got
-the rheumatics so that he could hardly move," but that he meant to
-carry on as long as possible, adding, "We are very short of men."
-
-Somehow the letters of that dark winter made her more proud than ever
-of this man of hers. There was a determined note of quiet cheerfulness
-that she had never known in him before. Instead of the eternal
-grumbling that had done so much to embitter her, there was a tone of
-whimsical humor which at a time made her laugh, although as a general
-rule few people found it harder than she did to laugh at anything. She
-had little imagination, still less of the penetration of mind that goes
-with it, but there was one phrase he used that was hard to forget.
-In one letter he was tempted to complain that the Boche had taken to
-raiding them in the middle of the night, but he added a postscript,
-"It's no use growsing here."
-
-Somehow that phrase stuck in her mind. When she rose before daylight
-in the bitter mornings of midwinter to light the kitchen fire and
-prepare a meal she would have to eat alone, she would remember those
-words which he of all men had used, he who was a born growser if ever
-there was one. "It's no use growsing here." She tried to take in their
-meaning, but the task was not easy. He wrote so cheerfully that he
-could hardly mean what he said. And it was his nearest approach to
-complaint, he whose life in peace time had been one long complaint. Now
-and again she read in the _Tribune_ of things that made her shiver.
-Sometimes in the winter darkness she awoke with these things in her
-mind. Bill's letters, however, gave no details. If he spoke of "a
-scrap," he did so casually, without embroidery, yet she remembered that
-once when he had cut his thumb, not very badly, he fainted at the sight
-of blood.
-
-Such letters were a puzzle; they told so little. She couldn't make them
-out. Reading between the lines, he seemed to be enjoying life more
-than he had ever done, he seemed to realize the humor of it more. It
-was very strange that it should be so, especially on the part of one
-who had always taken things so hard. In one letter he said that spring
-was coming and that the look of the sky made him think of the crocuses
-along Sharrow Lane, and then added as a brief postscript, "Stanning's
-gone."
-
-Some weeks later he wrote from the Base to say that "he had had a whiff
-of gas, nothing to speak of," but that he was out of the Line for a
-bit. And then after a cheerful letter or two in the meantime, he wrote
-a month later to say that he had got leave for ten days and that he was
-coming home.
-
-It was the middle of June when he turned up in Love Lane late one
-evening, without notice, laden like a beast of burden, looking very
-brown and well but terribly worn and shabby. So much had he changed
-in appearance that Melia felt it would have been easy to pass him in
-the street without recognizing him. He was thin and gray, even his
-features, and particularly his eyes, seemed to have altered. The tone
-of his voice was different; he spoke in a different way; the words and
-phrases he used were not those of the William Hollis she had always
-known.
-
-He was glad to be back in his home, if only for a few days, and the
-sight of him with his heavy pack and his gas mask and his helmet laid
-on the new linoleum in the little sitting room behind the shop gave her
-a deeper pleasure than anything life had offered her so far. Strange
-as he was, new almost to the point of being somebody else, the mere
-sight of him thrilled her. She was thrilled to the verge of happiness.
-It was something beyond any previous emotion. Long ago she had given
-up believing that ever again he would appeal to her in the way of that
-brief time which had been once and had passed so soon.
-
-He took off his heavy boots and lit his pipe and seemed childishly
-glad to be home again. But he didn't talk much. He sighed luxuriously
-and smiled at her in his odd new way, yet he was interested in the
-excellent supper she gave him presently and in the account she
-furnished of the business which was still on an ascending curve of
-prosperity. The old wound, still unhealed, would not allow her to
-praise her father, but there was more than one instance to offer of
-that tardy repentance; and it was hard to repress a note of pride when
-she announced that he was now Mayor of Blackhampton and by all accounts
-a good one.
-
-She tried to get her husband to speak of France, but some instinct
-soon made it clear to her that he wanted to forget it. He could not be
-induced to speak of his experiences, made light of his "whiff of gas,"
-but confessed it was hell all the time; he also said that the German
-was not a clean fighter. As he sat opposite to her, eating his supper,
-his reticence made it impossible for her to realize what he had been
-through. He did not seem to realize it himself, except that in a subtle
-way he was altogether changed.
-
-He was eight days at home and they spent a lot of the time together.
-They had a new kind of intimacy; the world of men and affairs had
-altered for them both. Everything came to them at a fresh angle. They
-were dwellers in another atmosphere. The most commonplace actions meant
-much more; events once of comparatively large importance meant much
-less. She half suggested that they should go up on Sunday afternoon
-to Strathfieldsaye, but the idea evidently did not appeal to him and
-she did not press it. Still she threw out the hint, because it was an
-opportunity to let bygones be bygones and she was sure that he would
-meet with a good reception. A sense of justice impelled her to be
-grateful to her father, much as she disliked him; in his domineering
-way he had tried to make amends; all the same she was not sorry that
-Bill was determined to hold himself aloof. It was not exactly that he
-bore a grudge against her father; at the point he had reached men did
-not bear grudges, but he had some decided views on the matter and they
-gained in power by not being expressed.
-
-On the afternoon of Wednesday, which was early closing day in
-Blackhampton, Bill insisted on taking Melia to the Art Gallery. It was
-in the historic low-roofed building in New Square--which dated from
-the Romans--known as the old Moot Hall. It was now the home of one
-of the finest collections of pictures in the country. Among ancient
-masterpieces and some modern ones were several characteristic examples
-of his friend, Stanning, R.A., whom he had carried dying into a dugout
-not four months ago.
-
-Corporal Hollis had it from Sergeant Stanning's own lips that the
-best picture he had ever painted was hung in the middle room, and
-that it was not the Sharrow at Corfield Weir, which the Corporal
-himself admired so much, but the smaller, less ambitious piece called,
-"The Leaves of the Tree"--a picture of the woods up at Dibley in the
-sunlight of October, stripped by the winds of autumn, with the bent
-figure in the foreground of a very old man raking the dead leaves
-together.
-
-They had no difficulty in finding it. "As the leaves of the trees are
-the lives of men." That legend on the gilt frame seemed to them both at
-that moment strangely, terribly prophetic. Bill did not tell Melia as
-they stood in front of the picture that he had risked his own life in
-a vain attempt to save the man who had painted it, nor did he tell her
-that the blood of the artist had dyed the sleeves of his tunic.
-
-The large room was empty and they sat down solemnly on the settee in
-front of this canvas, looking at it in silence, yet as they did so
-holding the hand of each other like a pair of children. Once before had
-they sat there, in the early days of their marriage, when he had talked
-to her of those ambitions that were never to materialize. And now,
-again, with the spirit of peace upon him and stirred by old memories,
-he sighed to himself and spoke for a moment or two of what might have
-been. One of these days he had hoped to do something. He had always
-intended to do something but the time had slipped away.
-
-They were still sitting there looking at the picture when two people
-came into the room. One was a commonplace elderly woman, the other
-a young man in khaki. Although they were totally unlike in the
-superficialities of outward bearing it was easy to tell that they were
-mother and son. His trained movements and upright carriage, his poise
-and alertness, were not able to conceal an odd resemblance to the
-wholly different person at his side.
-
-William and Melia were concealed by the high-backed, wide-armed settee
-on which they sat; and as these two people came up the room and took up
-a position behind it, they did not seem to realize that they could be
-overheard.
-
-"I want you, mother," said the young man in an eager voice, "to look
-at what to my mind is the picture of this collection. Stand here and
-you'll get it just right."
-
-The Corporal and his lady on the high-backed settee offered a silent
-prayer that the young man had as much wisdom and taste as the owner
-of such a clear, confident voice ought to have. "As the leaves of the
-tree are the lives of men." The Corporal breathed more freely; the
-young man's voice had not belied him. "Homer's words." He reeled off
-pat a large-sounding foreign language. "I want you to catch the ghost
-of the sun glancing through these wind-torn branches. You'll get the
-light if you stand just here. Wonderful composition ... wonderful
-vision ... wonderful harmony ... wonderful everything. The big artists
-feel with their eyes." It was charming to hear the voice in its
-enthusiasm. "They look behind the curtain of appearances as you might
-say. The life of man is but the shadow of a shadow ... you remember
-that bit of Lucretius I read you last night? Look at the figure in
-the foreground gathering the leaves. Modern critics say symbolism
-is not art, but it depends on how it's done, doesn't it? The eyes of
-the mind ... imagination ... and that's the only key we have to the
-Riddle of the Sphinx." He ran on and on, laughing like a child. "Look
-at his color. And how spacious!--imagination there!--the harmony, the
-drawing! A marvelous draughtsman. If he'd lived he'd have been a second
-Torrington, although you hear people say that Torrington couldn't
-draw." He laughed like a schoolboy and then his voice fell. "I like to
-think that Jim Stanning was one of us, that he was born among us, and
-it's good to think that our old one-horse Art Committee has had the
-luck to buy his magnum opus without knowing it. They paid twice as much
-for Corfield Weir in the other room, which is not in the same class.
-However ... posterity...."
-
-Prattling on and on the young man came round the corner of the settee,
-followed by the old lady.
-
-And then his flow of words failed suddenly as he caught a glimpse of
-William and Melia, whose presence he had been far from suspecting. His
-little start of guilt betrayed a feeling that he had made rather an ass
-of himself, for he said half shamefacedly, "Come on, my dear, let's go
-and look at the Weir. We'll come back here later." The Corporal and his
-lady could only catch a glimpse of him as he led his mother abruptly
-into the next room; but Melia saw he was an officer with two pips on
-his sleeve and that his tunic was adorned with a tiny strip of white
-and purple ribbon with a star on it. In answer to her questions the
-Corporal was able to inform her that the young man was a Captain in the
-B.B. and that his decorations was the M.C. with Bar.
-
-"And he looks so young!" said Melia.
-
-"A very good soldier," said the Corporal with a professional air.
-
-"Who is he, Bill? I seem to remember his mother."
-
-"It's young Nixey, the architect."
-
-Of course! But his uniform had altered him. He looked so handsome. And
-that was Emma Nixey--Emma Price that was. How proud she must be to have
-a boy like that!
-
-"He's a good soldier." The deep voice of the Corporal broke in upon
-Melia's thoughts. "A good soldier--that young feller."
-
-"Bill, you remember Emma Price that used to live at the bottom of
-Piper's Hill?" There was a note of envy in the tone of Melia.
-
-"I remember old Price, the cobbler."
-
-"Emma was his eldest girl--no, not the eldest. Polly who married Ford,
-the ironmonger, was the eldest. Emma was the second. Married Harry
-Nixey, whose mother kept the all-sorts shop in Curwood Street. A
-drunken fellow, but very clever at his trade. Bolted with another woman
-when this lad Harold was twelve months old. Emma never saw nor heard of
-him again. Went to Australia, people said at the time. But I'll say
-this for Emma, she was always a good plucked one."
-
-There was a moment of silence and then the Corporal demanded weightily,
-"Has she any others?"
-
-"He's the only one. But brought up very respectable ... she's managed
-to give him a rare good education. How she did it nobody knows.
-Tremendous worker, was Emma. But that boy does her credit, I must say."
-
-"He does that." The Corporal stared hard at the picture in front of
-him. "Nothing like education." He sighed softly. "If only I'd had a bit
-of education I sometimes think I might have done something myself."
-
-
-
-
-XXIX
-
-
-On the afternoon of the day before the Corporal returned to France he
-went with Melia by bus to Sharrow Bridge and they walked thence to
-Corfield Weir. Many hours had he spent with rod and tackle in this
-hallowed spot. Those were the only hours in his drab life that he would
-have desired to live over again. Many a good fish had he played in the
-bend of the river below the famous Corfield Glade, much commemorated by
-the local poets in whom the town and county were exceptionally rich. In
-particular there was the legend of the fair Mary Corfield who in the
-days of Queen Bess had cast herself for love of an honest yeoman into
-the deep waters of the Sharrow. From Bill's favorite tree, where from
-boyhood he had spun so many dreams that had come to naught, could be
-seen the high chimneys of the Old Hall, the home of the ill-fated Mary,
-about whose precincts her ghost still walked and was occasionally seen.
-
-The day was perfect, a rare golden opulence of sky and earth with a
-sheen of beauty on wood and field and flowing water. They came to
-the little gnarled clump of alders, his old-time friends, whom the
-swift-flowing Sharrow was always threatening to devour, and lay side
-by side in the shade, on the dry grass, listening to the great rats
-plopping into the cool water.
-
-Both were very silent at first; it was as if nature spoke to them in a
-new way. It was as if their eyes were bathed in a magical light. All
-the things around them were clearer in outline, brighter, sharper, more
-visible. Their ears, too, were attuned to a higher intensity. The swirl
-of the water, the rustle of leaves, the cry of the birds, the little
-voice of the wind, were more intimate, more harmonious, more audibly
-full of meaning. The world itself had never seemed so richly amazing,
-so gorgeously inexhaustible as at that moment.
-
-At last the Corporal broke a very long silence. "Mother, it's something
-to have lived."
-
-Melia did not answer at once, but presently she sighed a little and
-said, "I wonder, Bill."
-
-He plucked a spear of grass. "It's a rum thing to say, but if it hadn't
-been for this war I don't suppose I ever should have lived, really."
-
-She didn't understand him, and her large round eyes, a little like
-those of a cow, told him so.
-
-"I've always been thinking too much about it, you see." His voice was
-curiously gentle. "All my life, as you might say, I've always been
-telling myself what a wonderful day it was going to be to-morrow. But
-to-morrow never comes, you see. And you keep on thinking, thinking,
-until you suddenly find that to-morrow was yesterday. That's how it was
-with me. And if I hadn't had the guts to join up just when I did, my
-belief is I should never have lived at all. Understand me?"
-
-She shook a placid head at him, not understanding him in the least. But
-this was the mood in which he had first captured her, in which he had
-first impressed her with his intellectual quality, for which, as a raw
-girl, who knew nothing about anything, she had had a sort of reverence.
-But as she had come to see, it was this very power of mind, which she
-had told herself was not shared by other, more common men, that had
-been his undoing, that had brought them both to the verge of ruin. It
-was fine and all that, but it didn't mean anything. It was just a kink
-in the machine which prevented it from working properly.
-
-The tears sprang to her eyes as she listened to him, and her youth and
-his came back to her, but she turned her face to the river so that he
-could not see it. Still it was not all pain to hear him talking. It was
-the old, old way that she had loved once and had since despised, but
-now lying there in the shade of those old trees, with the music of the
-Weir and the glory of the earth and the sky all about her, she loved
-again. Strange that it should be so! But the sad voice at her elbow
-blended marvelously with all the things she could see and hear. And
-what it said was quite true. By some miracle both were living now more
-fully than ever before.
-
-"I'll always have one regret, Mother." His voice had grown as deep as
-the water itself. But it broke off in the middle suddenly.
-
-A feeling came upon her that she ought to say something. "Don't let us
-have no regrets, Bill." Those were the words she wanted to utter. "I'll
-not have none." But they were not for her to speak. At that moment
-she was not able to say anything. She waited tensely for him to go on
-talking.
-
-In the odd way he had, which was a part of his peculiar faculty, he
-seemed to feel what was passing in her mind. "I'm not thinking of what
-might have been. That's no good. The time's gone by. I'm thinking of my
-friend, Stanning, R.A. You see we'd arranged that if we ever had the
-chance we'd come here for a day's fishing. We had a bit one day when
-we were up in the Line--in that canal--the Yser, I think they call it.
-And he said, 'Auntie, I may be able to tell you a thing or two about
-drawing, but when it comes to this game the boot's on the other leg.'
-'Yes,' I said, 'that's because I've put my heart into it while you've
-put your heart into something better.' 'Well, I don't know about that,'
-he said--he was the broadest-minded, the best read, the wisest chap I
-ever talked to--'nothing is but thinking makes it so, as Hamlet, that
-old crackpot used to say. Whatever you happen to be doing, Auntie, the
-only thing that matters is whether your heart is in it.' 'Yes,' I said,
-'I daresay you are right there. But it's one thing to catch barbel.
-It's another to paint Corfield Weir.'"
-
-To Melia this seemed like philosophy. And she had no head for
-philosophy, although inclined to be a little proud that Bill should be
-able to swim in these deep waters in such distinguished company. But
-one thing aroused her curiosity. Why was this man of hers called Auntie?
-
-Bill laughed good humoredly when, a little scandalized, she came to put
-the question. "They all call me that in C company." His frankness was
-remarkable.
-
-"But why?"
-
-"They say I was born an old woman."
-
-Melia thought it was like their impertinence and did not hesitate to
-say so.
-
-"Ah, you don't know the Chaps," Bill laughed heartily. "The Chaps is a
-rum crowd. They call you anything."
-
-"But to your face?" Melia couldn't help resenting it and spoke with
-dignity. "You oughtn't to let them, Bill."
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"You're a Corporal."
-
-"Well, Stanning was a sergeant, you see. And nobody means nothing by
-it. It's a way they have in the army of being friendly and pleasant.
-And I daresay it suits me. My fingers is all thumbs as you might say.
-Fishing and a bit o' gardening are the only things I'm good for,
-although Stanning told me that in time, if I stuck it, I might be able
-to draw. And that was a lot for him to say."
-
-Melia thought that it must be.
-
-"I often wonder,"--the eyes of the Corporal were fixed on the
-Sharrow--"what made Stanning take up with a chap like me. There was
-lots of 'em in C company with far more education, but he told me once
-that I was the same kind of fool that he was and I said that I wished
-it was so. I suppose he meant that I liked to talk about this old river
-and the lights on it and the look of it at different times of the year.
-He knew every yard of the Sharrow between here and Dibley and so did I,
-but he could see things that I couldn't, and he could remember 'em and
-he'd a wonderful eye for nature. He wasn't the least bit of a soldier,
-no more than myself, but he made a first-rate job of it--he was the
-kind of chap who would make a first-rate job of anything. Our C.O.
-wanted him to apply for a commission, but he said he couldn't face the
-responsibility. That was queer, wasn't it, in a man of that sort?--for
-he was a man, I give you my word." The Corporal plucked another spear
-of grass and began to chew it pensively. "He had a cottage up at
-Dibley, that largish white one on the left, standing back from the
-road, you know the one I mean--the one with the iron gate, and that
-funny sort of a tower at the end of the garden."
-
-Melia said she did know, although she had half forgotten it, but she
-hadn't been to Dibley since they were first married, and that was a
-long time ago.
-
-"It belonged to Torrington the artist. He lived and died there.
-Stanning said he was the greatest painter of landscape that ever lived,
-but nobody knew it while he was alive and he died in poverty. Not that
-it mattered. Stanning said that money doesn't matter to an artist, but
-he said that many an artist had been ruined by making it too easy."
-
-This dictum of Stanning's sounded odd in the ear of Melia. No one could
-be ruined by making money too easily, but she had not the heart to
-contradict his disciple who was still chewing grass and looking up at
-the sky.
-
-"See what I mean, Mother?"
-
-"Makes them take to drink and gambling, I suppose." After all, there
-was that solution.
-
-"Stanning meant that if an artist gets money too easy it'll take the
-edge off his work. He was always afraid that was what was going to
-happen to himself. In 1913 he made six thousand pounds--think on it,
-Mother, six thousand pounds in one year painting pictures! He said
-that was the writing on the wall for him; he said it was as much as
-Torrington made in all his life and he lived beyond eighty. 'And I'm
-not fit to tie Torrington's shoelace, Auntie.' I laughed at that, of
-course, but he was not a man to want butter. 'I mean it, my dear.' If
-he liked you he had a way of calling you 'my dear,' like one girl does
-to another. 'Torrington was the only man that ever lived who could
-handle sunlight. That's the test for a painter. If I touch sunlight I
-burn holes in the canvas.' Of course, I laughed, but Stanning was a
-very humble chap when he talked about his own paintings."
-
-Suddenly the Corporal realized that he had let his tongue run away
-with him, as it did sometimes. Melia was getting drowsy. He got up,
-therefore, and stretched his legs on the soft turf and then he said,
-"Let us go across to the Corfield Arms and see if we can get a cup of
-tea. And then if you feel up to it we'll walk through the Glade as far
-as Dibley and look at the house that Torrington lived in."
-
-
-
-
-XXX
-
-
-They went across to the Corfield Arms. It was an old, romantic looking
-inn, spoiled a little in these later days by contiguity to a great
-hive of commerce. But there were occasions, even now, when it retained
-something of the halo of ancient peace it was wont to bear; and the
-afternoon being Friday was an off day for visitors. When Bill and Melia
-passed through the bowling green at the back of the house to the arbor
-where last they had sat in the days of their courtship they found it
-empty.
-
-In the garden by the arbor an old man was plucking raspberries. He
-turned out to be the landlord, and to the secret gratification of Melia
-he addressed Bill as "sir," out of deference to his uniform. Upon
-receiving the Corporal's commands he called loudly for "Polly."
-
-In two shakes of a duck's tail Polly appeared: a blithe beauty in a
-clean lilac print dress, a little shrunk in the wash, which showed
-to advantage the lovely lines of her shape and the slender stem of a
-brown but classic neck in which a nest of red-gold hair hung loose. The
-Corporal ordered a royal repast for two persons; a pot of tea, boiled
-eggs, bread and butter, cake, and a little of the honey for which the
-house used to be famous.
-
-While they waited for the tea, the Corporal gave the old chap a hand
-with the raspberries. "Happen you remember Torrington, the artist who
-lived up at Dibley?"
-
-"Aye." The old man remembered him without difficulty. "Knew him well
-when I was young. Soft Jack we used to call him; an old man and just
-a bit touched like as I remember him. Long beard he had and blue
-eyes--wonderful blue eyes had that old feller. Out painting in the open
-all day long, in all weathers. I used to stand for hours and watch him.
-He'd paint a bit, and then he'd paint it out, and then he'd paint it in
-again. 'Course he was clever, you know, in a manner of speaking. Nobody
-thought much of him then, but in these days, if you'll believe me, I've
-known people come specially from London to ask about him."
-
-The Corporal turned to Melia with an air of discreet triumph. But Melia
-was so drowsy that she said she would go into the arbor until the tea
-came. She was encouraged to do so while the landlord went on, "I was
-a bit of a favorite with old Soft Jack. Many's the boy I've lammoxed
-for throwing stones at his easel. Of course, at the time I speak of,
-the old chap had got a bit tottery; he lived to be tight on ninety.
-But as I say nobody thought much of him, yet if you'll believe me it's
-only last year, or the year before last--I'm getting on myself--that a
-college gentleman came down here to write a book about him. A very nice
-civil-spoken gentleman; but fancy writing a book about old Soft Jack!"
-
-"Ever buy any of his pictures?"
-
-"My father did. Gave as much as five pounds for one, more out of
-charity than anything, I've heard him say, but if you'll believe me
-when the old boy was dead my father sold that picture for twenty
-pounds, and they tell me--I've not seen it myself--that that picture is
-now in our Art Gallery, and the college gentleman I'm speaking of--I
-forget his name--says folk come from all parts of the world to look at
-it."
-
-"Happen there was the sun in it," said the Corporal.
-
-"Very like. Most of his pictures had the sun in 'em, what I remember.
-You know they do say that that old chap could look at the sun with the
-naked eye. And such an eye as it was--like an eagle's, even when he was
-old and past it."
-
-"Got any of his pictures now?"
-
-"Can't say I have. My father had one or two odd bits, but he sold 'em
-or gave 'em away. No good having a picture, I've heard the dad say,
-unless you've a frame to put it in. And frames was dear in those days.
-If you'll believe me, the frame often cost more than the picture."
-
-"Pity you haven't one or two by you now. They do say all Torrington's
-pictures are worth a sight o' money."
-
-"Shouldn't wonder. Money's more plentiful now than it used to be. My
-father was 'mazed when he got twenty pounds for the one he sold, and
-he heard afterwards it fetched as high as fifty. But I'm speaking, of
-course, of when the old man was dead. That reminds me, the old chap,
-being very hard up, painted our signboard. It wants a fresh coat now,
-but it's wonderful how it's lasted."
-
-The Corporal, in his devotion to art, ceased to pick raspberries, and
-accompanied by his host, went to look at the expression of Soft Jack's
-genius upon the ancient front of the Corfield Arms. As they crossed the
-bowling green they came upon the smiling and gracious Polly, who bore a
-tea tray heavily laden.
-
-"Lady's in the summerhouse." The gallant Corporal returned smile for
-smile. "Tell her to pour out the tea and I'll be along in a jiffy."
-
-The signboard, after all, was not much to look at. The arms of the
-Corfields consisted in the main of a rampant unicorn, reft by the
-weather of a good deal of paint. But even here, by some miracle,
-the sunlight was shining on the noble horns of the fabulous animal,
-but whether the phenomenon was due to purely natural causes on this
-glorious afternoon of July, or whether the great artist was personally
-responsible for it was more than Corporal Hollis was able to say. It
-needed the trained eye of a Stanning, R.A., or of a young Nixey, the
-architect, to determine the point, but in the right-hand corner of the
-signboard beyond a doubt, as the landlord was able to indicate with an
-air of pride, was Soft Jack's monogram, J. T.
-
-Somehow the monogram saved the signboard itself from being a washout
-as a work of art, and the Corporal felt grateful for it as he returned
-to the arbor to drink tea with his wife, while the landlord, less of a
-critic, went back to the raspberries in his prolific garden.
-
-
-
-
-XXXI
-
-
-After an excellent tea William and Melia went up the road to Dibley. It
-was two miles on and they took a path of classic beauty, fringed by a
-grove of elms in which the rooks were cawing, along a carpet of green
-bracken through which the lovely river wound. Dibley stood high, at the
-crest of a great clump of woodland, with the Sharrow silver-breasted
-below surging through a glorious valley.
-
-It was getting on for twenty years since Bill had last handed Melia
-over the stile at the top of the glade, famous in song and story, and
-they had debouched arm in arm past the vicarage, along the bridle
-path, and had threaded their way through a nest of thatched cottages
-to the village green. The sun had now waned a little and the air had
-cooled on these shaded heights, the tea had been refreshing, and, for
-a few golden moments, inexpressibly sweet yet tragically fleeting, the
-courage of youth came back to them. Just beyond the parson's gate the
-Corporal stopped suddenly, took Melia in his arms and kissed her.
-
-It was a sloppy thing to do, unworthy of old married people, but the
-guilt of the act was upon them, though neither knew exactly why it
-should have come about. They crossed the paddock and went on through
-the romantic village, so sweetly familiar in its changelessness. It
-seemed but yesterday since they walked through it last.
-
-"I've wondered sometimes," whispered the Corporal at the edge of the
-green, "what made you marry me?"
-
-"I believed in you, Bill; I always believed in you." It was a great
-answer, yet somehow it was unexpected. In his heart he knew he was not
-worthy of it and that seemed to make it greater still.
-
-Facing the duck pond, at the far end of the green, was the white
-cottage in which Torrington the artist had lived and died. It had
-changed a bit since his time. Things had been added by his more opulent
-successor. There were an iron gate, a considerable garden and a tall
-tower with a glass roof which nobly commanded the steep wooded slopes
-of the valley of the Sharrow.
-
-With the new eyes a great painter had given him Bill saw at once that
-this was a rare pitch for an artist. It was one of the most beautiful
-spots in the land. The immense city of Blackhampton with its thousands
-of chimneys and its roaring factories might have been a hundred miles
-off instead of a bare four miles down the valley. There was not a
-glimpse or a sound of it here in this peace-haunted woodland, in this
-enchantment of stream and hill, bathed in a pomp of golden cloud and
-magic beauty.
-
-The simple cottage had been modernized and amplified, but with
-rare tact and cunning, so that it was still "all of a piece," much
-as Torrington had left. But the house itself was empty, with green
-shutters across the windows. On the gate was a padlock, the reason for
-which was given in a printed bill stuck on a board that had been raised
-beside it.
-
- By order of the executors of the late James Stanning, Esqre., A.R.A.,
- to be sold by auction the valuable and historical property known as
- Torrington Cottage Dibley, together with the following furniture and
- effects.
-
-A list followed of the furniture and effects, but across the face of
-the bill was pasted a diagonal red-lettered slip,
-
- This property has been sold by private treaty.
-
-The Corporal tried to open the gate but found the padlock unyielding,
-and then he gazed at the notice wistfully.
-
-"Wonder who's bought it," he said.
-
-Melia wondered too.
-
-"Hope it's an artist," said the Corporal.
-
-"So do I. But I expect it isn't. Artists is scarce."
-
-"You're right, there." The Corporal sighed heavily. "Artists is
-scarce." There was a strange look in his eyes and he turned them
-suddenly upon the duck pond so that Melia shouldn't notice it.
-
-Across the road, beside the duck pond, was a wooden bench, sacred to
-the village elders, none of whom, however, was in occupation at this
-moment. The Corporal pointed to it. "Let's go an' set there a minute,"
-he said in a husky voice. As if she had been a child he took her by the
-hand and led her to it.
-
-They sat down and in a moment or two it was as if the spirit of the
-place had descended upon them. The magic hush of evening crept into
-their blood like a subtle wine. A strange soft rapture seemed to
-pervade the air. The Unseen spoke to them as never before.
-
-The Corporal took off his hat and wiped the dew from his forehead. And
-then with a queer tightening of the throat and breast he scanned earth
-and sky. They seemed marvelous indeed. He felt them speak to him, to
-the infinite, submerged senses whose presence he had hardly suspected.
-Never had he experienced such awe as now in the presence of this peace
-that passed all understanding.
-
-In a little while the silence of the Corporal began to trouble Melia. A
-cold hand crept into his. "What is it, love?" she said softly.
-
-Not daring to look at her, he kept his eyes fixed on the sky.
-
-"What is it, love--tell me?" He hardly knew the voice for hers; not
-until that moment had he heard her use it; but it had the power to ease
-just a little the intolerable pressure of his thoughts.
-
-"I was wondering," he said slowly, at last, "whether it would not have
-been better never to have been born."
-
-She shivered, not at his words, but at the gray look on his face.
-
-"Stanning said the night before he went he thought that taking it
-altogether it would have been better if there had never been a human
-race at all. I'll never forget that last talk with him, not if I live
-to be a hundred--which I shall not." The Corporal had begun to think
-his thoughts aloud. "You see, he knew then that his number was up. I
-can see him settin' there, Mother, just as you are now, lookin' at that
-old sunset, his back to that old canal--the Yser, I think they call
-it--an' stinkin' it was, fair cruel. 'Auntie,' he said suddenlike,
-'tell me what brought you into this?' I said, 'No, boy'--just like a
-child he was as he set there--'it's for me to ask _you_ that question.
-You're a big gun, you know, a shining light; I'm a never-was-er.' That
-seemed to make him laugh; he was one that could always raise a laugh,
-even when he felt most solemn. 'I come of a long stock of high-nosed
-old Methodists,' he said. 'Always made a thing they call Conscience
-their watchword and fetish. There was a Stanning went to the stake for
-it in the time of Bloody Mary; there was another helped Oliver Cromwell
-to cut the head off King Charles. A poisonous, uncomfortable crowd, and
-all my life they've seemed to come back and worry me just at the times
-I should have been most pleased to do without them. People talk about
-free will--but there isn't such a thing, my dear.'
-
-"I allowed that there wasn't in my case. Then I told him about Troop
-Sergeant Major Hollis, who fought at Waterloo. 'Yes,' he said, 'yours
-is an old name in the city, older than mine, I dare say.' 'Well,' I
-said, 'according to Bazeley's Annals there was a William Hollis who
-was mayor of the borough in the year of the Spanish Armada.' 'Good for
-you, Auntie,' he said, chaffing-like; he was a rare one for chaff. 'One
-up to you. Then,' he said, 'there was William Hollis who was "some"
-poet in the eighteenth century, who wrote the famous romantic poem,
-"The Love Lorn Lady of Corfield." Still,' he said, 'these things don't
-explain you dragging your old bones to rot out here.' 'They do in a
-way, though,' I said. 'When we come up against a big thing it isn't us
-that really matters, it's what's at the back of us. I used to set in
-my old garden on The Rise,' I said, 'in those early days when those
-dirty dogs opposite was just beginning to wipe their feet on Europe.
-And I said to myself, Bill Hollis, how would _you_ like it if they
-broke through the fence into your garden, trampling your young seeds
-and goose-stepping all over your roses and your tulips. And I tell
-you, Jim--we got to be very familiar those last few weeks--it used to
-make me fair mad to read in the _Tribune_ what they'd done ... Louvain
-one time ... Termondy another ... et cetera.... And I kept on settin'
-there day after day, in my old garden on the top o' The Rise, saying to
-myself, Hollis, it's no use, me lad, you're going into this. You've
-failed in every bloody thing so far, and if you take on this you'll
-not be man enough to stick it out. War isn't thinking, it's doing, and
-you've never been a doer, you've not. Then I read in the _Tribune_ one
-morning that they'd got Antwerp and I said to myself, I can't stand
-this no more. And I went right away to the Duke of Wellington and had
-a liquor up--but only a mild one, you know--and then round the corner
-to the Recruiting Office and gave my age as thirty-six and here I am
-admiring this bleeding sunset with the eye of an artist.'
-
-"That made him laugh some more. 'Well, Auntie,' he said, 'I'm very
-proud to have known you and I hope you'll do me the honor of accepting
-this as a keepsake.' He unbuttoned his greatcoat and took this old
-watch out of his tunic."
-
-The Corporal paused an instant in his story to follow the example of
-his friend. He produced an old-fashioned gold hunting watch, with J. T.
-in monogram at the back, and handed it to Melia.
-
-"It's a rare good one, Mother," the Corporal's voice was very low,
-"solid gold." He opened the lid and showed her the inscription:
-
- To John Torrington, Esquire, from a Humble Admirer of His
- Genius, 1859.
-
-"Stanning said, 'I had the luck to buy that in a pawnshop in
-Blackhampton long after he was dead, and if I had had a boy of my own
-I should like him to have kept it as an heirloom, but as I have not
-I want you to take it, Auntie, because I know you'll appreciate it.'
-Somehow, I could tell from the way he spoke that he was done. I hadn't
-the heart to refuse it, although I hadn't a boy or a girl of my own
-neither." A huskiness in the Corporal's throat made it hard to go on
-for a moment. "'I'm only thirty-nine,' he said, 'and all the best is in
-me. I don't fancy having my light put out like this in a wet bog, but
-it's got to come, my dear. I hate to think that sometime to-morrow I
-shall be as if I had never been.' 'Not you,' I said. 'You're sickening
-for the fever.' But I couldn't move him. He'd got the hoo-doo. 'No use
-talking about it,' he said, 'but you and I'll never have that day's
-fishing in Corfield Weir. I should like you to have seen my cottage
-up at Dibley. It's got the ghost of that old boy.' He put his hand
-on the watch, Mother, just like this. 'If there is a heaven for dead
-painters, and I doubt it, I'd like to sit in John Torrington's corner
-on his right hand. You see, I've learned all sorts of things, living
-in his house. I was getting to know the lights on the Sharrow and the
-feel of the clouds--in all the great Torringtons the clouds feel like
-velvet--and he was going to show me the way to handle sunlight--I've
-already been twice across to New York to see "An Afternoon in July in
-the Valley of the Sharrow," the most wonderful thing of its kind in
-existence. You get the view from my cottage--his cottage--at Dibley.
-I should like you to have seen it, Auntie. And then I should like to
-have taken you across to New York to show you what old John made of
-it. Fancy having to go all the way to New York to look at it. So like
-us to be caught on the hop, in the things that really matter.' I give
-you my word, Mother, he raised a laugh even then, but of a sudden his
-voice went all queer-like. 'However,' he said, 'there's a Mind in this
-that knows more than we do.' Then the lad began to shiver just as if
-he had the ague. And the next day, about the same time, or mayhap the
-perishin' old sun had gone a bit more west, I had to go out across No
-Man's Land to bring him in ... what there was left of him."
-
-The Corporal ended his strange story as if after all it didn't much
-matter. He was quite impersonal, but Melia sat beside him shivering
-at the look in his eyes. Never before had the veil been torn aside in
-this way. She was a dull soul, fettered heavily by her limitations,
-but sitting there in the growing dusk it came on her almost with
-horror that in all those long years it was the first peep she had had
-behind the scenes of his mind. She hadn't realized the kind of man he
-was. More than once she had cast it in his face that he was an idle
-shack-about. Somehow, there had been nothing to give her the key to
-him; and now, miraculously as it seemed, it had come to her, it was too
-late.
-
-She had the key to him now. But the sands were running out in fate's
-hour glass. She couldn't bear to look at his thin gray face as the
-light fell on it, nor at his strange eyes fixed on the padlocked gate
-of the cottage opposite. Of a sudden the watch slipped from her shaking
-hands, and fell lightly in a little brake of thistles by the end of the
-bench on which they sat.
-
-Cautiously and carefully he picked it out. "Take care on it, Mother,"
-he said softly as he put it again in her hands. "I wish we'd a little
-boy as could have had it. However, we've not. There was once a George
-Hollis who was an artist; I showed you that picture of his, "The Glade
-above Corfield," the other day; Jim said it was a good one. John
-Torrington one time was his pupil. Don't suppose he was any relation
-but it's the same name."
-
-Melia put the watch in the pretty leather bag he had insisted on buying
-for her. And then she said with a horrible clutch in her throat: "Bill,
-promise! You'll come back ... won't you?"
-
-His eyes didn't move.
-
-"I'll be that lonely."
-
-He sighed softly like a child who is very tired. "I'll do what I can,
-Mother." The voice was gentleness itself. "I can't do more."
-
-She didn't know ... she didn't realize ... what ... she ... was....
-
-
-
-
-XXXII
-
-
-They sat hand in hand on the bench by the duck pond until the shadows
-began to lengthen along the valley of the Sharrow. For quite a long
-time they didn't speak, but at last their reverie was broken by the
-sight of a dusty figure with a sack on its back shambling along the
-road towards them. It was the village postman.
-
-"Who's bought the cottage opposite?" the Corporal asked.
-
-"Zur?" said the postman.
-
-The Corporal repeated his question.
-
-"They do sey, zur," said the postman in slow, impressive Doric, "the
-Mayor o' Blackhampton has bought it."
-
-"What--Alderman Munt?" The voice of the Corporal was full of dismay.
-
-"The Mayor o' Blackhampton, zur. Come here the other day in a motey car
-to look at it. Large big genelman in a white hat."
-
-The heart of the Corporal sank. What the hell had he, of all people,
-to go buying it for! Somehow the postman had shattered the queer sad
-little world in which they sat. A feeling of desperation came suddenly
-upon the Corporal. He rose abruptly from the bench. "Come on, Mother,"
-he said, "if we don't get along we'll be late for supper."
-
-"Don't want no supper, Bill."
-
-But the Corporal was firm.
-
-"I'd like to stop here all night," Melia said as she rose limply from
-the bench. "I'd like to stop here forever."
-
-That was the desire uppermost in the Corporal also, but it would not do
-to admit it.
-
-Down the road, hand in hand, like two children out late, they trudged
-in the gathering dusk to Corfield. It was a perfect evening. Just a
-little ahead was one faint star; over to the left in the noble line of
-woods that overlooked the river they could hear the nightingale. Once
-they stopped and held their breaths to listen. They saw the rabbits
-dart from among the ferns at their feet and run before them along the
-white road. The evening pressed ever closer upon them as they marched
-slowly on, until, at a turn in the road, Corfield with its fruit
-orchards came into view.
-
-It was a long trek home but they were in no hurry to get there. By the
-time they had come to the old stone bridge which spanned the broad
-river and united the country with the town it was quite dark and the
-lamps of the city were shining in the distance.
-
-Midway across the bridge they stopped to take one last look at the
-Sharrow gleaming down its valley. Since the afternoon this mighty
-symbol which from earliest childhood had dominated their every
-recollection seemed to have gained in power, in magic and in mystery.
-
-
-
-
-XXXIII
-
-
-The hard and difficult months wore on. Summer passed to autumn; Europe
-was locked in the most terrible conflict the world had ever seen, but
-there was no sign of a decision.
-
-Like Britain herself, Blackhampton was in the war to the last man
-and the last shilling. From the moment the plunge had been taken the
-conscience and the will of this brotherhood of free peoples had been in
-grim unison behind the action of its government. The war was no affair
-of sections or of classes; the issue was so clear that there was no
-ground for misunderstanding it.
-
-For years it had been freely declared that Britain was past her zenith,
-that disintegration had already begun, that England herself was
-enervated with prosperity. At the outset the enemy in making war had
-counted on the fact too confidently. Britain would not dare to enter
-the struggle, she who was suffering from fatty degeneration of the
-soul, or if in the end she was driven into the whirlpool in spite of
-herself she would prove a broken reed in this strife for human freedom.
-
-These were dangerous heresies, even for a race of supermen, and nowhere
-in the oldest of free communities was the task of dispelling it
-undertaken more vigorously than in Blackhampton. As its archives bore
-witness it had a long and proud record. No matter what great national
-movement had been afoot in the past, Blackhampton, the central city of
-England, geographically speaking, had invariably reacted to it with
-force and urgency.
-
-Among the many virile men who strove to meet a supreme occasion, none
-deserved better of his country, or of his fellow citizens than Mr.
-Josiah Munt. He was of a type suited beyond all others to deal with the
-more obvious needs of a time that called for the unsparing use of every
-energy; he had a genius of a plain, practical, ruthless kind; he was
-the incarnation of "carry on" and "get things done."
-
-From the first hour he took off his coat and buckled to. He worked like
-a leviathan. No day was too long for him, no labor too arduous; his
-methods were rough and now and again the clatter he made was a little
-out of proportion to the amount of weight he pulled in the boat. His
-life had been one of limited opportunity, but he had a knack of seeing
-the thing to be done and of doing it. People soon began to realize that
-he was the right man in the right place, and that as a driving force he
-was a great asset to the city of Blackhampton.
-
-The war was about fifteen months' old when Alderman Munt was chosen
-mayor of Blackhampton. He took up an office that was by no means a
-sinecure at a very critical moment. But it was soon clear that a
-wise choice had been made; a certain Britishness of character of the
-right bulldog breed did much to keep a population of two hundred and
-eighty-six thousand souls "up to the collar." Somehow, the rude force
-and the native honesty of the man appealed to the popular imagination;
-if a prophet is ever honored in his own country it is in time of war.
-
-During his mayoralty Josiah Munt came to occupy a place in the minds
-of his own people that none could have predicted. When the grim hour
-struck which altered the face of the world and changed the whole aspect
-of human society few could have been found to say a word in favor of
-the proprietor of the Duke of Wellington. He had begun low down, in a
-common part of the town; and, although there was really nothing against
-him, his name was never in specially good odor, perhaps for the reason
-that he bore obvious marks of his origin and because the curves of his
-mind were too broad for him to care very much about concealing them.
-In the general opinion he had been a very "lucky" man, financially
-successful beyond his merits, and for that reason arrogant. But in the
-throes of the upheaval preconceived ideas were soon shed if they did
-not happen to square with the facts; and it took considerably less than
-a year for Josiah to prove to his fellow townsmen that the goddess
-Fortune is not always the capricious fool she has the name of being.
-
-Even in the stress of a terribly strenuous twelve months the Mayor
-of Blackhampton, like the wise man he was, insisted upon taking his
-annual fortnight's holiday at Bridlington. He had not missed his annual
-fortnight at Bridlington once in the last thirty years. It did him so
-much good, he was able to work so much the better for it afterwards,
-that, as he informed Mr. Aylett the Town Clerk, on the eve of departure
-in the second week of August, "it would take more than the likes o' the
-Kaiser to keep him from the seaside."
-
-Like a giant refreshed the Mayor returned to his civic duties at the
-end of the month. His leisure at Bridlington had been enlivened by the
-company of the Mayoress, by Mrs. Doctor Cockburn and her two children,
-and also by Miss Gertrude Preston, who for quite a number of years now
-had helped to beguile the tedium of her brother-in-law's annual rest
-cure.
-
-As soon as the Mayor returned to the scene of his labors he found
-there was one very important question he would have to decide. In his
-absence the City fathers had met several times to discuss the matter of
-his successor and had come, in some cases perhaps reluctantly, to the
-conclusion that none but himself could be his peer. According to the
-aldermanic roster, Mr. Limpenny the maltster was next in office, but
-that wise man was the first to own that he had not the driving power,
-or the breadth of appeal of the present mayor.
-
-In ordinary times that would not have mattered, but the times were very
-far from ordinary. War was making still sterner demands, week by week,
-upon every man and woman in the country. Blackhampton had done much,
-as every town in England had, but its temporal directors felt that no
-effort must be relaxed, and that it was ever increasingly their duty
-"to keep it up to the collar." And Josiah Munt now filled the popular
-mind.
-
-The very qualities which in the gentler days, not so long ago, had
-aroused antagonism were at a premium now. For superfine people the
-Mayor was a full-blooded representative of a distressing type, but it
-was now the reign of King Demos: all over the island from Westminster
-itself to the parish hall of Little Pedlington-in-the-Pound the
-Josiah Munts of the earth had come at last by their own. On every
-public platform and in every newspaper was to be found a Josiah Munt
-haranguing the natives at the top of his voice, thereby guaranteeing
-his political vision and his mental capacity. King Demos is not a
-rose born to blush unseen; he knows everything about everything and
-he is not ashamed to say so. With a fraction of his colossal mind he
-can conduct the most delicate and far-reaching military operations,
-involving millions of men, and countless tons of machinery to which
-even a Napoleon or a Clausewitz might be expected to give his
-undivided attention; with another he is able to insure that the five
-million dogs of the island, mainly untaxed, shall continue to pollute
-the unscavengered streets of its most populous cities; with another he
-is able to devise a Ministry of Health; with another he can pick his
-way through the maze of world politics, and recast the map of Europe
-and Asia on a basis to endure until the crack of doom; with yet another
-he can devise a new handle for the parish pump.
-
-King Demos is indeed a bright fellow. And in Mr. Josiah Munt he found
-an ideal representative. Happily for Blackhampton, although there were
-places of even greater importance who in this respect were not so
-well off, he was a man of rude honesty. He said what he meant and he
-meant what he said; he was no believer in graft, he did not willfully
-mislead; he was not a seeker of cheap applause; and in matters of the
-public purse he had a certain amount of public conscience. As Mr.
-Aylett the town clerk said in the course of a private conversation with
-Mr. Druce the chairman of the Finance Committee, "His worship is not
-everybody's pretty boy, but just now we are lucky to have him and we
-ought to be thankful that he is the clean potato."
-
-Therefore, within a week of his return from Bridlington, the Mayor was
-met by the request of the City fathers that he should take office for
-another year. Josiah was flattered by the compliment, but he felt that
-it was not a matter he could decide offhand. "He must talk to the wife."
-
-At dinner that evening at Strathfieldsaye, when the question was
-mooted, the hapless Maria was overcome. Only heaven knew, if heaven
-did know, how she had contrived to fill the part of a Mayoress for so
-many trying months. She had simply been counting the days when she
-could retire into that life of privacy, from which by no desire of her
-own had she emerged. It was too cruel that the present agony should be
-prolonged for another year, and although her tremulous lips dare not
-say so her eyes spoke for her.
-
-"What do you say, Mother?" His worship proudly took a helping of
-potatoes.
-
-Maria did not say anything.
-
-"A compliment, you know. Limpenny's next in, but the Council is
-unanimous in asking me to keep on. I don't know that I want to, it's
-terrible work, great responsibility and it costs money; but, between
-you and me, I don't see who is going to do it better. Comes to that,
-I don't see who is going to do it as well. Limpenny's a gentleman and
-all that, college bred and so on, but he's not the man somehow. Give
-Limpenny his due, he knows that. He button-holed me this morning after
-the meeting of the Council. 'Mr. Mayor,' he said--Limpenny's one o'
-those precise think-before-you-speak sort o' people--'I do hope you'll
-continue in office. To my mind you're the right man in the right
-place.' I thought that very decent of Limpenny. Couldn't have spoken
-fairer, could he?"
-
-The hapless Maria gave an audible sniff and discontinued the eating of
-war beef.
-
-"Well, Mother, what do you say? The Council seems to think that I've
-got the half nelson on this town. So Aylett said. A bit of a wag in
-his way, is that Aylett. He said I'd got two hundred and eighty-six
-thousand people feeding from the hand. That's an exaggeration, but I
-see what he means; and he's a man of considerable municipal experience.
-Smartest town clerk in England, they tell me. 'It's all very well, Mr.
-Aylett,' I said, 'but I'll have to talk to the Mayoress. And I'll let
-you have an answer to-morrow.'"
-
-The hapless Maria declined gooseberry fool proffered by the respectful
-Alice.
-
-"Don't seem to be eating, Mother," said his worship. "Aren't you well?
-I expect it's the weather."
-
-Maria thought it must be the weather; at any rate it could be nothing
-else.
-
-"Want a bit more air, I think," said Josiah in the midst of a royal
-helping of a favorite delicacy. "Just roll back those sunblinds, Alice,
-and let in a bit o' daylight."
-
-The sphinx-like Alice carried out the order.
-
-"And open the doors a bit wider."
-
-Alice impassively obeyed.
-
-"Would you like a nip of brandy? The weather, I suppose. Very hot
-to-day. Temperature nearly a hundred this morning in the Council
-Chamber. We'll have some new ventilators put in there or I'll know the
-reason. At the best of times there's a great deal too much hot air in
-the Council Chamber. And when you get a hot summer on the top of it...!
-Alice, go and get some brandy for the Mistress."
-
-Exit Alice.
-
-"You'll feel better when you've had a drop of brandy. Antiquated things
-those ventilators at the City Hall. Aylett thinks they've been there
-since the time of Queen Anne. But they're not the only things I'm going
-to scrap if I hold office another year. There's too much flummery and
-red tape round about Corporation Square. Tradition is all very well but
-we want something practical."
-
-Alice entered with a decanter.
-
-"Ah, that'll put you right. A little meat for the Mistress, Alice.
-Never mind the soda. It'll not hurt you, Mother. Prime stuff is that
-and prime stuff never does harm to no one. Some I've had by me at the
-Duke of Wellington for many a year."
-
-At first the Mayoress was very shy of the brandy, prime stuff though
-it was, but his worship was adamant, and after a moment or two of
-half-hearted resistance Maria seemed the better for her lord's
-inflexibility.
-
-"Talkin' of the Duke of Wellington ... funny how things work out! When
-we went in there in '79, you and me, we little thought we should be
-where we are now, in the most important time in history. That reminds
-me. Alice, just ring up the _Tribune_ Office and give the editor my
-compliments and tell him I've arranged to speak to-morrow at the Gas
-Works at twelve o'clock and they had better send a reporter."
-
-"Very good, sir."
-
-"Alice!"
-
-Alice halted sphinx-like at the door.
-
-"Wait a minute. I'll go myself!" Josiah plucked his table napkin out
-of his collar. "Nothing like doing a thing while it's fresh in your
-mind. And do it yourself if you want it done right. I must have a word
-with Parslow the editor. The jockey he sent to Jubilee Park to report
-the flower show didn't know his business. The most important part
-of the speech was left out." He laid down his table napkin and rose
-determinedly. "Nice thing in a time like this for the Mayor of the City
-not to be fully reported. I've half a mind to tell that Parslow what I
-think of him. Some people don't seem to know there's a war on."
-
-Five minutes later when Josiah returned in triumph to his gooseberries
-he found Maria reclining on the sofa with her feet up, next the window
-opening on to the spacious lawns of Strathfieldsaye. The impassive but
-assiduous handmaid was fanning her mistress with a handkerchief.
-
-"That's right, Alice!" Josiah sat down with an air of satisfaction. He
-was not indifferent to the sufferings of Maria, but of recent years
-she seemed to have developed a susceptibility to climatic conditions
-perhaps a little excessive for the wife of one who at heart was still
-a plain man. She had a proneness to whims and fancies now which in
-robuster days was lacking. He could only ascribe it to a kind of
-misplaced fineladyism, and he didn't quite approve it.
-
-"I spoke pretty straight to the _Tribune_ ... to the subeditor. I said
-I hoped they fully realized their duty to the public and also to the
-Empire, but that I sometimes doubted it. He seemed a bit huffed, I
-thought ... but you'll see I'll be reported to-morrow all right. I'll
-look after your mistress, Alice. Go and get the coffee."
-
-When Alice returned with the coffee she found the Mayor vigorously
-fanning the Mayoress with a table napkin, and she was peremptorily
-ordered "to nip upstairs for a bottle of sal volatile."
-
-
-
-
-XXXIV
-
-
-There was honest satisfaction in the town when it was known that the
-Mayor had consented to remain another year in office. Most people
-agreed that it was a good thing for Blackhampton. But the Mayoress took
-to her bed.
-
-Could she have had her way she would never have got up again. For
-many years now life had been a nightmare of ever-growing duties,
-of ever-increasing responsibilities. Her conservative temperament
-resisted change. She had not wanted to leave the Duke of Wellington
-for the comparative luxury of Waterloo Villa, she had not wanted to
-leave Waterloo Villa for the defiant grandeur of Strathfieldsaye. When
-she was faced with a whole year as Mayoress she fully expected to
-die of it, and perhaps she would have died of it but for the oblique
-influence of Gertrude Preston; but now she was threatened with a
-further twelve months of the same embarrassing public grandeur she was
-compelled to review her attitude towards an early demise.
-
-Maria knew that if she allowed her light to be put out Gerty had the
-makings of a highly qualified successor. No one was better at shaking
-hands with a grandee, no one had a happier knack of saying the right
-word at the right time; and neither the Mayor nor the Mayoress,
-particularly the latter, knew what they would have done without her.
-Gerty, in fact, had become a kind of unofficial standard bearer and
-henchwoman of a great man. Every piece of gossip she heard about him
-was faithfully reported, every paragraph that appeared in the paper
-was brought to his notice, she flattered him continually and made him
-out to be no end of a fellow; and in consequence poor Maria was bitten
-with such a furious jealousy that she would like to have killed her
-designing but indispensable step-sister.
-
-When Maria took to her bed, the Mayor promptly requested the
-accomplished Gertrude to do what she could in the matter.
-
-"Josiah, she must show Spirit." As always that was her specific for
-the hapless Maria, and at the request of his worship she went at once
-to the big bedroom, from whose large bay windows a truly noble view of
-the whole city and the open country beyond was to be obtained, and as
-Josiah himself expressed it, "proceeded to read the riot act to the
-Mayoress."
-
-The Mayoress was in bed, therefore she had to take it lying down. For
-that matter it was her nature to take all things lying down. But in
-her heart she had never so deeply resented the obtrusion of Gerty as
-at this moment. She wanted never to get up any more, but if she didn't
-get up any more this meddlesome and dangerous rival would do as she
-liked with Josiah, and in all human probability as soon as the lawful
-Mayoress was decently and comfortably in her grave she would marry him.
-
-It was really Gerty who kept the Mayoress going; not by the crude
-method of personal admonition, however forcible its use, but by the
-subtle spur that one mind may exert upon another. Maria had to choose
-between showing spirit and allowing the odious Gerty to wear the
-dubious mantle of her grandeur.
-
-Hard was the choice, but Mother Eve prevailed in the weak flesh of the
-lawful Mayoress. She made a silent vow that Gerty should not marry
-Josiah if she could possibly help it. Yes, she would show spirit. Cruel
-as the alternative was, she would be Mayoress a second year. Even if
-she died of it, and in her present frame of mind she rather hoped she
-would, she alone should sit in the chair of honor at the Annual Meeting
-of the British Women's Tribute to the Memory of Queen Boadicea, she
-alone should take precedence of the local duchess and the county ladies
-at the annual bazaar in aid of the Society for Providing Black and
-White Dogs with Brown Biscuits.
-
-Maria, however, in her present low state, consented to Gerty deputizing
-for her at the review of the Girl Scouts in the Arboretum. She was
-reluctant to make even that minor concession--it was the thin end of
-the wedge!--but it had been intimated to Josiah that the Mayoress was
-always expected to say a few words on this spirited occasion. This was
-altogether too much for Maria in the present condition of her health.
-
-Before the Girl Scouts, Gerty bore herself in a manner that even
-Miss Heber-Knollys, the august principal of the High School for
-Young Ladies, who was present, a perfect dragon of silent criticism,
-could hardly have improved upon. The Mayor at any rate was delighted
-with his sister-in-law's performance, drove her back in triumph to
-Strathfieldsaye and insisted on her staying to dinner.
-
-The hapless Maria, after nearly three weeks of the peace and sanctity
-of her chamber, had struggled down to tea for the first time. She sat
-forlornly in the drawing-room, a white woolen shawl over her ample
-shoulders. It had been a real relief to allow Gerty to deputize for
-her, but now that the hour of trial was past Maria was inclined to
-despise, for the moment at any rate, the human weakness that had played
-into the hands of a highly dangerous schemer. It would have been so
-easy to have done it oneself, after all; it was such a simple thing,
-now that it was safely over!
-
-Gerty consumed a pickelet and drank two cups of tea with an air of
-rectitude, while Josiah recited the story of the afternoon for the
-delectation of Maria. He was so well satisfied with the performance
-of the deputy that the lawful Mayoress began to scent danger. "Gert
-says," the Mayor informed her, "that if you don't feel up to it she'll
-distribute the prizes on the Fifth, at the Floral Hall."
-
-The Mayoress drew in her lips, a sign that she was thinking. She
-_might_ be able to manage the Fifth, as "a few words" were not
-expected, although, of course, they were always welcome.
-
-Josiah, however, was not inclined to press the matter. Maria seemed
-rather worried by her duties as Mayoress and Gerty having had greater
-experience in that kind of thing and having already done extremely
-well in the Arboretum, it now occurred to the Mayor that it might be
-possible to arrange with the Town Clerk for her to take over the duties
-permanently in his second year of office. "I don't say the Council will
-consent," said Josiah. "It may be a bit irregular. But they know you're
-not strong, Mother. I was careful to tell them that when I consented to
-keep the job on. So the way is paved for you, as you might say, if you
-really don't feel up to it. Anyhow, I'll hear what Aylett has to say
-about it. No man in England, they tell me, is a safer guide in matters
-of municipal practice. If Aylett thinks it will be all right, I'm sure
-Gerty won't mind acting as Mayoress."
-
-"Delighted, Josiah!" Gerty's bow and smile were positively regal; they
-were modeled, in point of fact, upon those of Princess Mawdwin of
-Connemara, the most celebrated bazaar-opener of the period.
-
-The Mayoress drew in her lips still further. She began to think very
-seriously. No human Mayoress could have been in lower spirits or have
-felt less equal to her duties than did Maria at that moment, but if
-Gerty was allowed to usurp the honors and the dignities so indubitably
-hers it would be very hard to bear. The whole thing was so like Gerty.
-Always a schemer; in spite of her soft manners and her pussy-cat ways,
-always at heart a grabber. The Mayoress felt that if the weak state
-of her health called for a deputy, and really it seemed to do so,
-she would have preferred the Queen of Sheba herself to the designing
-Gertrude. For years she had been able to twist Josiah round her little
-finger. So like a man to be taken in by her! So like a man not to be
-able to see what a Fox of a woman she really was.
-
-Unfortunately Maria had reason to fear that she was very ill, indeed.
-She was afraid of her heart. It is true that three times within the
-past fortnight Horace, Doctor Cockburn, had solemnly assured his
-mother-in-law that there was nothing the matter with it. But thinking
-the matter over, as day after day she lay in her miserable bed, she
-had come to the conclusion that Horace was a modern doctor and that a
-modern doctor could hardly be expected to understand that old-fashioned
-organ, the heart.
-
-She had made up her mind, therefore, to have a second opinion. She
-would go to a heart specialist, a man who really knew about hearts.
-As a fact she had already made up her mind to have the opinion of Dr.
-Tremlett who humored her, who understood her system and its ways.
-Horace, who was so modern, rather smiled at Dr. Tremlett--he was
-careful not to go beyond a smile at Doctor Tremlett, although his
-demeanor almost suggested that he might have done so had not etiquette
-intervened.
-
-The Mayoress, therefore, was now placed in a difficult position by
-the success of a base intriguer. She didn't know what to do. Three
-days ago her mind had been made up that she would put herself in the
-hands of Doctor Tremlett, but if she did that she was quite sure that
-Doctor Tremlett, a physician of the old school who knew how important
-the heart was in every human anatomy and therefore treated it with the
-utmost respect, would not allow her to go overdoing it. Her time would
-be divided between her bed and the drawing-room sofa; he would most
-probably insist on a trained nurse--Doctor Tremlett really respected
-the heart--and the trained nurse would mean, of course, that the
-Mayoress had abdicated and that the way was open for the treacherous
-Gertrude with her pussy-cat ways to take over the duties permanently.
-
-It was a dilemma. And it was made needlessly painful for the Mayoress
-by the blindness and folly of the Mayor; in some ways so very able, in
-others he was such a shortsighted man! Really, he ought to have seen
-what Gerty was up to. So like a man to be completely taken in by her.
-One of her own sex would have seen at a glance that Gertrude was a Deep
-one.
-
-It was a most difficult moment for the Mayoress. Either she must be
-false to Doctor Tremlett and give up her heart or she would have to
-submit tamely to the rape of her grandeur and have it flaunted in her
-face by a Designing creature. Heaven knew that she had no taste herself
-for grandeur, but Gerty had a very decided taste for it and there was
-the rub!
-
-"Have a piece of this excellent pickelet, Josiah!" That smile and that
-manner were very winning to some eyes no doubt, but those of Maria were
-not of the number. That coat and skirt, how well they hung upon her!
-Gerty had always had a slim figure. Some people thought her figure
-very genteel, but again Maria was not of the number. Some people also
-thought her voice was very ladylike--Josiah did for one. La-di-da
-the Mayoress called it. Simpering creature! Even if the pickelet was
-excellent it didn't need her to say so. What had she to do with the
-pickelet? And there was Josiah submitting to her like a lamb and talking
-to her about the Town Clerk and the City Council and wondering whether
-she would mind giving him a hand on the Fifth at the Floral Hall.
-
-"I'll be delighted, Josiah--simply delighted. Anything to help. If I
-can be the slightest use to you--and to Maria."
-
-That precious, "And to Maria," brought a curl to the lip of the lawful
-Mayoress. Designing hussy! So like a man not to see through her. Maria
-felt herself slowly turning green. The heart has been known to take
-people that way.
-
-"Gert is staying to dinner, Mother. Hope Billing sent up that salmon."
-
-Billing had sent up the salmon, the Mayor was meekly informed by the
-Mayoress.
-
-"Chose it myself. Looked a good fish."
-
-"It is wonderful to me, Josiah"--affected mouncing minx!--"how you
-manage to get through your day. You seem to have time for everything.
-Why, your work as mayor alone would keep most people fully occupied.
-Yet you always seem able to attend personally to this and that and the
-other."
-
-"Oh, I don't know, Gert." Some of the great man's critics were inclined
-to think that since he had made so good in his high office his amazing
-self-confidence had abated a feather or two. "I've always tried to
-be what I call a prattical man. If you want a thing done right do it
-yourself--that's my motto."
-
-"But you get through so much, Josiah."
-
-"Just a habit. But there's a very busy year ahead. Being Mayor o' this
-city is not child's play in times like these. We're up against the food
-shortage now. Last year it was munitions. Next year it'll be coal. And
-the Army's always crying out for men. And any labor that isn't in khaki
-is that durned independent and very inefficient into the bargain. The
-papers are always writing up what they call democracy. Well, you can
-have all my share of democracy. Between you and me, Gert, it's mainly a
-name for a lot of jumped-up ignoramuses who have no idea of how little
-they do know. Yesterday I was over at Cleveley arranging with the Duke
-about a certain matter. Now he's prattical fellow, is that. He said,
-'Mr. Munt, to be candid, I don't know anything about the subject, but
-I'm very willing to learn.' I tell you, Gert, you'd have to wait till
-the cows come home to hear one of our jumped-up Jacks-in-Office talking
-that way. There's nothing they don't know and they're not afraid to say
-so. Why, it even takes _me_ all my time to tell them anything."
-
-
-
-
-XXXV
-
-
-At this critical moment Ethel came in. Mrs. Doctor Cockburn was raging
-secretly. She had turned up at the Arboretum, dutifully prepared to
-help her mother through a situation a little trying perhaps to the
-nerve of inexperience and behold! there was Gertrude, smiling and pat,
-going through it all without turning a hair and palpably not in need of
-the least assistance from any one. The mortified Ethel, having missed a
-Sunday at Strathfieldsaye, had not been in a position to realize that
-her mother was going to be so weak as to allow Gerty, who as usual had
-masked her intentions very cleverly, to take her place. It was such a
-pity! Miss Heber-Knollys who was there, had said it was such a pity!
-
-Ethel, an old and successful pupil of that distinguished lady, had
-been carried off to tea by her at the end of the proceedings. And Miss
-Heber-Knollys had expressed herself as a little disappointed. She
-was sure the Girl Scouts had been so looking forward to having the
-Mayoress with them that afternoon; at any rate, Miss Heber-Knollys
-had, although of course she had no pretensions to speak for the Girl
-Scouts; but speaking as a public, a semi-public woman of Blackhampton,
-although born in Kent and educated at Girham, speaking therefore,
-as a quasi-public and naturalized woman of Blackhampton with an M.A.
-degree, she looked to the Mayoress to take a strong lead in all matters
-relating to the many-sided activities of the City's feminine life.
-
-Ethel quite saw that. And she now proceeded fully and pointedly to
-report Miss Heber-Knollys for the future guidance of her father, the
-admonition of her mother and for the confusion and general undoing of
-the designing Gertrude. Mrs. Doctor Cockburn was far from realizing the
-critical nature of the moment at which she had chanced to arrive, but
-the general effect of her presence was just as stimulating as if she
-had. The lawful Mayoress was in sore need of mental and moral support
-if she was to prevail against the Schemer.
-
-Ethel was in the nick of time, but yet it was by no means certain that
-she was not too late to keep Gerty from the Floral Hall. The Floral
-Hall would depend on Doctor Tremlett, bluntly remarked Josiah.
-
-"Doctor Tremlett!" said Mrs. Doctor Cockburn sternly.
-
-"Your man has got the sack." The Mayor indulged in an obvious wink at
-Gerty who was looking as if butter would not melt in her mouth.
-
-"But," said the horrified Ethel, "there's no comparison between Horace
-and Doctor Tremlett. Horace belongs to the modern school; Doctor
-Tremlett's an old fossil."
-
-"Your Ma seems to think Doctor Tremlett understands her," said Josiah
-bluntly. "And Doctor Tremlett says she's got to be very careful of her
-heart or she'll have to lie up and have a trained nurse."
-
-"But Horace declares there is nothing the matter with it."
-
-"That's where Horace don't know his business as well as Doctor
-Tremlett. Your Ma has got to be very careful, indeed, and I'm going
-to arrange with Aylett for her to have a deputy for the whole of the
-coming year. You see if anything happened to her she'd _have_ to have a
-deputy, so it may be wise to take steps beforehand."
-
-"Nonsense, Father! Horace says there's nothing the matter with her. He
-says it's stage fright. You ought not to encourage her. Certainly it
-isn't right that Gerty should be taking her place. Miss Heber-Knollys
-says it may make a bad impression."
-
-"Don't know, I'm sure, what business it is of hers." His worship spoke
-with considerable asperity.
-
-"Besides, if any one must deputize, surely it should be me."
-
-There was a little pause and then said Gerty in her meek and dovelike
-voice, "We all thought, dear, that just now you would not care to take
-part in a public display. Perhaps after Christmas ... when the new
-little one has safely arrived."
-
-The other ladies realized that the Fox of a Gertrude had scored a
-bull's-eye. At Christmas it was fondly hoped in the family that the
-Mayor would at last have a grandson. Certainly, Mrs. Doctor could not
-be expected to take an active part at the Floral Hall.
-
-There were occasions, however, when Mrs. Doctor was visited by some
-of her father's driving force and power of will. And this was one of
-them. If a calamity of the first magnitude was to be averted--Gerty
-as Deputy-Mayoress was unthinkable!--there must be no half measure.
-"Horace says it will do Mother good to distribute the prizes at the
-Floral Hall, and if she doesn't I am sure that quite a lot of people
-will be disappointed."
-
-Even for Ethel this was rather cynical. She was well aware that she had
-greatly overrated the public's power of disappointment; at the same
-time it was clearly a case for strong action. "You'll go to the Floral
-Hall, Mother. And I'll come with you."
-
-"_You_, dear?" Gerty spoke in a melodramatic whisper.
-
-"I shall sit just behind her ... in the second row. We can't have
-people talking. And I shall put on my fur coat."
-
-It was a blow on the sconce for the specious Gertrude, but she took
-it with disarming meekness, smiling, as Ethel mentally described her,
-"like a prize Angora" down her long, straight, rather adventurous nose.
-
-"It's your duty, Mother." Mrs. Doctor proceeded to administer a mental
-and moral shaking. "The women of the city look up to you, they expect
-you to set an example. Miss Heber-Knollys feels that very strongly. And
-Horace, who is a far cleverer man than Doctor Tremlett, says all you
-have to do is to keep yourself up."
-
-"In other words, Maria," cooed Gerty in the voice of the dove, "you
-must show Spirit. And that is what I always tell you."
-
-There were times when Gerty was amazing. Her audacity took away the
-breath even of Ethel. As for Maria she felt a little giddy. She was
-fascinated.
-
-The She serpent.
-
-
-
-
-XXXVI
-
-
-Maria went to the Floral Hall. And she was seen there to great
-advantage. She wore a new hat chosen for her by Ethel at the most
-fashionable shop in the city; she distributed the prizes to the
-Orphans' Guild in a manner which extorted praise from even the
-diminished Gertrude; she didn't actually "say a few words," but her
-good heart--speaking figuratively of course--and her motherly presence
-spoke for her; and as Miss Heber-Knollys said, in felicitously
-proposing a vote of thanks to the Mayoress on whose behalf the Mayor
-responded, she had brought a ray of sunshine into the lives of those
-who saw the sun too seldom.
-
-This achievement was a facer for the designing Gertrude, also for the
-antiquated Doctor Tremlett. On the other hand, it was a triumph for
-Ethel and for the modern school of medicine. Horace, Doctor Cockburn,
-was reinstated. Maria would still have felt safer with some one who
-really understood the heart and its ways, but, as Ethel pointed out to
-her, she would earn the admiration of everybody if she could manage to
-postpone her really serious illness until the following year.
-
-Maria, at any rate, was open to reason. For the sake of the general
-life of the community she would do her best. But it was very hard upon
-her; far harder than people realized. As she had once pathetically told
-Josiah, "she hadn't been brought up to that kind of thing," to which
-the Mayor promptly rejoined, "that he hadn't either, but he was as good
-as some who had."
-
-Education was what the Mayor called a flam. In the main it wasn't
-prattical. He allowed that it was useful in certain ways and in
-carefully regulated doses, but of late years it had been ridiculously
-overdone and was in a fair way to ruin the country. Education didn't
-agree with everybody. He knew a case in point.
-
-A classical instance of schooling misapplied would always remain in his
-mind. There were times when he brooded over this particular matter in
-secret, for he never spoke of it openly. His youngest girl, upon whose
-upbringing a fabulous sum had been lavished, had cast such a blot on
-the family escutcheon that it was almost impossible to forgive her. It
-was all very well for Ethel to talk of Sally's doings in Serbia. That
-seemed the best place for people like her. Yet, as a matter of strict
-equity, and Josiah was a just man, although a harsh one, he supposed
-that presently he would have to do something in the matter.
-
-Under the surface he was a good deal troubled by Sally. She was out of
-his will and he had fully made up his mind to have nothing more to
-do with her; she had had carte blanche in the matter of learning, and
-the only use she had made of it was to disgrace him in the eyes of the
-world.
-
-All that, however, was before the war. And there was no doubt that the
-war had altered things. Before the war he lived for money and worldly
-reputation; but now that he was in the thick of the fight some of his
-ideas had changed. Money, for instance, seemed to matter far less
-than formerly; and he had come to see that the only kind of worldly
-reputation worth having didn't depend upon externals. His success as a
-public man had taught him that. It wasn't his fine house on The Rise,
-or the fact that he had become one of the richest men in the city, that
-had caused him to be unanimously invited to carry on for another year.
-Other qualities had commended him. He didn't pretend to be what he was
-not, and the people of the soundest judgment seemed to like him all the
-better on that account.
-
-He was beginning to see now that the case of Sally would have to be
-reconsidered. In spite of the damnable independence which had always
-been hers from the time she was as high as the dining-room table, there
-was no doubt that she was now fighting hard for a cause worth fighting
-for. He had not reached the point of telling Mossop to put her back in
-his will, but the conviction was growing upon him that he would have to
-do so.
-
-At the same time it was going to hurt. He could have wished now that he
-hadn't been quite so hasty in the matter. It was not his way to indulge
-in vain regrets or to pay much attention to unsolicited advice, but it
-seemed a pity that he had not listened to Mossop in the first instance.
-This business of Sally, in a manner of speaking, would be in the nature
-of a public climb down. And there had been one already.
-
-As far as Melia and her husband were concerned his conscience pricked
-him more than a little. At first it had gone sorely against the grain
-to revoke the ban upon his contemptuously defiant eldest daughter
-and his former barman. But once having done so, it had come suddenly
-upon him that he had gone wrong in that affair from the outset. The
-provocation had been great, but he had let his feelings master him.
-Melia and Hollis were not exonerated. She ought to have shown more
-respect for his wishes, and a man in the position of Hollis ought to
-prove himself before he ventures to ask for his employer's daughter;
-but, if he had to deal with the episode again, he felt, in the light of
-later experience, that he would have acted differently.
-
-However, by the end of November, Josiah had made up his mind to restore
-Melia and Sally to his will. It was only a question of when he should
-do so. But this was a matter in which his usual power of volition
-seemed to desert him. In other affairs of life to decide on a thing was
-at once to do it; but now he hesitated, putting off from day to day.
-It was a dose of particularly disagreeable medicine that there seemed
-no immediate need to swallow.
-
-A day soon came, however, when he was rather bitterly to rue his
-vacillation. One morning Josiah arrived at the City Hall at a quarter
-to ten. A meeting of the Ways and Means Committee was called for a
-quarter past and he had to take the chair in the Mayor's parlor. When
-he entered the room he found the Town Clerk standing in front of a fire
-of the Best Blackhampton Bright, a twinkle in his eye and a formidable
-sheaf of documents in his hand.
-
-"Good morning, Mr. Mayor." Perhaps a faintly quizzical greeting,
-respectful though it was. But this shrewd dog Aylett, with a pair of
-humorous eyes looking through gold-rimmed glasses which hung by a cord
-from his neck, had a slightly quizzical manner with everybody. He knew
-his value to the city of Blackhampton; he was the ablest Town Clerk it
-had ever had.
-
-"Mornin', Aylett," said his worship in that official voice which seemed
-to get deeper and deeper at every meeting over which he presided.
-
-"I suppose you've read your _Tribune_ this morning?" Aylett had an easy
-chatty way with everybody from the Mayor down. He was so well used to
-high affairs that he could be slightly jocular without impairing the
-dignity of a grandee and without loss of his own.
-
-"As a matter of fact I haven't," said the Mayor. "The girl forgot to
-deliver it this morning at Strathfieldsaye. Don't know, Aylett, what
-things are coming to in this city, I don't really. We'll have to have
-an alteration if we are not going to lose the war altogether."
-
-The Town Clerk smiled at this, and then he took the municipal copy of
-the _Tribune_ from among other works of reference on a side table,
-folded back the page and handed the paper to the Mayor. "That youngest
-girl of yours has been going it."
-
-It was an unfortunate piece of phrasing on the part of one so
-accomplished as Aylett. Josiah started a little and then with an air of
-rather grim anxiety proceeded to read the _Tribune_.
-
-There was three quarters of a column devoted to the doings of Miss
-Sarah Ann Munt; a sight which, with certain sinister recollections in
-his mind, went some way to assure Josiah that his worst fears were
-realized. But he had but to read a line or so to be convinced that
-there was no ground for pessimism. Miss Sarah Ann Munt, it seemed, had
-rendered such signal service to the Allied Cause that she had brought
-great honor upon herself, upon a name highly and justly esteemed in the
-city of Blackhampton, and even upon the country of her origin.
-
-The _Tribune_ told the thrilling story of her deeds with pardonable
-gusto. On the outbreak of war she had volunteered for service with the
-Serbian Army. Owing to her great skill as a motor driver, for which
-in pre-war days she had been noted, she had been attached in that
-capacity to the Headquarters Staff. She had endured the perils and the
-hardships of the long retreat; and her coolness, her daring and her
-mother wit had enabled her to bring her car, containing the Serbian
-Commander and his Chief of Staff, in safety through the enemy lines at
-a moment when they had actually been cut off. "It is not too much to
-say," declared the _Tribune_ whose language was official, "that the
-story of Miss Munt's deeds in Serbia is one of the epics of the war.
-By her own personal initiative she did much to avert a disaster of the
-first magnitude. No single individual since the war began has rendered
-a more outstanding service to the Allied Cause. She has already been
-the recipient of more than one high decoration, and on page five will
-be found an official photograph of her receiving yet another last week
-in Paris from the hands of the Chief of the Republic."
-
-Josiah felt a little dizzy as with carefully assumed coolness he turned
-to page five. There, sure enough, was Sally, looking rather fine drawn
-in her close-fitting khaki, but with that half-wicked down-looking
-smile upon her that he knew so well. With her leggings, and her square
-chin and her "bobbed" hair which hung upon her cheeks in side pieces
-and gave her a resemblance to Joan of Arc she was like an exceedingly
-handsome, but as they say in Blackhampton, a rather "gallus" boy.
-The hussy! He couldn't help laughing at the picture of her, it was
-so exactly how he best remembered her. The amused slightly defiant
-You-Be-Damned air was so extraordinarily like her.
-
-"Blame my cats!" said the Mayor.
-
-For several minutes it was his only remark.
-
-
-
-
-XXXVII
-
-
-The meeting of the Ways and Means Committee which had been called for a
-quarter past ten was of more than local importance. It was of national
-importance as the Mayor was careful to inform its members, among whom
-were the picked brains of the community, when he informally opened the
-business. But it was not until twenty minutes to eleven that he was
-able to do so. It was not that the Committee itself was unpunctual; it
-was simply that one and all had seen that morning's _Tribune_ and that
-the common task had perforce to yield for the nonce to their hearty
-congratulations.
-
-For one thing, the Mayor had become decidedly popular; for another,
-one more glorious page had been written in history by the Blackhampton
-born. It was really surprising the number of absolutely eminent people
-who at one time or another had contrived to be born at Blackhampton.
-In no city in England did local patriotism run higher, in no city in
-England was there better warrant for it. The Ways and Means Committee
-was quite excited. It was almost childishly delighted at having, as
-their Chairman, the rather embarrassed parent of one who, as Sir Reuben
-Jope, senior alderman and thrice ex-mayor, said in a well turned
-phrase, "bade fair to become the most famous woman in the Empire."
-
-Perhaps a certain piquancy was lent to an event that was already
-historical, by the knowledge in possession of those in the inner circle
-of municipal life that the Mayor had been hard hit by a former episode
-in the dashing career of Miss Sally. That episode belonged to the
-pre-war period when the stock of Mr. Josiah Munt did not stand nearly
-so high in the market as it did that morning. More than one of these
-seated round the council board with their eyes on the Chairman had
-relished the public chastening of the lord of Strathfieldsaye. He had
-been smitten in a tender place and they were not so sorry for him as
-they might have been. But other times other modes of thought. Since
-July, 1914, water had flowed under Sharrow Bridge. Nothing could have
-been more eloquent of the fact than the rather excited cordiality of
-the present gathering.
-
-"I really think, gentlemen," said Sir Reuben Jope, "that the City
-should recognize Miss Munt's extremely gallant behavior. I presume, Mr.
-Town Clerk, it is competent to do so."
-
-"Oh, quite, sir--oh, quite." In the expressive words in which the Mayor
-reconstructed the scene that evening for the benefit of the Mayoress,
-"that Aylett was grinning all over his lantern-jawed mug like a Barbary
-ape."
-
-"Then I shall propose at the next meeting of the Council that a public
-presentation be made to Miss Munt."
-
-"I shall be glad to second that, Sir Reuben," said Mr. Alderman
-Limpenny, "when the time comes to do so."
-
-But the Mayor interposed with asperity: "No, no, no, gentlemen. We
-can't have anything of the kind. Very good of you, I'm sure, but we
-must get on with the business." His worship rapped smartly upon the
-municipal mahogany. "This is war time, remember. We've got to discuss
-that contract of Perkins and Baylis. Seems to me, as I said at the
-last meeting, that those jockeys are over-charging the city forty per
-cent. You know, gentlemen, we've got to stop this leakage of public
-money. Whatever they may do in Whitehall, we are not going to stand for
-it here. Signing blank checks and dropping them in Corporation Square
-is not our form. As long as I sit in this chair there is going to be
-strict control of the public purse. And there is not going to be graft
-in this city neither. This is not Westminster. We don't propose to
-allow a public department to make a little mistake in its accounts of
-a few odd millions sterling and then jog quietly on as if nothing had
-occurred."
-
-"Hear! hear!" from the City Treasurer.
-
-"This war is costing the British people more than seven millions a day
-at the present time and to my mind it's wonderful that they are able
-to do it at the price. However, gentlemen, that is by the way. Let us
-return to the contract of Perkins and Baylis."
-
-Truth to tell the contract of Perkins and Baylis had less attraction
-for the Committee at that particular moment than the picture in the
-_Tribune_. Somehow, the picture had captured its imagination. Whether
-it was the leggings, the "bobbed" hair, the Joan of Arc profile, or the
-"gallus" smile of the undefeated Miss Sally, it was quite certain that
-the last had not been heard of her historic actions.
-
-The Committee of Ways and Means was not alone in its response to the
-picture in the _Tribune_ and the great deeds it commemorated. It was
-the talk of the whole city. Josiah moved that day and for many days
-in a kind of reflected glory. Wherever he went congratulations were
-showered upon him. Three cheers were given him at the Club when he came
-in to lunch. There was a decided tendency to identify him personally
-with Sally's fame, which, if exceedingly gratifying, was in the
-peculiar circumstances not a little disconcerting.
-
-For one thing, he was rather at a loss to know what line he should take
-in the matter. On the unhappy occasion of Sally's going to prison he
-had written her what he called "a very stiff letter." In pretty blunt
-language he had told her that as she had disgraced him in the sight of
-the world he should have no more to do with her and that he intended to
-disinherit her.
-
-To this letter no reply had been received. It was the kind of letter
-which did not call for one. Since that time nothing had passed between
-Sally and himself on that subject or on any other. But for some months
-now Josiah had rather keenly regretted that his attitude had been so
-definite. The war seemed to soften the past and to sharpen the present.
-In some respects he was a changed man; one less overbearing in temper,
-one less harsh in judgment.
-
-The times had altered. Life itself had altered. He was not a man to cry
-over spilt milk, or to deplore the bygone, but at this moment he had
-one sharp regret. Some weeks before Sally had burst into fame he had
-made up his mind to restore her to his will and meant to write and tell
-her so. But for a man of his sort the task was hard and he had weakly
-put it off from day to day. And now, alas, it was too late to do it
-with the grace of the original intention. It would seem like compulsion
-now. Josiah was keenly vexed with himself. Nothing could have been more
-eloquent of the rule which hitherto had controlled his life, "Do not
-put off until to-morrow, etc." In times like those a cardinal maxim.
-
-
-
-
-XXXVIII
-
-
-The Mayor was in a false position in regard to his youngest daughter
-and he had only himself to blame. But much of his strength lay in the
-fact that he was the kind of man whom experience teaches. Delays, it
-seemed, were highly dangerous. He must make up his mind to put his
-pride in his pocket.
-
-It was not an easy or pleasant operation, but it had to be performed.
-Nevertheless, the town had been ringing a full ten days with the name
-of Sally before he could bring himself to turn out after dinner of a
-December evening and walk along the road as far as The Gables.
-
-He was received in the library, as usual, by Lawyer Mossop. The city's
-leading solicitor had recently aged considerably. He looked thinner
-and grayer, his cheeks were hollow, there were more lines in his face.
-His only son, George, who in the natural course of events would have
-carried on a very old established business, had been killed in France,
-and news had lately come that his sister Edith's boy, whom he had
-helped to educate and who had already begun to make his way at the Bar,
-had been permanently disabled by the explosion of a hand grenade.
-
-Long training in self-conquest, backed by generations of emotional
-restraint, enabled Lawyer Mossop still to play the man of the world. He
-rose with a charming smile and an air of ready courtesy to receive his
-distinguished client and neighbor. At a first glance there was nothing
-to tell that for the solicitor, life had lost its savor.
-
-The two men had a long and intimate talk. Oddly unlike as they were in
-temperament, education, mental outlook, their minds had never marched
-so well together as this evening in all their years of intercourse.
-Somehow the rude vigor, the robust sense of the client appeared to
-stimulate the more civilized, the more finely developed lawyer.
-Moreover, he could not fail to perceive that it was a humaner, more
-liberal-minded Josiah Munt than he had ever known who had come to
-talk with him this evening. Success, popularity, response to the
-overwhelming public need had ripened a remarkable man, rubbed off
-some of the corners, softened and harmonized the curious dissonances
-that had jarred in what, after all, was a fine character. Rough
-diamond as Josiah Munt still was and must always remain in the eyes
-of the critical, he stood out this evening as a right-thinking,
-straight-seeing citizen, a real asset to the community.
-
-"Mossop," he said a little shamefacedly, after their conversation had
-gone on some time, "I don't like having to own up to it, but I'm bound
-to say that I wish I'd had the sense to take that advice you gave me
-in the matter of Sally."
-
-The lawyer could not help a furtive smile at the humility of the tone.
-
-"You've got to put that gel back in my will." It was a pretty stiff
-dose now that it had to be swallowed and a fierce frown did not conceal
-its nature. "And I want you to believe, Mossop,"--there was an odd
-earnestness in the deep voice--"that I had made up my mind to do it
-long before this--this damnable Serbian business happened."
-
-The lawyer assured Mr. Munt that he was convinced of that.
-
-"Serves me right, though, for delaying. Mossop, I'm annoyed with
-myself. It has the look of a force-put now, but I as I say----"
-
-The lawyer nodded a nice appreciation of the circumstances.
-
-"And while I'm about it, I've made up my mind to put Melia, my eldest
-girl, back as well."
-
-The lawyer gave a little sigh of satisfaction.
-
-"My three gels are now going to share alike. But you must provide six
-thousand pounds for Gertrude Preston."
-
-The lawyer penciled a brief note on his blotting pad.
-
-"As you know, Mossop, I've made a goodish bit, one way and another,
-since this war began. Those girls ought to be very well off. And you
-know, of course, that we are takin' in the next house for my hospital
-along The Rise. It'll give us another twenty beds--making forty in all."
-
-The lawyer said in his level voice that he understood that to be the
-Mayor's intention when he had negotiated the purchase with Mr. Harvey
-Mortimore.
-
-"We bought that property very well, eh? Not going to get less in value."
-
-The lawyer agreed.
-
-"I'm now considering the question of making it over permanently to the
-Corporation. Wouldn't make a bad nest egg for the city, eh?"
-
-"A very generous gift, Mr. Munt."
-
-"Anyhow, I'm arranging with the Duke to come over on the twenty-sixth
-of January to open the new annex. And in the meantime we'll think about
-giving it to the city as an orphanage or a cottage hospital."
-
-
-
-
-XXXIX
-
-
-The next morning Josiah paid a visit to Love Lane. The business of
-Sally had taught him a lesson. Events moved so quickly in these crowded
-days that it might not be wise to postpone a reconciliation with Melia.
-
-So busy had the Mayor been since his return from Bridlington at the end
-of August that he had not found time to visit his eldest daughter, nor
-had she been to Strathfieldsaye since her first somewhat uncomfortable
-appearance there. She was still inclined to be much on her dignity.
-Women who lead lonely lives in oppressive surroundings are not easily
-able to forget the past. The olive branch had been offered already; but
-it was by no means certain that Melia intended to accept her father's
-overtures.
-
-This December morning, however, as the great man, proceeding
-majestically on foot from the Duke of Wellington, turned up the narrow
-street with its worn cobblestones and its double row of mean little
-houses, he fully intended as far as might be humanly possible "to right
-things with Melia once for all."
-
-The Mayor entered the shop and found his eldest daughter serving a
-woman in a white apron and a black and white checked shawl over her
-head with two pennyworth of carrots and a stick of celery. The honest
-dame was so taken aback by the arrival of the Mayor of the city, who
-was personally known to every man, woman and child throughout the
-district as one of a great triumvirate, of whom the King and the Prime
-Minister were the other two, that she fled in hot haste without paying
-for the spoils she bore away in her apron.
-
-Melia, however, true to the stock whence she sprang, had no false
-delicacy in the matter. Without taking the slightest notice of the
-august visitor, she was the other side the counter in a jiffy, out of
-the shop and calling after the fleeing customer, "You haven't paid your
-fivepence, Mrs. Odell."
-
-The Mayor stood at the shop door, watching with a kind of grim
-enjoyment the process of the fivepence being extracted. He plainly
-approved it. Melia, with all her limitations, had the root of the
-matter in her. Upon her return, a little flushed and rather breathless,
-he refrained from paying her the compliment he felt she deserved but
-was content to ask if trade was brisk.
-
-Trade was brisker, said Melia, than she had ever known it.
-
-Josiah was glad of that. He then looked round to assure himself that
-they were alone in the shop and being convinced that such was the case,
-he stood a moment awkwardly silent, balancing himself like a stork
-first on one leg and then on the other.
-
-"Gel," he took her hand suddenly, "you are back in my will. Sally's
-back too. You are both going to have an equal share with Ethel." He
-felt the roughened, toil-stained hand begin to quiver a little in his
-strong grasp. "Bygones have got to be bygones. Understand me." He drew
-her towards him and kissed her stoutly and firmly in the middle of the
-forehead.
-
-He retained his hold while her hot tears dripped on to his hand. She
-stood tense and rigid, unable to speak or move. But she knew as she
-stood there that it was no use fighting him or fighting herself. His
-masterfulness, his simplicity, his courage had reawakened her earliest
-and deepest instinct, the love and admiration she had once had for
-him. Of a sudden she began to sob pitifully. With a queer look on his
-face he took out a large red handkerchief and put his arms round her
-and wiped her eyes slowly and with a gentleness hard to credit in him,
-just as he had done when as a very little girl she had fallen and hurt
-herself on the tiled yard of the Duke of Wellington.
-
-Speech was not possible to father or daughter for several minutes
-as time is reckoned in Love Lane, although to both it seemed
-infinitely longer, and then said the Mayor, "We'll expect you up at
-Strathfieldsaye on Christmas Day. Lunch one-thirty sharp." Then he
-added in a tone that was almost peremptory, "If that man o' yours
-happens to get home on leave your mother would like him to come, too."
-
-Her tear-dimmed eyes looked at him rather queerly. "Didn't you know,
-Dad?" The voice had something in it of the child he remembered but it
-was so faint that it was barely audible.
-
-"Know what?" His own voice had more asperity than it was meant to have.
-But she was able to make allowances for it, as she always had done in
-the days when she really understood him.
-
-"Bill's in hospital."
-
-He drew in his breath quickly. The thought ran through his mind that
-it was well he had had the sense to learn by experience. "Where? What
-hospital?" He was just a trifle nervous, just a shade flurried. As near
-as a toucher he had put it off too long, as in the case of Sally.
-
-"In France. At the Base."
-
-"Wound?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Bad one?"
-
-"He says it's only a cushy ... but ... but somehow I don't trust him."
-
-"How do you mean you don't trust him?"
-
-"I mean this, Dad." She was quite composed now; the tears and the
-shakings were under control; she spoke slowly and calmly. "No matter
-how bad he was, he's not one as would ever let on."
-
-"Why shouldn't he?"
-
-"He'd be afraid it might upset you. He's got like that lately."
-Suddenly the hard eyes filled again. "He grins and bears things now."
-
-Josiah nodded rather grimly, but made no comment. He turned on his
-heel. "See you this day fortnight up at the house." Abruptly, in deep
-thought, he went away.
-
-
-
-
-XL
-
-
-Bill's wound, as it turned out, was a painful one, and it had an
-element of danger. His right leg was shattered, also poisoned badly;
-it would take a long time to heal and there was a fear that amputation
-might be necessary. Such a case demanded special treatment, and to
-Melia's joy at the beginning of Christmas week she received word from
-her father that her husband had been transferred from France to the
-Mayor of Blackhampton's hospital.
-
-There is no saying how this providential arrangement came about. It
-may have been coincidence; on the other hand it may not. Josiah in his
-second year of office was certainly becoming a power, if not an actual
-puller of strings. Influence may or may not have been at work; anyhow
-the Corporal bore the long journey so well that Melia, as a special
-concession, was allowed to see him for a short time on Christmas Eve.
-
-She found him wonderfully cheerful in spite of the fact that he had
-endured much pain; more cheerful perhaps than she had ever known him. A
-subtle change had taken place since she had seen him last. The look of
-utter weariness had yielded to something else. It was as if he had been
-spiritualized by suffering; indeed as he smiled at her gently from his
-bed she felt that he was not the kind of man she used to know.
-
-The memory of those few exquisite days in the summer was still in their
-minds. It was from that point they now took up their lives. For both
-the world had changed. They saw each other with new eyes. This man of
-hers had been as good as his word, he had done his best to come back
-to her; and there, full of pain, he lay helpless as a baby, yet now
-inexpressibly dear as the only thing in life that had any meaning for
-her. As for himself, as he smiled up at her, the grace of his dreams
-was again upon her. This was she about whom the romance of his youth
-had been woven. He didn't see her as she was, a commonplace, worn,
-gray-haired woman, or if he did he remembered the sacrifices she had
-made for his sake; he remembered that she had once believed in him, and
-after long days she had come to believe in him again.
-
-There was rare conflict in the clean and quiet room. The walls were
-hung with holly; everything about the place seemed to minister to a
-wonderful sense of home. He sighed a deep content as she took a chair
-by his bed and held a feverish hand in hers.
-
-"Your father's hospital!" A deep sigh spoke of gratitude. "When you
-happen to see him tell him from me I'm glad to be in it."
-
-She promised to do so.
-
-"It's a good place." His eyes and his voice grew softer than their
-wont in speaking of his father-in-law. "A bit of luck to be here." He
-sighed luxuriously.
-
-Said Melia, "You must take your time getting well, Bill."
-
-Eyes of suffering looked into hers. "I expect I won't be right just
-yet." They were still together, passing the time with delightful
-fragments of talk and with fragments of silence equally delightful
-when a nurse came importantly into the room to say that the Mayor had
-arrived unexpectedly to look round the hospital and to wish a happy
-Christmas to his guests.
-
-Melia rose rather nervously. "I think I'll be going, Bill."
-
-"Not yet, my dear." The voice from the bed was calm and quiet. "We must
-let bygones be bygones. The times has changed."
-
-She was glad to hear him say that. And she had not told him yet of her
-father's recent act of reparation. Should she tell him now? Was the
-moment favorable? Or had she better wait until----
-
-The question, however, was already decided. Too late to tell him now.
-The door at the other end of the room was open and the Commandant had
-entered followed by his worship the Mayor.
-
-"Only one bed in this room, sir," said the Commandant. "A special case.
-Corporal Hollis."
-
-The Mayor looked calmly round. He didn't see Melia who was hidden by a
-screen between the bedstead and the door. "I notice, ma'am, you've got
-another door yonder." He pointed to the other end of the room. "Hope
-these new casements fit well."
-
-The new casements fitted very well indeed.
-
-"All the same,"--the deep voice was very much that of the man of
-affairs--"I expect you get a bit of draught here when the wind blows
-from the northeast."
-
-The draught was nothing to speak of, he was assured.
-
-"Any complaints? Heating apparatus all right? Ventilators working
-properly?"
-
-There were no complaints to make of any kind.
-
-"Thank you, ma'am," said the Mayor. "You can leave me here alone a few
-minutes with Corporal Hollis--if he's well enough to talk to me."
-
-The Commandant retired, closing the door after her, and the Mayor
-slowly approached the bed.
-
-"How are you, Bill?" It was a tone of simple, hearty kindness.
-
-Before the occupant of the bed could answer the question, Josiah,
-coming round the corner of the screen, was taken aback by the sight
-of his eldest daughter. He was not prepared for her, yet he was quite
-equal to the situation. "Hulloa, Melia"--it was a father's cordiality.
-"How are you, gel? Happy Christmas to you. Happy Christmas to you both."
-
-For a little while he stood talking to them, easily and without
-constraint, while the Corporal lay in his bed saying nothing, but with
-his worn face softened by pain and service and the thought of others.
-From time to time he smiled grayly at the Mayor's pungent humor. Even
-in the old days "the Mester" had always had a liberal share of that
-quality in which his fellow townsmen excelled. Josiah's sense of humor
-was very keen, particularly when it came to assessing the shortcomings
-of other people; it had a breadth, a gusto, a penetration which high
-office seemed to amplify. His stories, comments, criticisms of those
-prominently before the world kept the Corporal quietly amused for some
-time. Finally, the Mayor looked at his watch. "I must be getting on,"
-he said. "I've got to address the War Workers' Association at six
-o'clock. And at seven I've promised to look in at the Hearts of Oak
-annual soiree and concert."
-
-Very simply and with the manliness that was part of him he held out
-his hand. Without hesitation the Corporal took it. They looked in the
-eyes of one another. "I hope you're quite comfortable," said Josiah.
-"If there's anything you need you have only to let me know. So long,
-my boy, and don't be in a hurry to get well. See you to-morrow, Melia.
-Wish you could have brought Bill along with you. Happy Christmas."
-
-With a wave of the hand for them both the Mayor went away, exuding an
-atmosphere of kindness and goodwill towards all men except Germans. In
-the Mayor's opinion Germans were not men at all.
-
-
-
-
-XLI
-
-
-It would have been ungracious of Melia not to spend Christmas Day at
-Strathfieldsaye. Indeed, she felt that she could hardly do otherwise.
-That stubborn thing, pride, might still be lurking in the corners of
-her heart, yet it durst not show itself openly; besides, whatever its
-secret machinations, she could not overlook the fact that her father
-was striving to wipe out the past. Perhaps the past is the only thing
-easier to create than to destroy, but certainly Josiah was now trying
-his best to undo it. And this Melia knew.
-
-In view of the important function on Christmas Day, Melia had been
-taken in hand by Aunt Gerty. It would have been natural to resent the
-interference of that lady, but it was clear that her actions were
-inspired "from above." At the same time no emissary could have been
-more tactful, more discreet. In situations that called for finesse
-she was hard to beat; and she was able to have Melia "fitted" for a
-_really_ good coat and skirt by her own accomplished dressmaker, Miss
-Pratt, and helped her also to choose a hat at Messrs. Rostron and
-Merton's, the best shop in the city, without arousing antagonism in
-that sensitive soul. Also she whispered in Melia's ear that there was
-reason to believe that her father had a little surprise in store for
-her on Christmas Day.
-
-In regard to "the surprise" Gerty's information was correct. And as
-Melia, looking and feeling far more fashionable than she had ever done
-in her life, turned up at Strathfieldsaye at a quarter past one, "the
-surprise" duly materialized even before the Christmas luncheon at
-one-thirty. Her father gave her a check for fifty pounds.
-
-On Melia's last visit to Strathfieldsaye she had felt quite "out of
-it," but not so now. Partly it may have been the new clothes. Formerly,
-she had felt self-conscious, awkward, hopelessly shabby in the midst of
-a grandeur to which she was unused, whereby she was thrown back upon
-her embittered self, but now her changing circumstances, the considered
-kindness of her mother and Gerty, and especially her father's new
-attitude towards her gave her a sense of happiness almost.
-
-Perhaps the fact that Ethel, Mrs. Doctor Cockburn, was unable to be
-present may also have ministered a little to this feeling. Ethel's
-absence was much deplored. Somehow a void was created which seemed to
-rob the modest function of any claim to distinction it might have had;
-yet in her heart Melia felt that the absence of Mrs. Doctor made it
-easier for her personally, and even for her mother, whatever it may
-have done for people so accomplished in the world as her father now
-was, and for Aunt Gerty who somehow had learned to be genteel without
-being stuck-up. With Ethel, on the other hand, she had never felt quite
-at her ease. Nor did anybody, if it came to that. Putting people at
-their ease was not among Mrs. Doctor Cockburn's many gifts. She was so
-much a lady that simple folk were apt to be overwhelmed by her sense of
-her happy condition. It was difficult for ordinary people to be their
-plain selves in her presence; ordinary they might be, but in social
-intercourse Mrs. Doctor seemed almost to resent their plainness as
-being in the nature of a slight upon herself.
-
-However, Ethel was not there. And in Melia's opinion her absence gave a
-finer flavor to the turkey, a gentler quality to the plum pudding and a
-more subtle aroma to the blazing fumes that crowned it. Nevertheless,
-it was a theme for much comment. An Event of the first magnitude was
-almost due to take place in the family; and the head of it, presiding
-over the modest feast with a kind of genial majesty which ever-growing
-public recognition of his unusual qualities seemed to enhance and to
-humanize, made no secret of the fact that he very much wanted to have a
-little grandson.
-
-"Well, Josiah," said the gallant Gerty, adding a little water to some
-excellent claret and smiling at him with two level rows of white teeth,
-"I am sure we all hope your wish will be gratified. No man, I'm sure,
-if I may be allowed to say so, more thoroughly deserves a little
-grandson than yourself."
-
-To some minds, perhaps, it was not quite in the Gertrude tradition.
-It was Christmas Day and in crowning the Christmas pudding Josiah had
-been a thought on the free side, no doubt, with some of the finest old
-brandy even the Duke of Wellington could boast; but in any case she
-meant well. All the same, the Mayoress could not repress a slight frown
-of annoyance. The demonstration did not amount to more than that. It
-did not really convict Gerty of bad taste, but Maria felt somehow that
-she had to watch her continually. Gerty was such a Schemer. Besides,
-what business was it of Gerty's anyway?
-
-"Thank you, Gert." The Mayor raised his glass to the Serpent with the
-homely charm that was never seen to greater advantage than on Christmas
-Day in the family circle. "Good health and good luck all round. I must
-have that little grandson, somehow. Melia, my gel, that's something for
-you and your good man to bear in mind."
-
-Melia flushed. She looked so confused and so unhappy that the watchful
-Gerty, who with all her ways really spent a good deal of time thinking
-for others, suddenly perceived that it might be kind to change the
-subject.
-
-"Josiah," said Gerty, "what is this one hears about a public
-presentation to Sally?"
-
-"You may well ask that." The Mayor held up a glass of '68 port to the
-light. "Some of those jockeys on the City Council have been making
-themselves very officious."
-
-"Glad to hear it, Josiah." Gerty was just as pat as your hat. "Think
-of the honor she's brought to the city. Surely right and surely proper
-that what Sally has done should be publicly recognized. Even the
-_Times_ says she's a credit to the Empire."
-
-"All very well," said his worship. "But it's nothing like ten years
-since I used to lay her across my knee and spank her. There was one
-slipper I kept for the purpose." With a humorous sigh he converged upon
-the brim of his wine glass. "But I could never make nothing of that
-gel. There was always the devil in her. Public presentation's all very
-well, but some of those jockeys on the Council have persuaded the Duke
-to make it, and he's fair set on my takin' the chair as I'm Mayor o'
-the city and so on."
-
-"The Duke is such a sensible man!" An arch preen of Gerty's plumage.
-"Only right and proper, Josiah, that you should take the chair. The
-other day, according to the _Tribune_, the French Government gave her a
-very high decoration. She's quite a heroine in Paris."
-
-"I'm not surprised at anything." In the Mayor's grim eye was quite
-as much vexation as there was humor. "Stubborn as a mule. And that
-independent. Must always go her own gait. Nice thing my having to
-preside over three thousand people while she's being handed an
-illuminated address. Of course, that Aylett's at the back of it.
-Mischievous dog! I said if there must be a public presentation, as I
-was the father o' the hussy, it was up to somebody else to preside.
-But, seemingly, they don't take to the idea."
-
-"Of course not, Josiah."
-
-Groaned the Mayor, "I'll have to make the best of it, I suppose. Still,
-a scurvy trick on the part of that Aylett."
-
-
-
-
-XLII
-
-
-In spite of the Mayor's attitude, which was unsympathetic to the
-verge of discouragement, the Town Clerk was able to inform him on New
-Year's morning that Miss Sarah Ann Munt had graciously consented to
-accept an illuminated address in commemoration of her deeds on January
-twenty-fifth at the Floral Hall. The news was not received graciously.
-Josiah had comforted himself with the not unreasonable hope that the
-Hussy would decline the presentation; it would be so like her to upset
-their plans. But no, after all, Sally preferred to behave with still
-deeper cussedness. She wrote a charmingly polite letter from the Depôt
-of the Northern Command at Screwton, where she was at present attached,
-to inform the members of the Blackhampton City Council that it would
-give her great pleasure to attend the function on January twenty-fifth
-and that she was very sensible of the honor about to be conferred upon
-her. And that, after all, was even more like her than a refusal of the
-proposal would have been.
-
-Josiah was more disconcerted than he cared to own. It was necessary
-to hide his feelings as far as he could, but he was not a finished
-dissembler, and, in addition to "that Aylett," there were several
-members of the Council who seemed to enjoy the situation. Several
-of these received a piece of the Mayor's mind in the course of the
-morning. "He didn't know what they could be thinking of to be wastin'
-the Town's money in that way." In other words, Josiah had decided to
-carry things off with a high hand.
-
-That evening, after dinner, he sat down and wrote a letter.
-
- "Dear Sarah Ann, I understand that you are to be presented with an
- Address on the twenty-fifth at the Floral Hall. Your mother and I hope
- that you will be able to come and stay here over the week end. Your
- affectionate Father, Josiah Munt. P.S. No need to tell you that this
- Affair is none of my doing."
-
-It was not an easy letter to write nor was the Mayor altogether
-satisfied when it was written. But in the circumstances it wouldn't do
-to say too much.
-
-By return of post came a dry, rather curt note from Sally. She thanked
-her father for the invitation, but she had already promised Ethel that
-when next in Blackhampton she would stay at Park Crescent.
-
-Josiah felt annoyed. Once more it was so like her. Somehow the reply
-left him less easy in his mind than ever. He would be glad when the
-ordeal of the twenty-fifth was over. He didn't trust the minx. As
-likely as not she would play some trick or other; she was quite capable
-of affronting him publicly. However, the eyes of the world were upon
-him, he must keep a stiff upper lip, he must see that she didn't down
-him.
-
-In the meantime, from another quarter, bitter disappointment came. The
-high hopes of a little grandson did not materialize. Instead of a lusty
-Horace Josiah Cockburn bursting upon a flattered world, the inferior
-tribe of Gwenneths and Gwladyses had a Gwendolen added to their number.
-It was quite a blow. The Mayor and all his family had set their hearts
-on a boy. For once the successful Ethel had been less than herself. She
-had failed conspicuously. It was impossible to conceal the fact that
-people were a little disappointed with her.
-
-Happily, Gwendolen had enough sense of proportion and right feeling to
-arrive according to schedule. It would have been unpardonable in her
-to have prevented Mrs. Doctor from attending the important function
-on the twenty-fifth at the Floral Hall and the even more important
-ceremony on the twenty-sixth when the Duke was to open the new annex
-to the Mayor of Blackhampton's hospital, which at one acute moment she
-had threatened to do. Fortunately Gwendolen remembered herself in time.
-She contrived to make her appearance on January second in this vale of
-tears, and, although from the outset not a popular member of society,
-after all she was less unpopular than she might have been had she
-deferred her arrival until a week later.
-
-
-
-
-XLIII
-
-
-The scene at the Floral Hall was worthy of the occasion. All that
-was best in the public life of Blackhampton and of the county of
-Middleshire was gathered in force in the ornate building in New Square.
-
-There was more than one reason for the representative character of the
-audience. In the first place it was felt to be a royal opportunity to
-exalt the horn of patriotism. This public recognition of the heroic
-Miss Munt was a compliment paid to the women of Britain, to those many
-thousands of magnificent women whose deeds had proved them worthy of
-their brothers, their husbands and their sons. Again, the figure of
-Sally herself had fired the public imagination. A Joan of Arc profile
-overlaid by a general air of you-be-damnedness made an ideal picture
-postcard as her father had already found to his cost. All sorts of
-people seemed to take a fantastic pleasure in addressing them to Josiah
-Munt, Esquire, J.P., Strathfieldsaye, The Rise, Blackhampton. "How
-proud you must be of her," et cetera. Ad nauseam.
-
-Moreover, this function was intended as a tribute to the Mayor himself.
-His worth was now recognized by all classes. He was the right man in
-the right place; his boundless energy and his practical sense were of
-the utmost value to the community; and the wise men of that thickly
-populated district seized the chance of paying homage to Josiah and at
-the same time of exploiting a powerful personality in the interests of
-the state.
-
-At three o'clock, when the Mayor came on to the platform, the large
-hall was very full. He was followed by the Duke of Dumbarton, a genial,
-young-middle-aged nobleman, who was to make the presentation, and by
-other magnates. Behind the Chairman many notables were seated already;
-and to lend point to the somewhat intimate nature of the proceedings,
-which may or may not have been part of the design of these "in the
-know," the members of Josiah's family with the national heroine in
-their midst had been grouped prominently upon his right hand.
-
-The Town Clerk, a little wickedly perhaps, had intimated beforehand
-to the Mayor that the proceedings would really be in the nature of
-"a family party." At all events, his worship took the hint "of that
-Aylett" literally. Before sitting down at the table and taking formal
-charge of the meeting his eyes chanced to light on a group of men in
-hospital blue for whom places had been reserved in the front row of
-the balcony. Among these he recognized Corporal Hollis, whose leg as a
-result of five weeks' special treatment had improved quite remarkably.
-
-The Mayor went to the end of the platform and called loudly, "Bill,
-you are wanted down here. Come on to the platform, my boy."
-
-The Corporal did not covet notoriety, but it would have been as wise to
-thwart the waters of Niagara as to resist the will of the City's chief
-magistrate at a public meeting. Until his instructions had been carried
-out there was not a chance of a start being made. Reluctantly realizing
-this the Corporal in the course of three minutes had made his way down
-from the gallery and on to the platform, a crutch in each hand, where
-his august father-in-law received him.
-
-"Come on, Bill." He was shepherded along the front row of chairs as
-if the presence of three thousand people was a very ordinary matter.
-"You come and sit with the wife. Colonel Hickman, kindly move up a bit.
-Thank you. Like a chair for your leg? If you do, I'll get one."
-
-The Corporal declined a chair for his leg, just as the meeting incited
-by certain officious members of the Town Council broke into cheers.
-Melia and the Corporal, seated side by side, were covered in momentary
-confusion. Then the chairman took his seat at the table, reduced the
-meeting to silence by rapping the board sternly with his mallet and
-stood up again briefly to open the proceedings. These consisted in
-patriotic speeches from Lieutenant-General Sir William Hardcastle,
-K.C.B., and the Duke of Dumbarton, and the presentation of an
-illuminated scroll in a gold casket to Miss Sarah Ann Munt.
-
-First, a speech excellent in its kind, which paid tribute to the deeds
-of the sons and daughters of the Empire in all parts of the world; also
-it emphasized the sternness of the hour and the need for "keeping on,
-keeping on." Then, amid a flutter of excitement, came the presentation
-to Miss Munt. It was made by the Duke, a figure deservedly popular all
-over the district from which, to be sure, he derived immense revenues.
-A master of courtly phrase and well turned compliment, he gave the
-heroine of the occasion the full benefit of his powers. And when at
-last, in the purview of three thousand people, the dauntless Sally came
-forth to the table to receive the casket and scroll she was a sight to
-behold.
-
-Rather tall, very slender, brown of cheek and with the eye of a falcon,
-in her simple, faded, but much beribboned khaki she looked at that
-moment a child of the gods. At the sight of her a thrill ran through
-the hall. Cinema, newspaper, picture postcard had led that assembly
-to set its hopes high, but the reality, in its calm strength, with a
-faintly ironical smile fusing a noble fixity of purpose, more than
-fulfilled them. In the youngest daughter of the Mayor of the city was
-symbolized the glorious spirit of the youth of the Empire.
-
-A hush came over the great audience. The Duke opened the casket and
-took out the scroll. Everybody seemed fascinated by her, including the
-members of her own family in a group at the right-hand of the Chair.
-But there was just one person there who did not seem willing to submit
-without a struggle to her dynamic influence; and that person was her
-rather rueful, slightly scandalized male parent.
-
-Even now, in this, of all moments, his worship seemed to detect in
-that amazing personality the spirit of Damnable Independence. How many
-times in the past, in the stress of combat, when it had been his will
-against hers, had he seen that dogged, oh-go-to-the-devil look which
-would surely have driven him mad had not he been weak enough to admire
-it secretly. There was no getting topside of a look of that kind. As
-she stood in the presence of the ducal necktie, with a faint trace
-of humorous scorn at the corners of her lips, the outraged Chairman
-suddenly caught and fixed her eye. And as he did so his own eye, as of
-old, seemed to say to her, "One word from You, our Sally, and I'll give
-You such a Lammoxing!"
-
-The casket and scroll were handed to Miss Munt, who acknowledged them
-with a graceful inclination of an imperial head, and then cheers broke
-out in a hurricane. In part, no doubt, they were inspired by family
-associations, for her father had grown vastly popular; but in large
-measure they were due beyond a doubt to sheer power of personality. The
-secret force which distinguishes one human being from another, over
-and beyond their works and their walk in life, belonged to Sally in
-sovereign degree. Her portraits and her fame had kindled hopes which
-the dauntless reality had more than fulfilled. In the sight of all she
-stood a true daughter of her race, foursquare, unconquerable.
-
-At last the cheers subsided and then arose demands for a speech from
-the Mayor. As the result of assiduous practice in war oratory Josiah
-had won remarkable success. He did not pretend to polish or to flights
-of intellect or fancy, but he had a knack of speechmaking that was
-immensely to the taste of his fellow citizens. In response to the
-insistent demand of the meeting he rose ponderously.
-
-On the crowded platform, as in the body of the hall itself, was many a
-shrewd judge of men. The average Briton of all classes has an instinct
-in such matters that is almost uncanny. He knows a man when he sees
-one. And when the Mayor stood up to address them, a little yet not too
-much, embarrassed by the nature of his reception, all present knew that
-they saw one now. Charmed and delighted by the heroine of the piece, so
-shrewd a body of persons may also have been rather amazed that she had
-come to happen. But, somehow, her father seemed to explain her. A rough
-diamond, no doubt, but at that moment, in his self-possession, in his
-self-belief, in his titanic grappling power when faced with difficulty,
-he was an expression of the genius of the race.
-
-All the same it was not easy for the Mayor of Blackhampton to find
-words at that moment. As a rule, when on his legs he did not suffer a
-lack of them. He had a natural gift of speech and a faculty of humor
-which found expression in many a racy idiom. But his powers threatened
-to desert him now.
-
-"Ladies and gentlemen," he began. There was a pause and then he
-began again. "Ladies and gentlemen." There was a second pause while
-three thousand sympathetic fellow citizens hung upon the phrase.
-And then at last slowly and grimly the great voice boomed out,
-"Ladies and gentlemen, there are those who think they can down the
-Anglo-Saxon race, but"--slight pause--"they don't know what they are
-un-der-ta-kin'----"
-
-There was one pause more. It lasted but an instant for the meeting
-broke out in a roar. Only too well had the Mayor interpreted the
-thought that was dominating the minds of his fellow citizens.
-
-
-
-
-XLIV
-
-
-On the Sunday after the famous meeting at the Floral Hall, Bill paid a
-first visit to Strathfieldsaye. He was loth to yield to the will of his
-father-in-law, but Josiah would take no denial. Corporal Hollis was a
-stubborn man, but no one under the rank of a field marshal could hope
-to resist effectively the Mayor of Blackhampton in his second year of
-office.
-
-Due notice was given by Josiah that he was going personally to fetch
-Melia on Sunday afternoon. He intended to drive in his car to Love Lane
-for that purpose. On the way back he would call at the hospital for
-the Corporal "who must come along up home and drink a dish of tea with
-Maria."
-
-The program was not exactly to the taste of Bill, who had little use
-for tea and perhaps even less use for his "in-laws." But what could he
-do in face of the Mayor's ukase?
-
-Thus it was that in the twilight of a memorable Sunday the Corporal
-made his first appearance in Strathfieldsaye's spacious drawing-room.
-In the past month his leg had surprisingly improved, but final recovery
-would be long and slow, and he still required two crutches. On entering
-the room he was a little disconcerted to find so distinguished
-a company, for in addition to the Mayoress, mutely superb at the
-tea table, was Mrs. Doctor Cockburn, more vocal in black velvet,
-Miss Preston, as usual, touched with fashion, and, standing on the
-hearthrug, near the fire, in her faded khaki was the slight but martial
-form of Sally.
-
-The presence of Sally was a surprise to the Mayor. He had not expected
-to see her there, and as soon as his eye lit on her he gave a start.
-First of all, however, he shepherded the Corporal into a comfortable
-chair with a tenderness hard to credit in him, fixing up the injured
-leg on a second chair and laying the crutches on the carpet by the
-Corporal's side.
-
-Having done all this, the Mayor moved up to the hearthrug, his hand
-outstretched. "Very glad to see you here, my gel." Without hesitation
-and in the frankest way he kissed Sally loudly upon the cheek. It was
-manly and it was also bold, for such an act seemed perilously like
-kissing in public a decidedly soldierlike young man.
-
-Sally didn't seem to mind, however. She was just as frank and
-unaffected as her father. Moreover, she had acquired a rich laugh and
-an authority of manner almost the equal of his own. She complimented
-him upon his speech and quizzically added that he ought to stand for
-Parliament. Josiah promptly rejoined that if he did he'd be as much use
-as some of those jackasses, no doubt.
-
-The Mayor then carried a cup of tea to the Corporal and Aunt Gerty
-provided him with bread and butter and a plate to put it on; and
-then Sally moved across from the chimneypiece, sat down very simply
-on a hassock by his side and began at once to talk to him. Plain,
-direct talk it was, full of technical turns and queer out-of-the-way
-information which could have only come from the most intimate
-first-hand knowledge. But it was palpably unstudied, without the least
-wish to pose or impress, and presently with almost the same air of
-blunt modesty the Corporal began talking to her.
-
-To Mrs. Doctor and even to Miss Preston it seemed rather odd that a
-real live graduate of Heaven-knew-where should sit tête-à-tête with
-poor Melia's husband and be completely absorbed by him and the crude
-halting syllables he emitted from time to time. Still to the Mayor
-himself, standing with his broad back to the fire and toying like a
-large but domesticated wolf with a buttered scone, it didn't seem so
-remarkable.
-
-Josiah, at any rate, was able to perceive that his youngest daughter
-and his son-in-law were occupied with realities. They had been through
-the fire. Battle, murder, death in every unspeakable form had been
-their companions months on end. These two were full-fledged Initiates
-in an exclusive Order.
-
-The Mayor, foursquare on the hearthrug, had never seemed more at home
-in the family circle, but, even his noble self-assurance abated a
-feather or two out of deference to Sally and the Corporal. They had
-been there. They knew. If Josiah had respect for anything it was for
-actual first-hand experience.
-
-Mrs. Doctor, however, was not fettered by the vanities of hero worship.
-In spite of Sally and in spite of the Corporal she was able as usual to
-bring her light tea table artillery into play. At strategic intervals
-her high-pitched, authoritative voice took spasmodic charge of the
-proceedings. Now it was the Egg Fund and the incompetence of Lady
-Jope, now the latest dicta of Miss Heber-Knollys, now the widespread
-complaints of the Duke's inaudibility at the Floral Hall.
-
-Miss Preston fully agreed. "So different from you, Josiah." She was
-well on the target as usual. "But he made up for it, didn't he, by the
-nice things he said of you when he opened the Annex?"
-
-"Very flattering, wasn't he?" Mrs. Doctor took up the ball. "And wasn't
-it charming of him to come here to lunch. Such an unaffected man!"
-
-Josiah broke his scone in half and held a piece in each hand. "Why
-shouldn't he come here?" The voice had the old huffiness, yet mitigated
-now by an undeniable twinkle of humor. "He got quite as good food here
-as he'd get at home, even if we don't run to gold plate and flunkeys."
-
-"Quite, Josiah, quite," piped the undefeated Gerty. "And only too glad,
-I'm sure, to come and see the Mayor of Blackhampton."
-
-The laugh of his worship verged upon the whimsical. "Gert, if you want
-my private opinion, he didn't come to see me at all."
-
-"Pray, then, Father, who did he come to see?" fluted Mrs. Doctor.
-
-Josiah jerked a humorous thumb in the direction of Sally, who was still
-tête-à-tête with the Corporal.
-
-"Nonsense, Father."
-
-"Well, it's my opinion."
-
-It was hard for Mrs. Doctor to believe that her youngest sister could
-be the attraction. But her father was clear upon the point. And that
-being the case it made the pity all the greater that Sally had declined
-the invitation to be present. She had been urged to come to luncheon
-and meet the Duke who was anxious to meet her, but she had preferred to
-stay at Park Crescent and play with the children.
-
-So like her!
-
-
-
-
-XLV
-
-
-"D'you mind if I smoke, Mother?"
-
-The lady at the tea table looked mutely at her lord.
-
-Josiah nodded graciously. "Do as you like, gel."
-
-Sally produced a wisp of paper and a very masculine tobacco pouch and
-began rolling a cigarette in an extremely competent manner. Josiah
-proffered a box of Egyptian but Sally preferred her own and struck a
-match on the sole of her shoe in a fashion at once so accomplished and
-so boylike as to take away the breath of her mother and Aunt Gerty.
-
-As she sat talking easily and yet gravely to the Corporal with her
-long straight legs and trim ankles freely displayed by a surprisingly
-short khaki skirt she looked more like a boy than ever. And such was
-the thought in the minds of the other three ladies, who agreed tacitly
-that the skirt and the cigarette and the astonishing freedom of pose
-were not quite maidenly. Still with those ribbons, and that clear deep
-voice and that wonderful eye she was fascinating. Even her father, who
-on principle declined to admire her Damnable Independence, was unable
-to resist the impact of a personality that was now world famous.
-
-Gazing at her in stern astonishment he pointed to her abbreviated lower
-garment. "Excuse me, gel," he said, "but do you mind telling us what
-you've got underneath?"
-
-Sally deigned no reply in words, but stuck the cigarette in the corner
-of her mouth with unconscious grace and dexterously lifted her skirt. A
-decidedly workmanlike pair of knickerbockers was disclosed.
-
-Josiah gasped.
-
-The unconcerned Sally continued to talk with the Corporal, while the
-Mayor, half scandalized, struggled against a guffaw. "Things seem to be
-changing a bit, as you might say. Don't you think so, Mother?"
-
-Aunt Gerty took upon herself to answer, as she often did, for poor
-bewildered Maria. "I fully agree, Josiah." She lowered her discreet
-voice. "But almost a pity ... almost a pity ... don't you think?"
-
-The Mayor pursed his lips. "Durned if I know what to think, Gert." He
-scratched a dubious head. "Seems to me the Empire is not going to be
-short o' man power for some little time to come, eh?"
-
-"Still ... not ... quite ... maidenly ... Josiah."
-
-"Daresay you're right." The Mayor fought down his feelings. "Next
-chicken on the roost'll be the hussy puttin' up for parliament."
-
-"Bound to get in if she does," Gerty sounded rather rueful. "There
-isn't a constituency in England that wouldn't jump at the chance of
-electing her just now."
-
-Josiah breathed hard while this obvious truth sank into his bones, but
-Mrs. Doctor assured Gerty that she was talking nonsense. Her father
-being frankly opposed to this pious opinion, Ethel appealed to her
-mother. Maria, alas, was in the position of a modest wether who has
-given birth to a superb young panther. She simply didn't know what
-to think, and by forlornly folding her hands on her lap gave mute
-expression to her feelings.
-
-At the best, however, it was a futile discussion as Gerty was quick
-to realize. She turned the talk adroitly into other channels. "This
-morning," she said, "as I was walking along Queen's Road I had quite
-a shock. I met a blind man being led by an old woman. And who do you
-think it was?"
-
-Mrs. Doctor had no idea who it could be.
-
-"It was Harold Nixey the architect. Such a pitiful object! Did you
-know, Josiah, that he is now quite blind?"
-
-Josiah was aware of the fact.
-
-"How sad, how very sad!" said Ethel. "And he has done so well, so
-wonderfully well, in France."
-
-Gerty considered it nothing less than a calamity--for an architect of
-all people. And for one who promised such great things.
-
-Sally was apparently absorbed in talk with the Corporal, but she lifted
-her eyes quickly. "Blind, did you say? Harold Nixey?"
-
-"Yes," said Gerty. "Such a grievous thing."
-
-"Aye, it is that!" The voice of Josiah was heavy and somber.
-
-Ethel hoped for his recovery.
-
-Her father shook his head. "From what they tell me the sight is
-completely destroyed. I was with the lad yesterday." It was clear from
-Josiah's manner that he was moved by real feeling. "Wonderful pluck
-and cheerfulness. He knows he'll never draw another elevation, but he
-pretends to that old mother of his that he's going to get better--just
-to keep her going."
-
-"And you say, Father"--it was the slow precise voice of Sally--"that he
-can't get better?"
-
-"Not a dog's chance from what Minyard the eye doctor tells me. It's a
-gas those devils have been using." The Mayor sighed. "He's a good lad,
-is that. And he'd have gone far. Rose from nothing, as you might say,
-but in a year or two he'd have been at the top of the tree." Josiah,
-whose gospel was "getting on," again sighed heavily.
-
-"I think I'll go and see him, Father, if you'll give me his address."
-Again the slow, precise voice of Sally.
-
-"Do. It'll be a kindness. Number Fourteen, Torrington Avenue. The
-second turn on the right past the Brewery along Corfield Road. Pleased
-to have a visit from you, I'm sure. He talked about you a lot. His
-mother had read him the _Tribune's_ account of Thursday. He says he
-used to know you in London when he was studying at South Kensington."
-
-Under Sally's deep tan the blood imperceptibly mounted. "Yes, I used
-to know him quite well." She didn't add that she had refused rather
-peremptorily to marry him.
-
-"Well, go and see him, gel. A very good soldier they tell me--D.S.O.
-and M.C. with two bars."
-
-"_Two_ bars, Josiah!" Gerty put up her glasses impressively.
-
-"And earned 'em--they tell me. Come to think of it, it's wonderful what
-some of these young chaps have done."
-
-"And some of the older ones, too, Josiah." Gerty looked across at
-the Corporal who was toying pensively with a cigarette that had been
-pressed upon him.
-
-"Aye, and some of the old uns, too!" The Mayor followed the glance of
-his sister-in-law with the eye of perfect candor. "And not been brought
-up to it, mark you. They tell me our B.B. is second to none in the
-British Army."
-
-The Corporal looked as if he would like to have confirmed the Mayor's
-statement had he not remembered that professional etiquette required so
-delicate a topic to be left exclusively to civilians.
-
-Sally and Ethel went after awhile, and Josiah led the Corporal across
-the hall to what he called "his snuggery," wherein he considered
-his business affairs and the affairs of the City, and, although by
-no means a reading man, occasionally referred to the Encyclopedia
-Britannica and kindred works. He was at pains to dispose the Corporal
-in comfort near the fire and then gave him an excellent cigar and
-insisted on his smoking it.
-
-At first little passed between them in the way of words. They smoked
-in silence, but the Corporal could not help thinking, as he delicately
-savored the best cigar he had ever held between his fingers, how much
-prosperity had improved "the Mester." He was so much mellower, so
-much more generous than of yore. His outlook on the world was bigger
-altogether; the Corporal's own outlook was larger also; somehow, he had
-not the heart to resist the peace overtures of his father-in-law.
-
-Said Josiah at last, pointing to the Corporal's leg: "A longish job, I
-expect."
-
-The doctors seemed to think it might be. Still it had got the turn now.
-It was beginning to mend.
-
-"I've been wondering," said the Mayor, "whether it mightn't be possible
-to get you transferred to munitions. Johnson and Hartley are short o'
-foremen. Pound a day to begin with. What do you say, my boy?"
-
-The Corporal gazed into the fire without saying anything.
-
-Said the Mayor, half apologetically, "You're not so young as you were,
-you see. Forty-three, they tell me, is a bit long in the tooth for the
-trenches. And you've done your bit. Why not give some o' the younger
-ones a chance?"
-
-In silence the Corporal went on gazing into the fire.
-
-"Anyhow it might be worth thinking over."
-
-The Corporal removed the cigar from his mouth and appeared laconically
-to agree that it might be worth thinking over. But the suggestion
-didn't seem to fire him.
-
-A deeper silence followed and then said the Mayor with a certain gruff
-abruptness which was a partial return to the old manner, "I'm thinking
-it'll be a good thing for Melia to quit Love Lane. She's not done so
-bad with the business lately, but it might be wise to sell it now.
-And she'll be none the worse for a rest in country air. Happen I told
-you that back in the spring I bought that cottage up at Dibley that
-that artist chap--I forget his name for the moment--used to come and
-paint in. Rare situation--sandstone foundation--highest point in the
-county--see for miles from his studio at the end o' the garden. Don't
-quite know why I bought it except that it was going cheap. An old
-property--nobody seemed to fancy it--but the freehold is not going to
-get less in value if I'm a judge o' such matters and the place is in
-pretty good condition. Suppose, my boy, you and Melia moved in there?
-Save me a caretaker, and some o' the finest air in Europe comes down
-the valley of the Sharrow."
-
-The heart of the Corporal leaped at these amazing words, but his eyes
-were still fixed upon the fire.
-
-"What was the name o' that artist chap? A local man, but quite well up,
-they tell me."
-
-"Stanning, R.A." Something hard and queer rose in the Corporal's throat.
-
-"That's the jockey--Stanning, R.A. Now I remember ... a rare dust there
-was in the Council some years ago when the Art Committee bought one of
-his pictures for...." The Mayor drew heavily at his cigar ... "for ...
-dram it! I'm losing my memory...."
-
-"A thousand guineas," the Corporal whispered.
-
-"Something like that. Something extortionate. I remember there was
-a proper dust when the Council got to know of it. All very well to
-encourage local talent, I remember saying, but a thousand guineas was
-money. Maxon the curator resigned."
-
-The Corporal kept his eyes on the fire.
-
-With a rich chuckle the Mayor turned over the cigar in his mouth at
-the memory of old battles in the Council Chamber. "The fur flew for
-a bit, I can tell you. He wasn't an R.A. at that time and the poor
-chap's gone now so happen he'll begin to rank as an old master. They
-tell me fabulous sums are paid for these old masters, so one o' these
-days Stanning, R.A., may grow into money and the City'll have a bargain
-after all. But I don't pretend to understand such things myself. A
-brave man, anyway. Joined up with the B.B. at the beginning and was
-killed out yonder."
-
-The Corporal nodded but said nothing. The Mayor went on with his
-cigar. "I'm trying to remember the name of another artist chap who
-used to live in that cottage when I was a boy. We used to jang from
-school on fine afternoons in the summer and go bathing in Corfield
-Weir. And painting by the river was an old chap with a long beard
-like Tennyson--you've seen the picture of Tennyson"--Josiah pointed
-to a lithograph of the bard on the wall behind the Corporal--"but
-not quite so fierce looking. Wonderful blue eyes had that old feller
-... lord love me, what _did_ they call him!... I remember we used to
-throw stones at his easel. We got one right through it once, when he
-had nearly finished his picture and he had to begin all over again.
-What _was_ the name of the old feller?" The Mayor fingered his cigar
-lovingly and looked into the fire. "Soft Billy ... that was it.... Soft
-Billy." Josiah sighed gently. "Poor, harmless old boy. I can see those
-blue eyes now."
-
-The Mayor drew gently at his cigar while the Corporal kept his eyes on
-the fire. "That reminds me.... I've got one of the old chap's pictures,
-somewhere." The Mayor laughed softly to himself. "Took it for a bad
-debt ... quite a small thing ... wonder what's become of it?" He grew
-pensive. "Must be up in the box room." Suddenly he rose from his
-chair. "I'll go and see if I can find it."
-
-The man of action went out of the room, leaving the Corporal in silent
-enjoyment of warmth, the tobacco and many reflections.
-
-In a few minutes Josiah returned in triumph with a small piece of
-unframed canvas in his hand. He rang the bell for a duster, of which it
-was much in need, and when the duster had been duly applied he held the
-picture up to the light. "It wants a frame." The tone was indulgent but
-casual. "Looks like Dibley Chase to me." He handed the landscape to the
-Corporal who gazed at it with wistful eagerness.
-
-"Dibley Chase was always a favorite pitch for these artist chaps.
-See the Sharrow gleaming between the trees?" Josiah traced with his
-finger the line of the river. "I like that bit o' sun creeping down
-the valley. Good work in it, I daresay ... but I don't pretend to be
-up in such matters. Very small but it may be worth a frame. Been up in
-the attic at Waterloo Villa for years ... aye, long before Waterloo
-Villa...." Josiah took a loving puff of his cigar. "I must have had
-that picture when I first went to the Duke o' Wellington in March,
-'79. How time gets on! Had it of that lame chap who used to keep
-the Corfield Arms who went up the spout finally. Used to supply him
-with beer. Gave me this for a barrel he couldn't pay for." The Mayor
-laughed richly and put on his spectacles. "Can you see the name o' the
-artist? What was the name o' that old Soft Billy ... ha, there it is."
-The Mayor brought his thumb to bear on the right-hand corner. "'J.
-Torrington, 1854' ... a long time ago. John Torrington, that was his
-name ... some of his work grew in value, I've heard say. A harmless old
-man!"
-
-The Mayor sighed a little and gave himself up to old memories while the
-Corporal held the picture in his hand. "Soft Jack ... aye, that was his
-name.... I can see him now with his white beard and long hair ... I'm
-speakin' of fifty years ago. Soft Jack, yes ... had been a good painter
-so they said ... but an old man, then. Used to sit by the Weir painting
-the sun on the water. I've pitched many a stone at his easel ... in the
-summertime after bathing."
-
-The Corporal was too absorbed in the picture to heed the Mayor's
-reminiscences. Josiah laughed softly at his thoughts and chose a second
-cigar. "Too small to be worth much," he said. "But Melia might like it.
-She was always a one for pictures. We'll pop a bit o' the _Tribune_
-round it and she can stick it in the front parlor up at Dibley where
-the old boy lived and died."
-
-
-
-
-XLVI
-
-
-The next morning, Monday, towards eleven o'clock, Sally dropped
-expertly off the municipal tram, without waiting for it to stop, at the
-second turn on the right past the Brewery, along the suburban end of
-the Corfield Road, and entered a street that she had never seen before.
-
-Torrington Avenue was one of those thoroughfares on the edge of large
-cities that seem to spring into being in a day and a night. In spite of
-the obvious haste with which its small houses had been flung together
-it was not unpleasing. But when Sally was last in her native city, a
-year before the war, this area had been a market garden.
-
-Number Fourteen was a well kept little dwelling in the middle of a neat
-row. Just as Sally reached it, an old woman with a wicker shopping
-basket came out of the iron gate.
-
-"Mrs. Nixey?"
-
-The visitor had recognized the old lady but the converse did not hold
-true.
-
-"You don't remember me, Mrs. Nixey. I'm Sally Munt."
-
-The old lady gave vent to surprise, pleasure, incredulity. But even
-then she was not able to identify one who but a few years ago had been
-almost as familiar to her as her own son until Sally had lifted her cap
-and rolled back the fur collar of her immense khaki overcoat.
-
-"Well, I never!" The old woman's voice was shrill and excited. "It
-_is_ Miss Munt. I _am_ pleased to see you, my dear." The distinguished
-visitor suddenly received a peck on a firm brown cheek. "He knows all
-about you. I read him the account of the doings at the Floral Hall. He
-wanted to be there, but the Doctor thought it wouldn't be good for him.
-It _is_ kind of you to come and see him.... It'll please him so."
-
-Sally cut the old lady short with a brief, pointed question or two. He
-was very well in health except that he couldn't see, but he was always
-telling his mother that he was quite sure he would be able to see
-presently, although Dr. Minyard had told her privately that he couldn't
-promise anything.
-
-The old lady led the way along the short path and applied a latchkey to
-the front door. As it opened, Sally caught the delicately played notes
-of a piano floating softly across the tiny hall.
-
-"He plays for hours and hours and hours," said the old lady. "Your
-dear father has just given him a beautiful new piano. He's been such a
-friend to Harold. Wonderful the interest he's taken in him."
-
-She opened the door of a small sitting room, whence the music came,
-but the player wholly absorbed did not hear them enter.
-
-"Harold, who do you think has come to see you!"
-
-As the piano stopped and the musician swung round slowly on his stool,
-Sally shivered at the pallor of the face and the closed eyes. She saw
-that tears were trickling from them.
-
-"Miss Munt has come to see you." There was excitement in the voice of
-the old lady. "You remember Miss Sally of Waterloo Villa. And to think
-what we've been reading about her in the _Tribune_!"
-
-The musician sprang up with a boy's impulsiveness. "You don't say,
-Mother--you don't say!" The eager voice had a music of its own. "Where
-are you, Miss Sally?" He held out his hand. "Put your hand there and
-then I shall believe it."
-
-Sally did as she was asked.
-
-"Well, well, it's really the great and famous you." He seemed to caress
-that strong and competent paw with his delicate fingers.
-
-She couldn't find the courage to say anything.
-
-But he did not allow the silence to become awkward. "Better go and look
-after your coupons, Mother, while Miss Sally and I talk shop."
-
-Upon that plain hint the old lady went away, closing the front door
-after her, and then the blind man helped the visitor to take off her
-heavy coat and put her into a chair. He found his way back to the music
-stool without difficulty, but in sitting down he brushed the keys of
-the piano with his coat sleeve.
-
-"Your dear, good father gave me this. A wonderful improvement on
-the one we've scrapped. Did you hear me murdering Beethoven as you
-came in? One's only chance now to score off the poor blighters!" His
-cheerfulness, his whimsical courage, were amazing to Sally. "Since
-last we met things have happened, haven't they? South Kensington Tube
-Station, December, 1913. Æons ago." He sighed like a child. "By the
-way, tell me, did you get a letter I sent to you when you did your 'go'
-of time?"
-
-Sally had received the letter. Soft the admission and also blushing,
-although he could not see that.
-
-"Wasn't meant as an impertinence, though perhaps it was one. Always
-doing the wrong things at that time, wasn't I? And I'm saying 'em now.
-Born under bad stars." He laughed a little and paused. "Jove! what
-wonderful things you've done, though."
-
-"I've had luck." Her voice was firm at last.
-
-"Not more than you deserve. Hell of a time in Serbia ... must have had.
-Don't know how you managed to come through it."
-
-"Just the stars." Sally laughed a little now. But never in her life had
-she felt so little like laughing. She remembered that she used to think
-him a bounder; she remembered how much his proposal had annoyed her.
-Yet he was just the same now--the same Harold Nixey--only raised to a
-higher power. Once she had despised his habit of thinking aloud, yet
-now it almost enchanted her....
-
-But she was not very forthcoming. He seemed to have to do the talking
-for both. "Fritz beginning to get cold feet, do you think?"
-
-She didn't think so.
-
-"What are you doing now?" It was the dry tone of the professional
-soldier.
-
-"I'm detailed for special duty in France." The tone of Sally was
-professional also.
-
-He sighed a gentle, "When?"
-
-"Off to-morrow."
-
-He sighed again.
-
-"It was not until last evening,"--her voice changed oddly--"that I
-heard you were at home."
-
-"Nice of you to come and see me," he said. "You must excuse the room
-being in a litter." There was a table in the center on which was a
-drawing board, geometrical instruments, many sheets of paper. "I've
-been trying to work. I'm always trying ... but ... you need eyes to be
-an architect ... you need eyes."
-
-Sally was suddenly pierced by the thought of his ambition and his
-passion for work. He was going to do so much, he had begun so well.
-
-"I have an idea for a new cathedral for Louvain. Been studying
-ecclesiastical architecture for years in my spare time." As he paused
-his face looked ghastly. "It's all in my head ... but...."
-
-"Is it possible"--she could hardly speak--"for any one to help you--in
-the details, I mean?"
-
-"They would have to get right inside my mind ... some one practical ...
-yet very sympathetic ... and then the chances are that it wouldn't work
-out."
-
-"It might, though."
-
-"Somehow, I don't think so." He was curiously frank. "I tell myself it
-might, just to keep going. There's always the bare chance if I get the
-right person to help me ... some one with great intelligence, great
-insight, great sympathy, yet without ideas of their own."
-
-"You mean they wouldn't have to know too much?"
-
-"That's it ... not know too much. They would have to sink their
-individuality in ... in one who couldn't.... Your father suggested
-a partnership. But it wouldn't be fair, would it? Besides I should
-be terribly trying to work with ... terribly trying ... perhaps
-impossible."
-
-"Do you think you would be?"
-
-"In a partnership, yes. It couldn't answer. I'm so creative.... I have
-always to stamp myself on my work ... if you know what I mean. Then
-... as I say ... I don't know yet ... that ... I can pick up all the
-threads that have been...."
-
-"You need," said Sally slowly and softly, "some intelligent amateur,
-capable of drawing a ground plan, who would give himself up to you."
-
-He threw up his head eagerly. "That's it ... somebody quite
-intelligent ... but without ambition ... who would"--the voice began to
-tail off queerly--"have the courage ... not to mind ... the ferocious
-egotism ... of the ... baffled." Suddenly he covered his face with his
-hands.
-
-"It wouldn't take me very long to learn the rudiments, I think," said
-Sally. "I'm rather quick at picking up the things that interest me.
-It would be enormously interesting to see what could be done with
-this--this----"
-
-"But you are off to France to-morrow."
-
-"The war won't last forever."
-
-The tone of her voice startled him. His heart leapt queerly. There was
-a time, not so long ago, when he would have given his soul to have
-surprised just that note in it. He began to shake violently.
-
-With all the will his calamity had left him he strove to hold himself
-in. Her voice was music, her nearness magical; what she offered him now
-was beyond his wildest hopes. Once he had jumped at her too soon, in
-a moment of delirium; but he had always known, by force of the strong
-temperament, that was such a torment to him now, that she was the only
-woman in the world he would ever really care for.
-
-"I see just the kind of helper you need." Divinely practical, yet
-divinely modern! "I could mug up my drawing in a week or two and I
-should never know enough to want to interfere with anything that
-mattered."
-
-He held himself tensely like one who sees a precipice yawning under
-his feet. "America coming in, do you think?" It was a heroic change of
-voice. "I wish she would. I'm afraid it may be a draw without her."
-
-Sally, with all her ribbons and her uniform, could rise to no immediate
-interest in America.
-
-"Our poor lads have had an awful grueling on the Somme. Seven hundred
-thousand casualties and nothing to show for it so far."
-
-"I know." The sightless eyes were lacerating her. "They ought to help
-us. It's their war as much as it's ours."
-
-"We can't blame them for staying out. Can't blame anybody for staying
-out. But we'll never get the right peace unless they help us."
-
-"Some people think they'd not make much difference."
-
-"My God!" It was the vehemence she used not to like. "They'd simply tip
-the scale. Have you ever been there?"
-
-"No."
-
-"I have. Some country, America. They've pinched our best Torrington,
-curse them ... not that that took me there. One afternoon, though, I
-happened to be looking for it in a moldy, one-horse museum just off
-Washington Square--I forget the name of it--when I walked straight into
-the arms of dear old Jim Stanning who had actually come all the way
-from Europe on purpose to gaze at it."
-
-Sally emitted becoming surprise.
-
-"If you read that in a novel you'd say it was the sort of thing that
-doesn't happen. But it did happen. Fancy old Jim coming all those miles
-by flood and field to look at a strip of canvas not as big as that
-drawing board. 'The Valley of the Sharrow on an afternoon in July.' By
-the way, did you ever happen to meet him?"
-
-Sally had never met Stanning the painter.
-
-"One of the whitest men that ever lived. Lies out there. A great chap,
-Jim Stanning. Another Torrington almost for a certainty ... although he
-doubted himself, whether he was big enough to fight his own success.
-See what he meant?"
-
-It thrilled him a little when he realized that she did.
-
-For an instant the extinguished eyes seemed to well with light. "That
-picture of his, 'As the Leaves of the Tree,' carries technique to a
-point that makes one dizzy. Some say technique doesn't matter, but
-there's nothing permanent without it." He sighed heavily. "Of course
-the undaunted soul of man has to shine through it. And that's just what
-Jim Stanning was--an undaunted soul. Dead at thirty-nine. We shan't
-realize ... if we ever realize ... however...."
-
-Overcome by his thoughts for a moment, he could not go on. Sally sat
-breathing hard.
-
-"If I were a rich man, as rich as Ford or Carnegie, I'd buy that
-picture of old Jim's and send it to them in Berlin. Some day it might
-help them to ask themselves just what it was that brought the man who
-painted it, a man who simply lived for beauty, to die like a dog, half
-mad, in a poisoned muckyard in Flanders."
-
-Suddenly he stopped and the light seemed to die in his face. Then he
-turned round on the piano stool and broke delicately into the opening
-bars of the haunted, wild and terrible Fifth Symphony. For the moment
-he had forgotten that Sally was there.
-
-She got up from her chair and came to him as a child to a wounded and
-suffering animal. Putting an arm round his clean but frayed collar she
-kissed his forehead.
-
-"I shall come and see you again ... if I may."
-
-His sightless flesh seemed to contract as he lifted his thin hands from
-the keyboard. "Don't!" he gasped. "Better not ... better not ... for
-both of us."
-
-She knew he was right and something in her voice told him so. "... If I
-may," she repeated weakly.
-
-He didn't answer. She pressed her lips again upon his forehead, then
-took up her coat and went hastily from the room.
-
-The old woman was in the act of turning the latchkey in the front door.
-She had got her coupons and was returning in triumph with a full basket.
-
-"Not going, Miss Sally, are you? I should like you to have seen his
-decorations--D.S.O. with two Bars and such a wonderful letter from the
-General."
-
-"I'm afraid I simply must go, Mrs. Nixey. Off to France to-morrow, and
-I've got to pack."
-
-"Yes, my dear, I suppose so. Very good of you to come and see him."
-
-"Don't say that."
-
-At the sight of Sally's eyes the voice of the old woman changed
-suddenly. "He thinks, my dear, he'll get better ... he quite thinks
-he'll get better ... but ... but, Dr. Minyard...." Again the voice of
-the old woman changed. "Ah, there he is playing again. How beautifully
-he does play, doesn't he? Hours ... and hours ... and hours. So soft
-and gentle ... the bit he's playing now reminds him of the wind in
-Dibley Chase. Yes, and that bit too ... he says it makes him see the
-sun dancing along the Sharrow on an afternoon in July. Beautiful
-piano! So kind and thoughtful of your dear father! He quite thinks ...
-he'll...."
-
-
-
-
-XLVII
-
-
-The Corporal's leg was a long time getting well.
-
-First it came on a bit, then it went back a bit; but the process of
-recovery was a painful and a tardy business. Still it was much softened
-by the judicious help of others. By the interest of the Mayor of the
-city, whose model hospital on The Rise and its last word in equipment
-meant access to more than one influential ear, Corporal Hollis in the
-later stages of a long convalescence had the privileges of an out
-patient.
-
-These privileges, moreover, were enjoyed in ideal conditions. Early in
-April, Melia was installed at Torrington Cottage, Dibley. To the secret
-gratification of her family, the business in Love Lane was given up,
-and Melia's checkered life entered upon a new phase amid surroundings
-wholly different from any it had known before.
-
-At first the change seemed almost too great to be enjoyed. After the
-gloom, the semi-squalor, the hard toil of Love Lane, it was like an
-entrance into paradise. And when, at the end of that enchanted month
-of April, the Corporal joined her in the new abode, Melia's cup of
-happiness seemed quite perilously full.
-
-That was a summer of magic days. For weeks on end they lived in a dream
-that had come true. To Melia the well appointed house, the beautiful
-surroundings, the bounty of her father were sources of perpetual
-amazement; to the Corporal the extensive garden, so gloriously stocked
-with flowers, fruit and vegetables, was a thing of delight; above all,
-the tower at the end of it, commanding on every hand his lovely native
-county, was a sacred thing, a temple of august memories.
-
-The Corporal sunning himself and smoking his pipe by the south
-wall, where the peaches grew, could never have believed it to be
-possible. Melia, tending the flowerbeds and the grass, at the end of a
-not-too-strenuous summer's day, felt somehow that this was fairyland.
-Yes, their dreams of the long ago had more than come true. And,
-crowning consummation, in the eyes of each other, they were honored
-husband and cherished wife.
-
-The Corporal was a long time getting well, but in that he was obeying
-instructions. Those most competent to speak of his case had told him
-not to be in a hurry; otherwise he might be permanently lame. And he
-was entitled to take his time. He had done his bit. Moreover, as his
-father-in-law assured him, it was the turn of younger men to "carry
-on." He had been through more than a year and a half in the trenches
-amid some of the cruelest fighting of the war; he was entitled to wear
-two stripes of gold braid on his sleeve. If any man could nurse a
-painful injury with a good conscience that man was Corporal Hollis.
-
-In spite of searing memories, in spite of the whole nation's anxieties,
-in a measure made less, yet not wholly dispelled by the entrance into
-the war of a great Ally, the Corporal was allowed a taste of those
-half-forbidden fruits, Poetry and Romance. At such a time, perhaps,
-with the issue still undecided and the trials of the people growing
-more severe every week, the gilt on life's gingerbread should have
-been denied him altogether. And yet by dogged pluck he had earned that
-guerdon, and Melia by her simple faith was worthy to share it with him.
-
-The famous erection at the end of the garden, a weathercock at its
-apex, a course of bricks and twelve stone steps at its base, was
-haunted continually by an unseen presence. And it was a presence with
-whom the Corporal long communed. Many an odd hour between sunrise and
-sunset, a humble disciple of the Highest, pencil or brush in hand,
-strove with hardly more than infantile art to surprise some of the
-secrets of woodland, stream and hill.
-
-No wonder that at that particular corner, where mile upon lovely
-mile of England rolled back to the frontiers of three counties, two
-of her greatest painters had gloried in Beauty and drunk deep. The
-lights tossed from the sky to the silver-breasted river gleaming a
-thousand feet below and then cast back again were so many heralds and
-sconce-bearers for those who had eyes to see.
-
-When the Corporal was not being wheeled round his enchanted garden,
-or was not smoking his pipe in the sun, he was sitting with his back
-to the weather, drawing and painting and dwelling in spirit with the
-genius of place and, through it, with one immortal friend.
-
-Autumn came and the Corporal still needed a crutch. But he could get
-about the garden now and even pluck the weeds, although not yet able
-to dig. And he was so happy that he didn't chafe against the slow
-recovery. He needed rest and he had earned it; of that there could be
-no question.
-
-Meanwhile the months passed and events moved quickly. The war, to which
-no glimpse of an end was yet in sight, continued to press ever more
-severely upon all sections of the population. There was a shortage
-of everything now except the spirit of grim determination. It was a
-people's war, as no war had ever been, and the people, come what might,
-were set on winning it.
-
-In November the signal compliment was paid Josiah of electing him to
-office a third consecutive year. If anything, his second term had
-enhanced his prestige; his authority in the city of Blackhampton
-was greater than ever. More and more did he seem to be the man such
-abnormal times required. And the Mayoress, although under the constant
-threat of dissolution throughout a strenuous year, was still in the
-land of the living. Looking back on what she had suffered, the fact
-appeared miraculous; and yet as the end of the second term drew near,
-had she been quite honest with herself, she might have been tempted
-to own that she was none the worse for her experience. In some ways,
-although the admission would have called for wild horses, she might
-almost be said to be the better for it. Gertrude Preston, at any rate,
-openly said so.
-
-Such being the case, Josiah did not hesitate to accept office for a
-third term. By now he realized that he was the best man in the city, at
-all events for that particular job. Everybody said so, from the Town
-Clerk down; and it was no mere figure of speech. Indeed, Josiah felt
-that Blackhampton could hardly "carry on" without him.
-
-He was an autocrat, it was true, his temper was despotic, but that was
-the kind of man the times called for. It was no use having a divided
-mind, it was no use having a mealy-mouth. With the political instinct
-of a hardheaded race he had contrived to find a formula of government.
-He could talk to Labor in the language it understood; and the employers
-of Labor allowed him to talk to them, perhaps mainly for the reason
-that he was not himself an employer, but a disinterested and, if
-anything, slightly too honest, private citizen.
-
-Therefore, no great surprise was caused at the beginning of the New
-Year when it was announced that the dignity of a Knight of the British
-Empire had been conferred upon the Mayor of Blackhampton. Sir Josiah
-Munt, K.B.E., took it as "all in the day's work." A democrat pur sang,
-yet he didn't doubt "that he'd make as good a knight as some of 'em."
-But the hapless Maria showed less stoicism. According to credible
-witnesses, when the news came to her that Lady Munt was her future
-style and degree, she fainted right off, and when at last the assiduous
-Alice had brought her to, she put herself to bed for three days.
-
-Be that as it may, old issues were revived in that tormented breast.
-Horace, Doctor Cockburn, had immensely strengthened his position in
-the triumphant course of the preceding year, but the new situation
-cried aloud for Doctor Tremlett. However, the Mayor telephoned to his
-sister-in-law "to come at once and set her ladyship to rights," the
-call was promptly obeyed by the dauntless Gerty, and the crisis passed.
-
-
-
-
-XLVIII
-
-
-The early months of the year 1918 saw the entire Allied Cause in the
-gravest jeopardy. Even a superficial study of facts only partially
-revealed has made it clear that disaster was invited by an almost
-criminal taking of chances. The time is not yet for the whole truth to
-be known. Meanwhile the muse of history continues to weave her Dædalian
-spells....
-
-On the last Sunday morning of that momentous and terrible March the
-Mayor sent his car to Torrington Cottage. Melia and her husband had
-been invited to spend the day at Strathfieldsaye. For several months
-the Corporal had been working at a new aerodrome along the valley,
-which happened to be within easy reach of his tricycle. His last
-Medical Board had proved that his leg was still weak and in its opinion
-not unlikely to remain so. But he had not been invalided out of the
-Army, as there was still a chance that presently he might be able to
-pass the doctor; at the same time, having regard to his age and the
-nature of his injury, he had a reasonable hope of getting his discharge
-whenever he cared to apply for it.
-
-More than once had Melia urged him to do so. Her arguments were strong.
-He was not a young man and he had already "done his bit"; they were
-very happy together in their charming house; and her father had said
-that it would continue to be theirs as long as they cared to live in
-it. The Corporal, however, could not quite bring himself to quit the
-Army, even had such a course been possible. Something still held him.
-He didn't know exactly what it was, but even now that the chance had
-been given him he was loathe "to cut the painter." Pride seemed to lie
-at the root of his reluctance. Melia felt it must be that. But the
-Corporal knew that alchemies more potent were at work.
-
-On this fateful Sunday in March, after the midday meal, as he sat
-smoking one of his father-in-law's cigars in the little room across the
-hall he realized that pressure was being brought to bear upon him to
-make a decision. Moreover, in Josiah's arguments, he heard the voice of
-his wife. Melia had lately astonished the world with the news that she
-was expecting a baby. The fact was very hard to credit that she was now
-preparing clothes for her first-born. A nine days' wonder had ensued.
-Such a thing was almost beyond precedent, yet, after all, Dame Nature
-had been known to indulge in these caprices! The startled, fluttered,
-rather piqued Mrs. Doctor, after consultation with her lord, was able
-to furnish instances. Still, it was remarkable! And it lent much
-cogency to Melia's desire that the Corporal should now apply for his
-discharge from the Army.
-
-This afternoon it was clear that Josiah was pleading Melia's case.
-There was an excellent billet waiting for the Corporal at Jackson and
-Holcroft's if he cared to take it. They offered short hours and good
-pay. Why not? He was still going a trifle lame; the Medical Board was
-not likely to raise any objection; and it would be a relief to Melia
-who ought to be considered now.
-
-The Corporal, however, shifted uneasily in his chair. All through
-luncheon he had seemed terribly gloomy; and, if anything, his
-father-in-law's arguments had deepened the clouds. One reason was,
-perhaps, that Josiah himself was terribly gloomy. The whole country was
-terribly gloomy. It had suddenly swung back to the phase of August,
-1914.
-
-The simple truth was that disaster was in the air. A crushing blow had
-fallen, a blow doubly cruel because so long foreseen and, therefore, to
-be parried if not actually prevented.
-
-"Over a wide front the British Army is beaten!" Such was the enemy
-message to the Sunday papers. "Ninety thousand prisoners and an
-enormous booty have been taken!" And the greatest disaster in the long
-history of British arms was confirmed by the artless official meiosis.
-"Our Fourth and Fifth Armies have retired to a previously prepared
-position." It omitted to state that the position was some thirty miles
-nearer Paris, but that fact received confirmation from the French
-communiqué in the next column, "The capital is being bombarded by
-long-range guns."
-
-No day could have been less propitious for Melia. And after the Mayor
-had sat smoking a few minutes with his gloomy son-in-law he appeared
-to realize the state of the case. As the Corporal drew at his cigar in
-a silence that was almost morose, Josiah's own thoughts and feelings
-began to take color from their surroundings. He lapsed into silence
-also. It seemed to come home to him all at once and for the first time
-in his life that he had been guilty of impertinence. This little man
-with his bloodshot eyes and few struggling wisps of gray hair, with his
-twitching hands and his air of smoldering rage, had been through it.
-Even to have been Mayor of Blackhampton three years running was very
-little by comparison. Josiah was man enough to feel keenly annoyed for
-having allowed his tongue so free a rein.
-
-There came at last a deep growl from the Corporal. It was the note of
-an old dog, whose life of many battles has not improved his temper. "If
-the bloody politicians will interfere!"
-
-The words found an echo in the heart of the Mayor. Sinister tales were
-rife on every hand. And of his own knowledge he was aware that there
-were hundreds of thousands of trained men in the country at that moment
-whose presence was most imperatively called for on the perilously
-weakened and extended British line to France.
-
-"Goin' to call up the grandads, I see," said the Corporal, grimly.
-
-"Aye!" The Mayor laughed bitterly. "Fat lot o' use they'll be when
-they've got 'em. Muddle, muddle, muddle." Like the Corporal, he was in
-a very black humor. "It's a mercy the Yankees are with us now--if they
-are not in too late."
-
-"Fancy muckin' it," said the Corporal, "with the game in our hands. A
-year ago we'd got 'em beat."
-
-"Press government," said Josiah savagely.
-
-The Corporal proceeded to chew a good cigar. "Dad," he said at last,
-and it was the first time in his life he had addressed his former
-employer so familiarly, "I'm thinking I'll have to go before the
-Medical Board again."
-
-Josiah combed an incipient goatee with a dubious forefinger. "But, my
-boy, from what you told me, you thought you could get your discharge
-any time you liked to ask for it."
-
-"That was back in January."
-
-"You're no fitter now than you were then, are you?"
-
-The Corporal slowly stretched his right leg to its full length, and
-then, gathering it under him leant his whole weight upon it. "I'm much
-firmer on my pins than I was then." His rough voice suddenly regained
-its usual gentleness. "Work seems to suit me." He laughed rather
-wryly. "I expect the Board'll pass me now--if I ask 'em to."
-
-It was the turn of Josiah to maltreat his cigar. "Not thinking of going
-back into the Line, are you?"
-
-"If they'll take me." The Corporal spoke slowly and softly. "And I
-daresay they will--if I ask 'em polite."
-
-Josiah's keen face was full of queer emotion. "Not for me to say
-anything." But he had been charged with a mission by the urgent Melia.
-No matter what his private feelings let him not betray it! "Seems to
-me, my boy, although it's not for me to say anything, that no one'll
-blame you, after what you've been through, if you stand aside and make
-room for others."
-
-The Corporal extended both legs towards the fire. He gazed into it
-solemnly without speaking.
-
-"Well, think it over, Bill." The voice of the tempter. "No one can
-blame you, if you stick to your present billet, which suits you so
-well--or even if you go into munitions at a good salary. You'll have
-earned anything they give you. And in a manner o' speaking you'll still
-be doing your bit. But as I say ... it's not for me...."
-
-Strangling a groan, the Corporal rose suddenly from his chair, "I must
-think it over." He threw the stump of his cigar into the fire. "You
-see, I don't like leaving the Chaps." The voice of the Corporal sank
-almost to a whisper.
-
-The Mayor gave his guest a second cigar and chose another for himself.
-But he didn't say anything.
-
-"You see--as you might say--I've had Experience."
-
-The Mayor looked a little queerly at the Corporal. Then he took a
-penknife out of the pocket of a rather ornate knitted waistcoat and
-dexterously removed the tip from his cigar.
-
-"I've had Experience." The Corporal sighed and sat down heavily in his
-cushioned chair. He fixed his eyes again on the fire.
-
-The Mayor applied a lighted spill to his cigar and then in silence
-offered it to the Corporal. But the Corporal's cigar was not yet ready
-for smoking.
-
-"If I do go"--the voice of the Corporal was soft and thick and rather
-husky--"you'll ... you'll...."
-
-His father-in-law nodded. "Don't you worry about that. I'll see _her_
-all right."
-
-Josiah took out his handkerchief and blew his nose violently.
-
-
-
-
-XLIX
-
-
-That evening, about nine o'clock, when Melia and the Corporal returned
-to Torrington Cottage, they found a cosy fire awaiting them in the
-charming sitting room, an act of grace on the part of Fanny, a
-handmaiden from the village, for the evenings were chilly. They sat
-a few minutes together and then Melia retired for the night after
-having drawn a promise from the Corporal that he would not be long in
-following her example.
-
-Alas, the Corporal did not feel in the least like going to bed. There
-was a decision to be made. In fact he had half made it already. But the
-good wife upstairs and the very chair in which he sat had cast their
-spells upon him. Gazing into the heart of the fire he realized that
-he was deliciously and solidly comfortable. All his days he had been
-a catlike lover of the comfortable. In the first instance it had been
-that as much as anything that had so nearly undone him. Conflicting
-voices were urging him, as somehow they always did, at critical moments
-in his life.
-
-This beautiful room with its old furniture, its china, its bric-a-brac,
-its soft carpet, its one rare landscape upon the wall was an enchanted
-palace. Even now, after all these months of occupation, it seemed
-like sacrilege to be sitting in it. But it was a symptom of a changed
-condition. This lovely place with its poetry and its elegance was a
-dream come true. And the honor and the affection with which a world
-formerly so hard and so supercilious surrounded him now made life so
-much sweeter than ever before.
-
-Sitting there in front of a delicious fire he felt that the peace and
-the beauty all about him had entered his soul. He had a right to these
-languors; he had purchased them with many unspeakable months of torture
-and pain. No one would blame him, no one could blame him if he left the
-dance to younger men. Suddenly he heard a little wind steal along the
-valley and he shivered at the image that was born upon its whisper.
-Just beyond these cosy, lamplit walls was Night, Chaos, Panic. Outside
-the tiny harbor he had won at such a price was all hell let loose.
-
-He heard the awful Crumps, he could taste the icy mud they flung over
-him, he was plunged again in endless, hideous hours, he could see
-and feel the muck, the senseless muck, the boredom, the excruciating
-misery. The wind in the valley grew a little louder and he shuddered in
-the depths of his spirit.
-
-The crocuses were out in the fields by the river. Next week would be
-April, the time of cloud, of glowing brake and flowering thorn, of
-daffodils and miraculous lights along the Sharrow. The little picture
-over the chimneypiece, which he had copied three times in his long
-convalescence, showed what April meant along the Sharrow. Friendship
-had taught him something, had given him eyes. He had been initiated
-into the higher mysteries. Beauty for the sake of Beauty--the world
-religion of the future--had been revealed to him. The sense of it
-seemed to fill him with passion as he gazed into the fire.
-
-"Auntie!" Surely there was a voice in the room. Or was it the little
-wind outside softly trying the shutters? "Auntie!" It was there again.
-He got up unsteadily, but in a kind of ecstasy, half entrancement, half
-pain, and crossed to the French window. Very gently he slipped back
-the bolts and flung open the door. The darkness hit him, but there
-was nothing there. He knew there was nothing there, yet in his old
-carpet slippers he stepped out gingerly on to the wet lawn. The air was
-moist and mild and friendly, and as his eyes grew used to the mirk the
-rosebushes and the fruit trees took shape on either hand.
-
-The shafts of light from the room he had left guided him across the
-grass as far as the path which led to the tower at the end of the
-garden. As soon as his feet were on the gravel he thought he heard the
-voice again. Of course it couldn't be so. It was only the wind along
-the valley. And yet ... no ... if the wind wasn't calling....
-
-The gaunt line of the many-windowed tower loomed ahead. Less by
-calculation than by instinct he suddenly found the lowest of the twelve
-stone steps which led to its high door--in that darkness he couldn't
-see it, and if he had seen it there was not the slightest reason for
-ascending, but just now he was possessed. Step after step shaped itself
-with a kind of intelligence to his old waterlogged slippers, the damp
-knob of the door came into his hand.
-
-The door was locked. Silly fool he was! Must be cracked anyway! But
-the starched cuff of his best Sunday shirt had got entangled with
-something. The key, of course. It had been left in the lock. Careless
-to leave it like that.
-
-Of a sudden the door came open. The ghostly abyss within smelt very
-damp and cheerless. Ought to have had an occasional fire there during
-the winter months. He felt his way cautiously in and his eyes adjusted
-themselves to the grimmer texture of the darkness. The chill made his
-teeth chatter. He felt in his pockets for a match, but he hadn't got
-one; he moved gingerly forward, past a wooden table and a wicker chair;
-the spectral outline of an unshuttered window confronted him.
-
-Outside was nothing but the wind in the valley. He couldn't see a yard
-beyond the glass. The chill of the musty place was settling into his
-bones. What a fool not to be in his comfortable bed! But ... a voice
-was still whispering. There _was_ something ... somewhere....
-
-The wind was just like the little wind along that damned Canal. No
-wonder his teeth chattered. And then right out in the void he saw a
-star. It was so faint, so far beyond the valley and the wind's voice
-that he was not sure it was a star. But as he stood looking at it the
-voice seemed to come quite close.
-
-"Auntie ... Auntie...."
-
-"That you, Jim ... here I am, boy...."
-
-... Only a fool would stand with chattering teeth, in carpet slippers,
-at a goodish bit past midnight, talking to something that wasn't
-there....
-
-Somewhere in the darkness there was a presence. Perhaps it was outside
-the window. He felt his way back to the open door, as far as the veiled
-peril of the twelve stone steps. It was so dark that he couldn't even
-see the topmost; there was not even a railing for such an emergency; a
-single false step and he would break his neck.
-
-Queerly excited he stood poised on the threshold, feeling into space
-with one foot. The wind was in the garden below him. And then oddly,
-at a fresh angle, over by his left hand, he caught a glimpse of the
-star. He swayed forward into the void but the lamp of faith had been
-lit in his eyes. His taut nerves awoke to the fact that he was really
-descending the unseen steps one by one and that he was counting them.
-If he didn't take extraordinary care he was very likely to kill
-himself, but the care he was taking seemed by no means extraordinary.
-
-His old carpet slippers were shuffling along the gravel at last. He
-could make out a line of currant bushes by which ran the path to the
-house. As he moved forward the wind died away in the valley and he
-lost sight of the star. But he knew his way now. Pent up forces flowed
-from him through the wall of living darkness. "I'm coming, Jim!" he
-muttered. The wind seemed to answer him. And then he came to the end of
-the row of bushes and there beyond a patch of wet grass was the door of
-the cosy room still open with a subdued glow of lamp and fire shining
-beyond.
-
-When he came in he took off his soaked slippers that they might not
-soil the beautiful carpet of which Melia was so proud. As he barred the
-door and drew the curtains across the window, the pretty old-fashioned
-clock on the chimneypiece chided him by melodiously striking one
-o'clock. He must be a fool--he had to be up at seven; but the enchanted
-room that was like a dream embodied cast one last spell upon him.
-
-He had no need ... the Chaps wouldn't expect it ... he was
-forty-five....
-
-The voice was in the valley. It was a quarter past one. He raked out
-the last faint embers of the fire, then he put out the lamp and carried
-his wet slippers into the hall. After his recent adventure it was but a
-simple matter to find his way up the richly carpeted stairs without a
-light and creep into the room where his wife slept.
-
-She was sleeping now. So cunningly he crept into the room that she did
-not stir. He listened to the gentle rise and fall of her soft breath.
-Good woman! brave woman! He tiptoed past the bed to where the window
-was and managed to draw up the clever new-fangled blinds without making
-a sound. Yes, there was the star. That was all he wanted to see. Faint
-it was, so faint that faith was needed to believe that it was a star.
-But there was nothing else it could be.
-
-The little sobbing voice, now no more than a whisper, that, too, was
-out there. Jim's voice ... cracked he must be ... such sloppy notions
-... the wind along that damned canal....
-
-Suddenly he turned from the star. At the beck of a queer impulse he
-knelt by the bed, burying his eyes in the soft counterpane. He prayed
-for the Chaps. He prayed for Melia. He prayed for the life that lay
-with her, the life coming to them so miraculously they knew not whence,
-after all those years.
-
-Could it be that Jim was coming back to complete his great beginnings?
-Coming back to witch the world with beauty? Just a fancy. But
-everything was just a fancy. Jim had said so once, looking at the
-sunset on the bank of that canal.
-
-And he was one who....
-
-
-
-
-L
-
-
-The months went by. In the meantime, upon the fields of France, was
-being decided the fate of the world for generations to come. Day
-followed day whose story will echo down the ages, but in the cottage
-with the green shutters at the head of the valley there was little to
-indicate that it was a time of destiny.
-
-The Corporal was allowed to return to his old regiment. Experience had
-made him doubly valuable and its ranks had been grievously thinned.
-After three months at the Depôt he was sent to France.
-
-When at the end of July he came home on draft leave to bid Melia
-good-by, her time was drawing near. And in spite of the burdens life
-had laid upon them, the feeling now uppermost was a subtle sense of
-triumph. In the final bitterness of conflict the dark Fates had given
-them courage to bear their heads high.
-
-A strange reward was coming to them, bringing with it new obligations,
-new responsibilities. But they were not afraid. Somewhere, a Friend was
-helping them. It must be so, or else the dire perils to which they had
-been exposed would not have allowed their happiness to bear so late a
-flower. Besides, they had been given a specific token that in the sum
-of things they mattered.
-
-As the Corporal held his wife in a last embrace it came to him all at
-once that he was never to see the young life that was to bear his name.
-"If we can put the job through to a finish," he whispered huskily, "I'd
-like it to be a boy. If we can't, a girl'd be better."
-
-She asked why a girl would be better. As usual she was not very quick
-in the uptake.
-
-"The world'll not be a place for boys--unless we can do the job clean."
-
-"But you will do it, Bill." The almost cowlike eyes expressed a divine
-instinct. "God won't let the Germans win."
-
-Somehow the words shamed him, yet not for the reason that turned her
-own heart to fire. It was treason to the Chaps to talk of girls.
-
-"O' course we'll make a clean job on it." He pressed a final caress
-upon her. "You can set there, my dear, in that nice chair all covered
-with wild flowers, and the door open just as it is, so that you can get
-a glimpse o' that old river with the sun on it and when your eyes get
-tired-like, my dear, you can fix 'em on that little picture over the
-chimneypiece opposite. See what I mean, like? There's the sun in that,
-too. John Torrington painted it. Look at it sometimes. We are going to
-win--it isn't right to think otherwise. That means a boy. And if a boy
-it is, I'd like him to be called Jim."
-
-
-
-
-LI
-
-
-Civilization was ringing with great news at the very hour that a son
-was born to the Corporal. But at that time he was a Corporal no longer.
-A letter had already reached Melia to say that "he was promoted Color
-Sergeant." The fighting was awful, but the Chaps had got their tails
-up, and the time was coming "when Fritz would be bound to throw in his
-hand."
-
-It was very well, therefore, that the half comic, rather pathetic,
-somewhat crumpled but perfectly healthy creature snuggling up against
-its mother in a lovely chintz-clad bedroom looking southwest,
-proved to be a small but perfectly formed specimen of the human
-male. The delighted grandmother herself took the incredible news to
-Strathfieldsaye.
-
-Josiah, who for several days past had been hard set to conceal a
-growing excitement, rubbed his hands with glee. "One in the eye for
-Park Crescent--what? Fancy ... Melia!"
-
-Lady Munt agreed that wonders are never likely to cease in this world.
-
-"Mother," she never remembered to have seen Josiah so excited,
-"this means a bottle o' champagne." He pressed the bell and gave
-comprehensive orders to Alice. "Seems to me that Victory's in the
-air." Secretly he had always had a grudge against Fate, that, with all
-his worldly success, his family could not muster one solitary male
-among them. "Funny thing, y' know, how you can be deceived in people. I
-always said that chap Hollis was a good-for-nothing. Well, I was wrong."
-
-Her ladyship sniffed a little and wiped tearful eyes. She was in
-perversely low spirits, but good soup, in spite of the food crisis
-and good wine, which she was simply forced to drink, did something to
-restore her.
-
-"Yes, you can be deceived in people." The cool trickle down Josiah's
-throat generated a desire for conversation. "Take the Germans.
-Everybody thought they were a white race. Well, they aren't. Then take
-the Americans. Everybody said they were too proud to fight. And, when
-finally they came in, people said they'd not be much use anyway. But it
-shows how easy it is to be wrong." Again the Mayor took up his glass.
-"For I tell you, Mother, those Yankees have made a difference. Since
-that mix-up back in March they've done wonders. The Yankees have turned
-the scale."
-
-Maria had a head for domestic affairs only; she did not pretend to
-be wise in international matters. She sighed gently and thought of a
-certain chintz-clad room up at Dibley.
-
-"Get on with it!" Her lord pointed at her glass peremptorily. "Pol
-Roger '04'll hurt nobody." Strong in that faith, he lifted his own
-glass and bowed and beamed over the top of it. "Grandma, here's now!"
-
-At the toast Maria hoisted a blush which brought Josiah to the verge
-of catastrophe. Tears, her one form of emotional luxury, came into her
-honest eyes.
-
-"In a year or two, Grandma, we'll have to be thinking of your
-golden wedding--touching wood!" He laid a ritualistic finger upon
-the mahogany. "You little thought, did you now, when we started out
-together in that funny little box up Parker's Entry that one day you'd
-be My Lady? Funny world--what? I remember going to fetch the Doctor the
-night that gel was born. Bitter cold it was." Suddenly Josiah stopped
-and again took up his glass. "Wind had an edge like a knife round the
-corner by Waterloo Square." Then came an odd change of voice. "Did I
-understand you to say the gel would like me to be godfather?"
-
-Maria understood that Melia understood that Bill would like it.
-
-A sigh escaped Josiah. He laid down his knife and fork. "Well, well, I
-never made such a mistake in my life as over that chap." His voice grew
-humbler than Maria had ever heard it. "Shows how you can be deceived.
-Something big about that feller. Never made a greater mistake in my
-life. We'll hope he'll come through. Better write him a line, Mother.
-Don't suppose it's any use tryin' to send a wire."
-
-
-
-
-LII
-
-
-Some weeks later, on a cold Sunday morning in November, Sir Josiah
-and Lady Munt drove over to Torrington Cottage. They were accompanied
-by Sally, on short leave from France, and by Gertrude Preston. Before
-the party walked across the village green to the little parish church,
-where a service of National Thanksgiving was to be held, it found that
-a matter of great importance claimed attention.
-
-The matter was Jim. The rector of the parish had arranged to christen
-him that afternoon at three o'clock. Near a good log fire in the sunny
-embrasure of the charming little drawing-room his grand cradle had been
-set; and here the wonderful infant was duly inspected by his godparents.
-
-Jim was a picture. His grandfather said he was. There was no other
-word. Yet even in the presence of this phenomenal youth there was but
-a chastened joy. He was sleeping for one thing, calmly, sweetly and
-superbly; and his pale, fine-drawn, yet strangely proud-looking mother
-was clad in the livery of widowhood.
-
-Said Josiah in a low voice, so as not to wake the baby, "What's
-happened to the picture that used to be there?" He pointed to the wall
-above the chimneypiece.
-
-"It fell down, Dad." The voice of Melia was calm.
-
-"When?"
-
-"One night last week--the night before the news came."
-
-"You don't say!" Josiah was not superstitious, still it was queer.
-
-"No one was in the room when it happened. No one heard it fall. Didn't
-break the frame or the glass or anything. Just the snapping of the
-cord."
-
-"War cord, I expect." Josiah's voice was grim. "Need a cord of a better
-quality to hang a certain party. Better have it put up again. Young
-Nixey tells me that picture may be worth a sight o' money."
-
-Melia promised that it should be put up again. _He_ always set such
-great store by it.
-
-Of a sudden, Sally, who had been wholly absorbed in the contemplation
-of James, said, "Tell me, Father, when did you last see young Nixey?"
-
-"Thursday--Friday. Happened to look in Friday morning as I was passing."
-
-"How was he?"
-
-"Wonderfully cheerful considerin'. Tries to gammon his old mother, but
-I guess the old lady knows...."
-
-"... he'll never...."
-
-"No, poor fellow. Wonderful pluck. Tells me he's plannin' a cathedral
-... a cathedral, mark you ... and stone blind."
-
-Sally sighed a little and turned again to look at Jim. Aunt Gerty
-laid a white-gloved hand gently on the Mayor's sleeve. "Ten minutes
-to eleven, Josiah. Won't do to be late--_you_ of all people. Will it
-Maria?"
-
-
-
-
-LIII
-
-
-Maria and Aunt Gerty, carrying respectability to the verge of fashion,
-led the way by the path across the green to the village church. Josiah,
-walking with his daughters, followed ten paces behind. Wearing the tall
-hat of public life he looked imposing, but four and a quarter years
-of war had chastened him. The roll and the swagger were not what they
-were; four and a quarter years of incessant but fruitful labor for the
-common weal had molded his mind, had modified an aggressive personality.
-
-The church, although in excess of the local requirements as a rule, was
-very full this morning in November. It was an hour of Thanksgiving. The
-goal had been reached. Victory, complete and final, had come almost
-like a thief in the night. And its coming had revealed, in a manner
-transcending even the awful dramas of old, the omnipotence of the
-moral law. Yet again the God of Righteousness had declared Himself in
-Sovereign power.
-
-Grim perils had been surmounted by the devotion of the sons and
-daughters of the race, but very much remained to do. Behind the humble
-gratitude to the Giver of Victory, behind the sense of exultation
-so rightly uppermost this Sabbath morning, was in every heart a
-desolating sense of the cost in human lives and a deep anxiety for the
-future.
-
-The Vicar of the parish, by name the Reverend Corfield Stanning, was a
-white-haired man who had given soul and kin freely to the Cause. He was
-a son of the soil, a type of the almost extinct squarson who survives
-here and there in England, half landowner, half patriarch, less a
-scholar than a sportsman and a man of the world. For that reason,
-perhaps, he had the practical wisdom that books do not give. He had the
-instinct for affairs which men of his type seldom lack.
-
-Victory was with the arms of Right. The people did well to rejoice.
-But also it was a time for prayer, for steadfast dedication to the
-gigantic tasks ahead. The man-eating tiger was in the net. It now
-remained to repair the havoc he had wrought, and to provide security
-for generations unborn against his kind.
-
-Having humbly thanked the Giver, the old man prayed for his country and
-for those noble races of which it was the foster-mother. He prayed for
-all her wide-flung peoples to whom the Keys had been given; he prayed
-that the Pioneers of sacred liberties so long in peril, those one in
-name and in blood over all the wide seas, who hold Milton's faith, who
-speak Shakespeare's tongue may ever stand as now, shoulder to shoulder
-in the gate.
-
-He prayed for all those children of men grown old and weak in bondage,
-whose chains had at last been cast off. He besought the Divine grace
-to guide them.
-
-Finally, he prayed for the Co-trustees of the future and that the
-Divine wisdom encompass them in their reckoning with a cruel and
-unworthy foe. He asked that mercy be extended to those who had denied
-it to others, not that it was in his heart to pity them in their
-eclipse or to spare them aught of their desert, but that the name of
-the Master be served, in whom lay the ultimate hope of the world, might
-be honored in mankind's supreme yet most terrible hour.
-
-When the old man came to his brief and simple sermon the words of his
-text pierced every heart. "Greater love hath no man than this, that he
-lay down his life for his friends."
-
-It began with commemoration of a humble hero, known to many in that
-church, who had given all he had to give without stint or question. And
-he read a letter written from the sacred and recovered soil of France
-by the officer commanding that Band of Brothers raised in their midst
-to the wife of one Sergeant William Hollis, who had died a soldier and
-a gentleman that his faith and his friends might live.
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
-Words and phrases that were typeset as italic in the printed version
-of this book have been shown with an underscore (_) at the beginning
-and end of the word or phrase.
-
-Minor changes have been made to correct obvious typesetters' errors
-and to regularize hyphenation; variant spellings have been retained.
-
-In chapter XXIV, the sentence that was typeset as "By the time William
-and Melia turned down Saint James his street," has been changed to
-"By the time William and Melia turned down Saint James's street," to
-make sense grammatically.
-
-In several places, Josiah Munt refers to himself or others as
-"prattical" in conversation. In chapter XXXVI, he is musing about
-education for women as not being "prattical"; the Transcriber has
-chosen to retain this spelling as fitting the author's style and intent.
-
-In four instances in the book, the author refers to a "pickelet", and
-in one place to a "pikelet". Because of the frequency of pickelet, the
-Transcriber has chosen to retain the variant spelling.
-
-
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-<pre style='margin-bottom:6em;'>The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Undefeated, by J. C. (John Collis)
-Snaith
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Undefeated
-
-Author: J. C. (John Collis) Snaith
-
-Release Date: December 05, 2020 [EBook #63546]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by the Library of Congress)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE UNDEFEATED ***
-</pre>
-<div class="figcenter hide" style="width:400px;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="400" alt="Cover" title="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h1><i>The</i><br />
-UNDEFEATED</h1>
-
-<p class="center no-indent">BY</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent ph2">J. C. SNAITH</p>
-
-<p class="ph4 no-indent bgap">AUTHOR OF &ldquo;THE SAILOR,&rdquo; &ldquo;BROKE OF COVENDEN,&rdquo; ETC.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter bgap" style="width: 100px;">
-<a id="i_title"><img src="images/i_title.jpg" width="60" height="75" alt="Publishers Logo"
-title="" /></a></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent center ph2">D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br />
-<span class="span1"><small>NEW YORK</small></span> <span class="span2"><small>1919</small></span></p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="center no-indent"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1919, by</span></p>
-
-<p class="center no-indent bgap">D. APPLETON AND COMPANY</p>
-
-<p class="center no-indent bgap">Printed in the United States of America.</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="center no-indent"><small>DEDICATED RESPECTFULLY</small></p>
-
-<p class="center no-indent"><small>TO</small></p>
-
-<p class="center no-indent">&ldquo;A DECENT AND A DAUNTLESS PEOPLE&rdquo;</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="ph1">THE UNDEFEATED</p>
-
-<h2 id="I">I</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">I</span>T was hot.</p>
-
-<p>It was so hot that a certain Mr. William Hollis
-sitting on an old bacon box in the lee of a summerhouse
-in his lock-up garden had removed coat and
-waistcoat tie and collar, rolled up the sleeves of his
-shirt and loosened his braces. The presence of a
-neighbor&rsquo;s elbows on the party hedge forbade a complete
-return to nature, but the freedom of Old Man
-Adam from the restraints imposed by society was envied
-just now by one at least of his heirs.</p>
-
-<p>By the side of Bill Hollis was a stone jar of Blackhampton
-ale, a famous brew, but even this could not
-save him from gasping like a carp. It was a scorcher
-and no mistake&mdash;thick, slab and hazy, the sort of heat
-you can almost cut with a knife.</p>
-
-<p>Leaning gracefully across from the next plot was
-a large, rotund gentleman with the face of a well-nourished
-ferret. Draped in an artful festoon beneath
-an old straw hat, a wreath of burdock leaves
-defended him from the weather. &ldquo;Mr. Hollis&rdquo;&mdash;he
-addressed the man on the bacon box with conversational<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span> charm&mdash;&ldquo;if
-you want my opinion they&rsquo;re putting
-in a bit of overtime in Hell.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Goldman, you&rsquo;ve got it.&rdquo; His neighbor, a man
-of somber imagination, was struck by the force of
-the image. First he glanced up to a sky of burnished
-copper and then he glanced down over the edge of
-sheer hillside upon which he and his friend were
-poised like a couple of black ants on the face of a hayrick.
-Below he saw a cauldron in which seethed more
-than a quarter of a million souls. Floating above the
-cauldron and its many thousands of chimneys was a
-haze of soot thick enough to conceal what in point of
-mere size was the fourteenth city of Great Britain.
-But speaking geographically, and Blackhampton&rsquo;s inhabitants
-were prone to do that, it was the exact center
-of England, of the United Kingdom, of the British
-Empire, and therefore&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Somewhere in the mind of William Hollis lurked
-a poet, a philosopher and an artist. He pointed over
-the dip of the hill into the middle of the cauldron.
-&ldquo;Reminds me,&rdquo; he said, half to himself, for he was
-not consciously an artist, &ldquo;of the Inferno of Dant,
-with Lustrations by Door.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Goldman frowned at the simile. What else
-could he do? He was a solid citizen, of a solid city,
-of a solid empire: he was not merely a Philistine, he
-was proud of being a Philistine. He suddenly remembered
-that his neighbor was a failure as a man of
-business. And in a flash Mr. Goldman knew why.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Hollis&mdash;hot.&rdquo; The ferret-faced gentleman
-spoke with more caution and less charm. Commercially
-and socially he was secure, but the same could
-hardly be said for the man on the bacon box who
-spoke of the Inferno of Dant with Lustrations by
-Door&mdash;whatever the Inferno of Dant with Lustrations
-by Door might be.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hot enough, Mr. Goldman, to melt those three
-brass balls of yours.&rdquo; It was a graceful allusion to a
-trade symbol, yet a prosperous pawnbroker felt that
-in making it a semi-bankrupt greengrocer was verging
-upon the familiar. He had just reached that conclusion
-when a boy selling papers came along the narrow
-lane that ran past the end of the garden, and
-thrust a tousled head over the fence.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Four o&rsquo;clock, mister?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Bill Hollis produced a halfpenny. A minute later
-he produced a note of disgust. &ldquo;County&rsquo;s beat. Yorkshire
-won by an innings an&rsquo; four runs. Funny thing,
-our chaps can&rsquo;t never play against Yorkshire&mdash;not
-for sour apples.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Goldman gave a slow deep grunt and then artistically
-readjusted his garland.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hirst six for twenty-two. Them Tykes can <i>bahl</i>
-a bit. Rhodes four for nineteen.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Goldman grunted again. And it was now clear
-by the look in his small eyes that disapproval was intended.
-The Inferno of Dant with Lustrations by
-Door was still in his mind. That was the key to his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>neighbor&rsquo;s financial failure, but this squandering of
-money, time and brain power on things of no value
-was just as significant.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Cricket.&rdquo; The tone was very scornful. &ldquo;One o&rsquo;
-these days cricket is going to be the ruin of the country.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>William Hollis stoutly dissented. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s cricket that
-makes us what we are.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s business, Hollis, that makes a country.&rdquo; There
-was an accession of moral superiority in the pawnbroker&rsquo;s
-tone. &rdquo;That&rsquo;s the thing that counts. All this
-sport is ruination&mdash;ruination, Hollis&mdash;the road to nowhere.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>William Hollis was unconvinced, but a man so successful
-had him at a hopeless disadvantage. In theory
-he was sure that he was right, but the pawnbroker
-knew that he had just made a composition with
-his creditors, so that it didn&rsquo;t matter how sound the
-argument or how honest the cause, he was out of
-court. Truth doesn&rsquo;t matter. It is public opinion that
-matters. And public opinion is conditioned by many
-subtleties, among which a banking account is foremost.</p>
-
-<p>Bill Hollis covered his retreat from a position that
-should have been impregnable, by turning to another
-part of the paper which was the Blackhampton <i>Evening
-Star</i>.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ultimatum to Serbia. Ugly situation. I don&rsquo;t
-think.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Goldman asked why he didn&rsquo;t.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A dodge to sell the paper.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I expect you&rsquo;re right,&rdquo; said the pawnbroker judicially.
-&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve always got some flam or other.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Civil war in Ireland,&rdquo; announced Bill Hollis.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I daresay. And next week we shall have the sea
-serpent and the giant gooseberry. And all for a halfpenny,
-mark you. We&rsquo;re living in great days, Hollis.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The little greengrocer was silent a moment and then
-he said thoughtfully, &ldquo;I sometimes think, Mr. Goldman,
-what this country wants is a really good war.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Goldman smiled in a superior way. &ldquo;Well, I
-don&rsquo;t mind telling you,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that I&rsquo;ve thought
-that for the last twenty years. Not this country only,
-but Europe, the whole world.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re right, Mr. Goldman.&rdquo; There was a grandeur
-in the conception that in spite of the weather
-almost moved his neighbor to enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Stands to reason, my boy, and I&rsquo;ll tell you why.
-The world is overpoppylated. Look at this town of
-ours.&rdquo; With the finger of an Olympian the pawnbroker
-pointed down the hillside to the smoking cauldron
-below. &ldquo;Poppylation two hundred and sixty odd
-thousand at the last census. And when I first set up
-in business, the year before the Franco-Prussian War,
-it was seventy-two thousand. And it&rsquo;s not only here,
-it&rsquo;s all over the world alike.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That is so, Mr. Goldman. And they say that in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>America it&rsquo;s even worse. In fact, wherever you look
-the competition is cruel.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Hollis, a real good war would do a power of
-good. We want Old Boney back again&mdash;then there
-might be breathing space for a bit. As it is this country
-is overrun with aliens.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>William assented gloomily.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;This town of ours, my boy, is crawling with Germans.
-They come over here and take the bread out
-of our mouths. They work for nothing and they live
-on nothing. They learn all our trades and then they
-go back to the Fatherland, and undersell us.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Said Bill Hollis with the air of a prophet, &ldquo;I reckon
-that sooner or later we&rsquo;ll be having a scrap with the
-Germans.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not likely.&rdquo; The pawnbroker&rsquo;s tone was a little
-contemptuous. &ldquo;The Germans can get all they want
-without fighting. Peaceful penetration&rsquo;s their game.
-They are the cleverest nation in the world. In another
-twenty years they&rsquo;ll own it all.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Upon this last expression of his wisdom Mr. Goldman
-gave a final touch to his straw hat and its cool
-garland, waddled down a box-bordered path and out
-of the gate at the bottom of his garden.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="II">II</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE departure of Mr. Goldman left a void in
-the heart of Mr. William Hollis. He was a
-sociable man, with a craving for the company of his
-fellows, and although for quite a long time now his
-distinguished neighbor had been clearly labeled in his
-mind as &ldquo;a pursy old pig,&rdquo; he was an interesting person
-to talk to when he was in the humor. He was
-not always in the humor, it was true, for he was a
-&ldquo;warm&rdquo; man, an owner of house property; therefore
-he was in the happy position of not having to be civil
-to anybody when he didn&rsquo;t feel like it. This afternoon,
-however, he had unbent.</p>
-
-<p>The slowly receding form of Mr. Goldman waddled
-along by the hedge, turned into the lane, passed from
-view. In almost the same moment William Hollis
-felt a severe depression. He had reached the stage
-of life and fortune when he could not bear to be alone.
-With a kind of dull pain he realized that this was his
-forty-first birthday and that he had failed in life.</p>
-
-<p>He was going down the hill. Unless he could take
-a pull on himself he was done. Already it might be
-too late. The best part of his life was behind him.
-A year ago that day, in this very garden, his only
-source of happiness, he had told himself that; two
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>years ago, three years ago, five years ago, this had
-been the burden of his thoughts. But he was in a rut
-and there seemed to be no way out.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty years ago he had felt it was in him to do
-something. He was an ambitious young fellow with
-a mind that looked forward to the day after to-morrow.
-Such a man ought to have done something. But
-now he knew that there had been a soft spot in him
-somewhere and that a moral and mental dry rot had
-already set in. He was a talker, a thinker, a dreamer;
-action was not his sphere. Unless he took a strong
-pull on himself he was out of the race.</p>
-
-<p>He poured what remained of the jar of ale into the
-earthenware mug he kept for the purpose&mdash;Blackhampton
-ale tastes better out of a mug&mdash;and drank it
-slowly, without relish. Then he cut a few flowers to
-take home to his wife&mdash;to the wife who hadn&rsquo;t spoken
-to him for nearly a week&mdash;arranged them in a bunch,
-with the delicacy of one unconsciously sensitive to
-form and color, looped a bit of twitch neatly round
-them, put on his coat, a stained and worn alpaca, put
-on his hat, a battered, disreputable straw, cast the
-eye of a lover round his precious garden, locked its
-dilapidated green door and started down the lane and
-down the hill towards the city.</p>
-
-<p>It was now five o&rsquo;clock and a little cooler, yet William
-Hollis walked very slowly. There was a lot of
-time to kill before the day was through. But his
-thoughts were biting him harder than ever as he turned
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>into the famous road leading to the city, known as
-The Rise. This salubrious eminence, commanding the
-town from the northeast, was sacred to the city magnates.
-When a man made good in Blackhampton,
-really good, he built a house on The Rise. It was
-the ambition of every true Blackhamptonian to express
-his individuality in that way. Until he had
-achieved a house entirely to his own fancy and taste
-on The Rise, no son of Blackhampton could be said
-really to have &ldquo;arrived.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>William Hollis trudged slowly along a well kept
-road, between two irregular lines of superb villas,
-gleaming with paint and glass, standing well back
-from the road in ample grounds of their own, with
-broad and trim gravel approaches. The first on the
-right was Rosemere, the residence of Sir Reuben Jope,
-three times Mayor of Blackhampton, a man of large
-fortune and robust taste, whose last expression was
-greenhouses and conservatories. They were said to
-produce fabulous things&mdash;flowers, fruits, shrubs,
-plants known only to tropical countries. Many a time
-from afar had Bill gazed upon them with rather wistful
-awe.</p>
-
-<p>A little farther along was The Haven, the ancestral
-home of the Clints, a famous Blackhampton family
-whose local prestige was on a par with that of
-the Rothschilds in the city of London. Across the
-road was The Gables, the modest house of Lawyer
-Mossop, the town&rsquo;s leading solicitor; then on the right,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>again, the reticulated dwelling of the philanthropic
-Stephen Mortimore, head of the great engineering
-firm of Mortimore, Barrow, and Mortimore. For a
-true son of Blackhampton these were names to conjure
-with. Even to walk along such a road gave one
-a feeling of worldly success, financial security, aristocratic
-exclusiveness.</p>
-
-<p>Still a little further along on the left was what was
-clearly intended to be the <i>pièce de resistance</i> of The
-Rise. It was the brand-new residence of the very latest
-arrival and no house had been more discussed by
-Blackhampton society. It was intended to eclipse
-every other dwelling on The Rise, but it was of nondescript
-design, half suburban villa, half mediæval
-castle. From the æsthetic standpoint the result was
-so little satisfactory that a local wit had christened it
-&ldquo;Dammit &rsquo;All.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>As &ldquo;Dammit &rsquo;All&rdquo; came into view, Bill Hollis found
-an almost morbid fascination in gazing at its turrets
-and the tower so regally crowning them. It was the
-house of his father-in-law, Mr. Josiah Munt. Sixteen
-years ago, in that very month of July, an ambitious
-young man had married his master&rsquo;s eldest daughter.
-Melia Munt had espoused Bill Hollis in direct defiance
-of her father&rsquo;s wishes and had lived long enough already
-to rue the day. Josiah, at that time, was not the
-great man he had since become, but he was a hard,
-unbending parent; and he gave Melia to understand
-clearly that if she married Hollis he would never
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>speak to her again. Melia chose to defy him, as he
-always thought out of sheer perversity, and her implacable
-father had been careful to keep his word to
-the letter. Not again did he mention her name; not
-again did her old home receive her.</p>
-
-<p>In those sixteen years Josiah Munt had gone up
-in the world, and if William Hollis could not be said
-to have come down in it, he had certainly made very
-little headway. At the time of his marriage he was
-the chief barman at &ldquo;the Duke of Wellington,&rdquo; an
-extremely thriving public house, at the corner of
-Waterloo Square in the populous southeastern part
-of the city. He was now a small greengrocer in Love
-Lane, within a stone&rsquo;s throw of the famous licensed
-house of his father-in-law, and he was continually
-haunted by the problem of how much longer he would
-be able to carry on his business. On the other hand,
-his old master had prospered so much that he had recently
-built for himself a fine house on The Rise.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Josiah Munt was still the owner of the Duke
-of Wellington. Over the top of its swing doors his
-name appeared below the spirited effigy of the Iron
-Duke as &ldquo;licensed to sell wines, spirits, beer and tobacco,&rdquo;
-but years ago he had ceased to reside there
-with his family. As far as possible he liked to disassociate
-himself from it in the public mind, but he
-was too shrewd a man to part with the goose that laid
-the golden eggs; besides, in his heart, there was a
-tender spot for the old house which had been the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>foundation of his fortunes. His womenfolk might
-despise it; in some ways he had outgrown it himself;
-but he knew better than to crab his luck by parting
-with an extremely valuable property which at the
-present time was not appreciated at its true worth by
-the surveyor of rates and taxes.</p>
-
-<p>As William Hollis trudged along the dusty road
-and his father-in-law&rsquo;s new and amazing house came
-into view, he became the prey of many emotions. The
-sight of this magnificence was a bitter pill to swallow.
-It brought back vividly to his mind the scene that was
-printed on it forever&mdash;the scene that followed his diffident
-request for the hand of Melia. He could still
-hear the stinging taunts of his employer, he could still
-feel the impact of Josiah&rsquo;s boot. It may have been
-that boot&mdash;for women are queer!&mdash;which caused the
-final capitulation of Melia. But the hard part was that
-time had justified the prediction of her far-sighted
-parent. Melia in throwing herself away on &ldquo;a man
-of no class&rdquo; would do a bad day&rsquo;s work when she
-married Hollis.</p>
-
-<p>It had been the son-in-law&rsquo;s intention to give the lie
-to that prophecy. But!&mdash;there was a kink in him
-somewhere. He had always loved to dream of the
-future, yet he had not the power of making his dreams
-come true. If only he had had a good education! If
-only he had known people who could have put him
-on the right road to success when he was young and
-sharp and the sap was in his brain! If only there
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>hadn&rsquo;t been so much competition, so much to fight
-against; if only he could have had a bit of luck; if
-only Melia had really cared for him; if only he hadn&rsquo;t
-speculated with the hundred pounds she had inherited
-from her Aunt Elizabeth; if only he wasn&rsquo;t so apt to
-be hurt by things that didn&rsquo;t matter a damn!</p>
-
-<p>William Hollis was a disappointed and embittered
-man. Life had gone wrong with him; but a small jar
-of Blackhampton Old Ale softens failure and evokes
-the quality of self-pity. However, as he approached
-Mr. Munt&rsquo;s gate and gained a clearer view of the newest
-and most imposing house on The Rise, the sense
-of failure rose in him to a pitch that was hard to
-bear. So this was what Melia&rsquo;s father had done!
-No wonder she despised a man like himself. It was
-not very surprising after all that she hardly threw a
-word to him now from one day&rsquo;s end to another.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="III">III</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">A</span> MAN in an apron that had once been white and
-in a cloth cap that had once been navy blue
-was painting a series of bold letters on Mr. Josiah
-Munt&rsquo;s front gate. Bill Hollis was overwhelmed with
-depression, but at this interesting sight curiosity
-stirred him. He advanced upon the decorative artist
-who was whistling gently over a job in which he took
-a pride and a pleasure. Upon the ornate front of the
-large green gate was being inscribed the word</p>
-
-<p class="center no-indent">
-STRATHFIELDSAYE</p>
-
-<p>Bill recognized the artist as a near neighbor of his
-own in Love Lane.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Working for the Nobs, are you, Wickens?&rdquo;
-There was a world of scorn in the tone of William
-Hollis, a world of sarcasm. And yet what was scorn
-and what was sarcasm in the presence of a hard fact,
-clear, outstanding, fully accomplished!</p>
-
-<p>The artist expectorated a silent affirmative.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Piecework, I suppose? Cut rates?&rdquo; Mr. Munt
-had the reputation of being a very keen man of business.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The artist was too much absorbed in his labors to
-indulge in promiscuous talk.</p>
-
-<p>William Hollis peered through the gate, to the rows
-of newly planted shrubs on either side the curving
-carriage drive. &ldquo;Bleeding upstart&rdquo; he muttered;
-then he turned on his heel and walked on up the road.</p>
-
-<p>He had gone but a few yards when quite unexpectedly
-he came upon a massive figure in a black
-and white checked summer suit and a white billycock
-hat worn at a rather rakish angle. It was his
-father-in-law and they were face to face.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Munt was proceeding with a kind of elephantine
-dignity along the exact center of the sidewalk,
-and instinctively, before he was aware of what he had
-done, his son-in-law by stepping nimbly into the
-grassgrown gutter had conceded it to him. But in
-almost the same instant he scorned himself for his
-action; and the gesture of lordly indifference with
-which the proprietor of the Duke of Wellington directed
-his gaze upon the western gables of Strathfieldsaye,
-without a flicker of recognition of the person
-who had made way for him, suddenly brought William
-Hollis to the bursting point.</p>
-
-<p>The world allows that in a stone jar of Blackhampton
-Old Ale there are magic qualities; and far down
-in Bill himself was hidden some deep strain of independent
-manhood. The City records proved&mdash;vide
-Bazeley&rsquo;s famous Annals of Blackhampton, a second-hand
-copy of which was one of his most cherished pos<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>sessions&mdash;that
-the name of Hollis had been known
-and honored in the town long before the name of
-Munt had been heard of. The Hollises were an old
-and distinguished Blackhampton clan. A William
-Hollis was mayor of the Borough in the year of the
-Armada. It was a family of wide ramifications.
-There was the great John Hollis the inventor, circa
-1724-1798, there was Henry Hollis the poet, circa
-1747-1801. Of these their present descendant was a
-kinsman so remote that the science of genealogy had
-lost track of their actual relationship. But beyond
-a doubt his father&rsquo;s uncle, Troop Sergeant Major
-William Hollis, had fought at Waterloo. He himself
-was named after that worthy, and the old boy&rsquo;s portrait
-and portions of his kit had long embellished the
-sitting room in Love Lane.</p>
-
-<p>It was then, perhaps, force of ancestry quite as
-much as the virtue of the Blackhampton ale that
-moved William Hollis to his sudden and remarkable
-act of self-assertion. For as Josiah Munt passed him,
-head in air, and weather eye fixed upon the western
-gables of Strathfieldsaye, his son-in-law stopped,
-swung round and called after him in a voice that
-could be heard even by the decorative artist at work
-on the gate&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sally out of Quod yet?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="IV">IV</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">B</span>Y not so much as the quiver of an eyelid did Mr.
-Munt betray that he had even heard, much less
-taken cognizance, of that which amounted to a studied
-insult on the part of William Hollis. The proprietor
-of the Duke of Wellington converged upon the
-gate of Strathfieldsaye with head upheld, with dignity
-unimpaired. He even cast one cool glance at the
-handiwork of the inspired Wickens, but made no comment
-upon it, while the artist suspended his labors,
-opened the gate obsequiously, and waited for the
-great man to pass through. But when Mr. Munt had
-walked along the carriage drive to within a few yards
-of his newly bedizened front door, he stopped all of a
-sudden like a man who has received a blow in the face.</p>
-
-<p>Had Bill Hollis at that moment been able to obtain
-a glimpse of his father-in-law he would have seen
-that his shaft had gone right home. A sternly domineering
-countenance was distorted with passion.
-There was a rage of suffering in the fierce yellow-brown
-eyes, there was a twist of half strangled torment
-in the lines of the hard mouth. As the lord of
-Strathfieldsaye stood clenching his hands in the center
-of the gravel he was not an attractive figure. Before
-entering the house he took off the white hat and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>soothed the pressure upon head and neck by passing
-over them a red bandanna handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p>A trim parlor maid, bright as a new pin, received
-the lord of Strathfieldsaye. The smart and shining
-creature was in harmony with her surroundings.
-Everything in the spacious and lofty entrance hall
-shone with paint and polish, with new curtains, new
-carpets, new fittings, new furniture.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Munt handed his hat to the parlor maid rather
-roughly. &ldquo;Tea&rsquo;s in the drawing-room, sir,&rdquo; she said,
-calmly and modestly. It was the air of a very superior
-servant.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah went into the drawing-room and found two
-ladies drinking tea and consuming cake, strawberries
-and cream and bread and butter. One was a depressed
-lady in puce silk to whom her lord paid little attention;
-the other was much more sprightly, although by
-no means in the first blush of youth. She had the
-air of a visitor.</p>
-
-<p>Before heralding his arrival by any remark, Mr.
-Munt gazed with an air of genuine satisfaction round
-the large cool room smelling of paint and general
-newness, and then he said in a tone of rather grim
-heartiness to the more sprightly of the two ladies,
-&ldquo;Well, Gert, what do you think on us?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was a careful marshaling of manner on the
-part of the lady addressed as Gert. &ldquo;Almost <i>too</i>
-grand, Josiah&mdash;since you ask my opinion. Still I&rsquo;ve
-been telling Maria that she must show Spirit.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The nod of Josiah might be said to express approval.
-Miss Gertrude Preston was a half-sister of
-his wife, and she was perhaps the only woman among
-his strictly limited acquaintance who was able to sustain
-a claim to his respect. She had character and
-great common sense and having acted for many years
-as resident companion to no less a person than Lawyer
-Mossop&rsquo;s aunt, the late Miss Selina Gregg, she
-had seen something of the world. Upon all subjects
-her views were well considered and uncommonly
-shrewd; therefore they were not to be passed over
-lightly. Aunt Gerty was a favorite of Josiah, not
-merely for the reason that &ldquo;she knew a bit more than
-most,&rdquo; but also because she was clever enough to play
-up to his rising fortunes and growing renown.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Maria shown you round?&rdquo; said Josiah, accepting
-a cup of tea from the graceful hands of his sister-in-law.</p>
-
-<p>The depressed lady in puce silk sighed a limp yes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Eggshell china tea service,&rdquo; Gerty fixed a purposeful
-eye upon Josiah&rsquo;s cup.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Out of old Nickerson&rsquo;s sale,&rdquo; Josiah performed
-an audible act of deglutition. &ldquo;Four pun ten the set.
-Slop basin&rsquo;s cracked though.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I see it is, but you have a bargain, Josiah. You
-always seem to have a bargain, no matter what you
-buy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah purred under the subtle flattery.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Seen that chayney vawse?&rdquo; He pointed across the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>room to a pedestal upon which was a blue china bowl.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Looks like genuine Ming,&rdquo; Gertrude opened a
-pair of long-handled tortoiseshell glasses. There was
-less than a score of ladies in the whole of Blackhampton
-who sported glasses of that ultra-fashionable kind,
-but Miss Preston was one of them.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That young feller Parish said it was genuine and
-he ought to know.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Charming,&rdquo; Gerty sighed effectively; then her eyes
-went slowly round the room. &ldquo;This room is perfect.
-And such a view. You stand so high that you can
-look right over the city without knowing that it&rsquo;s
-there. And there&rsquo;s the Sharrow beyond. Isn&rsquo;t that
-Corfield Weir on the right?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Rather proudly Josiah said that it was Corfield
-Weir.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And that great bank of trees going up into the
-sky must be Dibley Chase.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Dibley right enough,&rdquo; vouched Josiah. &ldquo;Have
-you had a look from the tower?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I have. Wonderful. Maria says on a clear
-day you can see Cliveden Castle.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Aye. And a sight farther than that. You can
-see three counties up there. To my mind, Gert, this
-house stands on the plumb bit of The Rise.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gertrude fully agreed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So it ought if it comes to that. I had to pay seven
-and sixpence a yard for the land, before I could put
-a brick on it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Gertrude was impressed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What do you think o&rsquo; that oak paneling in the dining-room?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She thought it was charming.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Has Maria shown you the greenus&mdash;I should say
-conservatory&mdash;an&rsquo; the rockery&mdash;an&rsquo; the motor garidge?
-We haven&rsquo;t got the motor yet, but it&rsquo;s coming
-next week.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gertrude had seen these things. It only remained
-for her to enter upon a diplomatic rapture at the recital
-of their merits.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No strawberries, thank you,&rdquo; Josiah&rsquo;s voice was
-rather sharp as the depressed lady tactlessly offered
-these delicacies at a moment when her lord was fully
-engaged in describing the unparalleled difficulties he
-had had to surmount in order to get the water fountain
-beyond the tennis lawn to work properly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Fact o&rsquo; the matter is, our Water Board wants
-wackenin&rsquo; up.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you are the man to do that, Josiah. You
-are an alderman now.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am.&rdquo; The slight note of inflation was unconscious.
-&ldquo;And old Scrimshire an&rsquo; that pettifoggin&rsquo;
-crew are goin&rsquo; to have a word in season from Alderman
-Munt.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mustn&rsquo;t get yourself disliked though.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah smiled sourly. &ldquo;Gel,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;a man worth
-his salt is never afraid o&rsquo; being unpopular. Right is
-right an&rsquo; wrong is no man&rsquo;s right. Our Water Board&rsquo;s
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>got to be run on new lines. It&rsquo;s a disgrace to the
-city.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Preston was far too wise to offer an opinion
-upon that matter. She knew, none better, the limits
-imposed by affairs upon the sex to which she belonged.
-But she was very shrewd and perceptive and underneath
-the subtle flatteries she dealt out habitually to
-this brother-in-law of hers was a genuine respect for
-great abilities and his terrific force of character.</p>
-
-<p>Among all the outstanding figures in Blackhampton
-his was perhaps the least attractive. His name, in
-polite circles, was almost a byword, for he never
-studied the feelings of anybody; he deferred only to
-his own will and invariably took the shortest way to
-enforce it. There was generally a covert laugh or
-a covert sneer at the mention of his name and the
-house he had recently built on The Rise had set a
-seal upon his unpopularity. Nevertheless, the people
-who knew him best respected him most. His sister-in-law
-knew him very well indeed.</p>
-
-<p>Maria poured out a second cup of tea rather nervously
-for Josiah to whom Miss Preston handed it
-archly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No cake, thanks. I dussent.&rdquo; He tapped his chest
-significantly; then he cast a complacent glance through
-the wide-flung drawing-room windows to the fair
-pleasaunce beyond. &ldquo;So you think, Gert, take it altogether,
-this is a cut above Waterloo Villa, eh?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Gertrude&rsquo;s only answer to such a question was a
-discreet laugh.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Waterloo Villa was <i>so</i> comfortable,&rdquo; sighed the
-depressed lady in puce silk.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But there&rsquo;s no comparison, Maria, really no comparison.&rdquo;
-It was wonderful how the caressing touch
-of the woman of the world dispersed the cloud upon
-Josiah&rsquo;s brow almost before it had time to gather.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Of course there isn&rsquo;t, Gerty. Any one with a grain
-o&rsquo; sense knows that. Why, only this morning as I
-went down in the tram with Lawyer Mossop, he said,
-&lsquo;Mr. Munt, this new house of yours is quite the pick
-of the basket.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is, Josiah.&rdquo; The discreet voice rose to enthusiasm.
-&ldquo;And no one knows that better than Maria.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lady in puce silk gave a little sigh and a little
-sniff. &ldquo;Waterloo Villa was quite good enough for
-<i>me</i>,&rdquo; she murmured tactlessly.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="V">V</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HERE was silence for a moment and then said
-Josiah: &ldquo;Talking of Lawyer Mossop&mdash;that reminds
-me. I&rsquo;m going round to see him. I wonder
-what time he gets back from his office.&rdquo; He looked
-at his watch. &ldquo;Quarter past five. Bit too soon, I
-suppose.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Maria ventured to ask what he wanted Lawyer
-Mossop for.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah did not answer the question immediately.
-When he did answer it his voice had such a depth
-of emotion that both ladies felt as if a knife had
-been plunged suddenly into their flesh.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m goin&rsquo; to take our Sally out of my will.&rdquo; There
-was something almost terrible in the sternness and
-finality of the words.</p>
-
-<p>The depressed lady in puce silk gave a gasp. A
-moment afterwards large tears began to drip freely
-from her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Gerty sat very upright on a satinwood chair,
-her hands folded in front of her, and two prominent
-teeth showing beyond a line of extremely firm lips.
-She didn&rsquo;t speak.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nice thing&rdquo;&mdash;each word was slowly distilled
-from a feeling of outrage that was almost unbear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>able&mdash;&ldquo;to
-be made the talk and the mark of the
-whole city. And after what I&rsquo;ve done for that gel!
-School&mdash;college&mdash;France&mdash;Germany&mdash;your advice,
-you know, Gerty&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Gerty didn&rsquo;t speak.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And then she comes home and gets herself six
-weeks&rsquo; hard labor. Hard labor, mark you!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Both ladies shivered audibly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nice thing for a man who has always kept himself
-up, to have his daughter pitchin&rsquo; brick ends
-through the windows of the Houses o&rsquo; Parliament, to
-say nothin&rsquo; of assaulting the police. Gerty, that comes
-of higher education.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Still Aunt Gerty didn&rsquo;t speak.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Fact is, women ain&rsquo;t ripe for higher education.
-It goes to their heads. But I&rsquo;ll let her see. In a few
-minutes I&rsquo;ll be off round to Lawyer Mossop.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;Josiah!&rdquo; ventured a quavering voice.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not a word, Mother. My mind&rsquo;s made up. That
-gel has fairly made the name o&rsquo; Munt stink in the
-nostrils of the nation. Not ten minutes ago that
-rotten little dog Bill Hollis flung it in my teeth as I
-came in at the front gate. The little wastrel happened
-to be passing and he called after me, &lsquo;Sally out
-of Quod yet?&rsquo; One o&rsquo; these days I&rsquo;ll quod him&mdash;the
-little skunk&mdash;or Josiah Munt J.P. is not my name.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Maria continued to weep copiously but in silence.
-She dare not make her grief vocal with the stern eye
-of her husband upon her. The tragedy of her eldest
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>girl&rsquo;s defiance, now sixteen years old, was still green
-in her memory. Josiah had given Amelia plainly to
-understand that if she married William Hollis he
-would never speak to her again and he had kept his
-word. Maria had not got over it even yet; and now
-their youngest girl, Sally, on whose upbringing a fabulous
-sum had been lavished, had disgraced them in
-the sight of everybody.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah was meting out justice no doubt, but mothers
-are apt to be irrational where their offspring are
-concerned; and had Maria been able to muster the
-courage she would have broken a lance with him, even
-now, in this matter of the youngest girl. But she was
-afraid of him. And she knew he was in the right.
-Sally&rsquo;s name had appeared in all the papers. That
-morning, by a cruel stroke, they had come out with
-her portrait&mdash;Miss Sarah Ann Munt, youngest daughter
-of Alderman Munt J.P. of Blackhampton, sentenced
-to six weeks hard labor. Yes, it was cruel!
-It would take her father a long time to get over it.
-And for Maria herself, it was like the loss in infancy
-of the young Josiah; it was a thing she would
-always remember but never quite be able to grasp.</p>
-
-<p>The silence grew intolerable. At last it was broken
-by Gertrude Preston.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be having splendid roses, Josiah&mdash;next
-year.&rdquo; Those mincing tones, quite cool and untroubled,
-somehow did wonders. Josiah had always been
-a noted rose grower and as his sister-in-law pointed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>elegantly to the rows of young bushes beyond the
-drawing-room windows something in him began to
-respond. After all that was his great asset as a
-human entity: the power to react strongly and readily
-to the many things in which he was interested.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; he said, almost gratefully. &ldquo;Next year
-they&rsquo;ll be a sight. I&rsquo;ve had a double course o&rsquo; manure
-put down.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I hope there&rsquo;ll be some of my favorite Gloire de
-Dijons,&rdquo; said Gerty with fervor.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You bet there will be. There&rsquo;s a dozen bushes
-over yond. By the way, Gert, you&rsquo;re comin&rsquo; to the
-show to-morrow week.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Preston, for all her enthusiasm for roses, was
-not sure that she could get to the show. But Josiah
-informed her that she would <i>have</i> to come. And he
-enforced his command by taking a leather case from
-his breast pocket and producing a small blue card
-on which was printed:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>
-BLACKHAMPTON AND DISTRICT ROSE GROWERS&rsquo; ASSOCIATION<br />
-<br />
-PRESIDENT, ALDERMAN JOSIAH MUNT J.P.</p>
-
-<p>The twenty-seventh annual Show will be held in the Jubilee
-Park on Tuesday, August the Fourth. Prizes will be presented
-at six o&rsquo;clock to successful competitors by Mrs. Alderman Munt.
-The Blackhampton Prize Brass Band will be in attendance.
-Dancing in the evening, weather permitting.</p>
-
-<p>Admission one shilling.</p></div>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;ll get you in, Gert.&rdquo; The card was placed in
-her hand. &ldquo;Come and stand by Maria and keep her
-up to it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Had Maria dared she would have groaned dismally.
-As it was she had to be content with a slight gesture
-of dismay.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You see it&rsquo;ll be a bit o&lsquo; practice for her. In 1916&mdash;the
-year after next&mdash;she&rsquo;ll be the Mayoress.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lady in puce silk shuddered audibly.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="VI">VI</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">I</span>N the process of time the clock on the drawing-room
-chimneypiece chimed six and Josiah &ldquo;stepped
-round&rdquo; to Lawyer Mossop&rsquo;s.</p>
-
-<p>That celebrity lived at The Gables, the next house
-but one along The Rise. Outwardly a more modest
-dwelling than Strathfieldsaye, it was less modern in
-style, more reticent, more compact. As Josiah walked
-up the drive he noted with approval its well kept appearance
-and its fine display of rhododendrons, phlox,
-delphiniums, purple irises and many other things that
-spoke to him. He was a genuine lover of flowers.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Munt&rsquo;s pressure of the electric button was answered
-by a manservant in a starched shirt and a neat
-black cutaway. The visitor noted him carefully as
-he noted everything. &ldquo;I wonder what he pays a month
-for that jockey!&rdquo; was the form the memorandum took
-on the tablets of his mind.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Mossop in?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If you&rsquo;ll come this way I&rsquo;ll inquire, sir.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah was led across a square-tiled hall, covered
-in the center by a Persian rug, into a room delightfully
-cool, with a large window in a western angle opening
-on to a pergola ablaze with roses, along which the
-westering sun streamed amazingly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What name, sir?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hey?&rdquo; Josiah frowned. As if there was a man,
-woman or child in Blackhampton who didn&rsquo;t know
-him! Still, it was good style. &ldquo;Munt&mdash;Mr. Munt.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thank you, sir!&rdquo; The manservant bowed and
-withdrew.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, it was good style. And this cool, clean but
-rather somber room had the same elusive quality.
-Three of its four walls were covered with neat rows
-of books, for the most part in expensive bindings.
-Style again. All the same the visitor looked a little
-doubtfully upon those shining shelves. Books were
-not in his line, and although he did not go quite to
-the length of despising them he was well content that
-they shouldn&rsquo;t be. Books stood for education, and in
-the purview of Mr. Josiah Munt, &ldquo;if they didn&rsquo;t watch
-it education was going to be the ruin of the country.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Still to that room, plainly but richly furnished, those
-rows of shining leather lent a tone, a value. A shrewd eye ran them up and down.
-Meredith&mdash;Swinburne&mdash;Tennyson&mdash;Browning&mdash;Dickens&mdash;Thackeray&mdash;all
-flams, of course, but harmless, if not carried too far.
-Personally he preferred a good billiard room, but no
-one in Blackhampton disputed that Lawyer Mossop
-was the absolute head of his profession; he could be
-trusted therefore to know what he was doing. There
-was one of these books open on a very good table&mdash;forty
-guineas worth of anybody&rsquo;s money&mdash;printed in
-a foreign language, French probably, of which he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>couldn&lsquo;t read a word. Il Purgatorio, Dante. Fine bit
-of printing. Wonderful paper! Yes, wonderful! He
-handled it appraisingly. And then he realized that
-Lawyer Mossop was in the room and smiling at him
-in that polite way, that was half soft sawder, half
-good feeling. The carpet was so thick that he had
-not heard him come in.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good evening, Mr. Munt.&rdquo; The greeting was very
-friendly and pleasant. &ldquo;Sit down, won&lsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, I&rsquo;ll stand&mdash;and grow better.&ldquo; Mr. Munt had
-a stock of stereotyped pleasantries which he kept for
-social use. They seemed to make for ease and geniality.</p>
-
-<p>The two men stood looking at each other, the solicitor
-all rounded corners and quiet ease, the client stiff,
-angular, assertive, perhaps a shade embarrassed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Anything I can do for you, Mr. Munt?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The answer was slow in coming. It was embodied
-in a harsh growl. &ldquo;Mossop, I want you to take that
-gel of mine, Sally, out of my will.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer said nothing, but pursed his lips a little,
-a way he had when setting the mind to work, but that
-was the only expression of visible feeling in the heavily
-lined face.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Excuse my troubling you to-night, Mossop. But
-I felt I couldn&rsquo;t wait. Give me an appointment for
-the morning and I&rsquo;ll look in at the office. Nice goings
-on! And to think what her education cost me!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer made a silent gesture, spreading his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>hands like a stage Frenchman, half dismay, half tacit
-protest.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Better have a new document, eh?&rdquo; The outraged
-parent had been already dismissed; the highly competent
-man of affairs was now in control. &ldquo;My second
-girl, Ethel, Mrs. Doctor Cockburn, can have it all now,
-except&rdquo;&mdash;Josiah hesitated an instant&mdash;&ldquo;except five
-thousand pounds I shall leave to Gertrude Preston.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lawyer Mossop was still silent. But the mobile
-lips were working curiously. &ldquo;Not for me to advise,&rdquo;
-he said at last, very slowly, with much hesitation, &ldquo;but
-if I might&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah cut him short with a stern lift of the hand.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know what you&rsquo;re going to say, but if she was
-your gel what&rsquo;d you do, eh?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lawyer Mossop rubbed his cheek perplexedly. &ldquo;At
-bottom I might be rather proud of her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&mdash;might&mdash;be&mdash;rather&mdash;proud&mdash;of&mdash;her!&rdquo; It
-was the tone of Alderman Munt J.P. to a particularly
-unsatisfactory witness at a morning session at the City
-Hall. An obvious lie, yet a white one because it was
-used for a moral purpose. Mossop had no ax to
-grind; he merely wanted to soften things a bit for a
-client and neighbor. &ldquo;You can&rsquo;t tell <i>me</i>, Mossop, you
-really think <i>that</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The solicitor gazed steadily past the purple face of
-his client through the open window to the riot of color
-beyond. &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Think of the pluck
-required to do a thing like that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Josiah shook his head angrily. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s the devil that&rsquo;s
-in her.&rdquo; He spoke with absolute conviction. &ldquo;And
-it&rsquo;s always been there. When she was that high&rdquo;&mdash;he
-made an indication with his hand&mdash;&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve fair lammoxed
-her, but I could never turn her an inch. If she
-wanted to do a thing she&lsquo;d do it&mdash;and if she didn&rsquo;t
-nothing would make her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A lady of strong character.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Cussedness, my friend, cussedness. The devil.
-And it&rsquo;s brought her to this.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer, however, shook his head gently. &ldquo;Well,
-Mr. Munt, as I say, it is not for me to advise, but if
-she was a daughter of mine&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;d be proud of her.&rdquo; The sneer was rather
-ugly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In a way&mdash;yes&mdash;perhaps ... I don&rsquo;t say positively ... because
-one quite sees.... On the other
-hand, I might ... I don&rsquo;t say I should ... I <i>might</i>
-be just as angry as you are.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The thundercloud began to lift a little. &ldquo;Come now,
-that&lsquo;s sense. Of course, Mossop, you&lsquo;d be as mad as
-anybody&mdash;it&lsquo;s human nature. Every Tom, Dick, and
-Harry pointin&lsquo; the finger of scorn&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Sally out of Quod
-yet</i> was still searing him like a flame&mdash;&ldquo;you&lsquo;d be so
-mad, Mossop, that you&rsquo;d want to forget that she belonged
-to you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It might be so.&rdquo; Mr. Mossop&rsquo;s far-looking eyes
-were still fixed on the pergola. &ldquo;At the same time,
-before I took any definite step, I think I should give
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>myself a clear fortnight in which to think it over.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah laughed harshly. &ldquo;No, Mossop&mdash;not if you
-were as mad as I am.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was so true that the solicitor was not able to
-reply.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;When I think on her&rdquo;&mdash;the great veins began to
-swell in the head and neck of the lord of Strathfieldsaye&mdash;&ldquo;I
-feel as if I&rsquo;d like to kill her. Did you see that
-picture in the <i>Morning Mirror</i>? And that paragraph
-in the <i>Mail</i>? It&rsquo;s horrible, Mossop, horrible. And
-first and last her education&lsquo;s cost me every penny of
-three thousand pound.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mossop nodded appreciatively; then, sympathetically,
-he lifted the lid of a silver box on a charming
-walnut-wood stand and asked his visitor to have
-a cigar.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, I never smoke before my dinner,&rdquo; said Josiah
-sternly. &ldquo;She hasn&rsquo;t been home a month from
-Germany.&rdquo; The veins in his forehead grew even more
-distended.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Where&mdash;in Germany?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Eight months at Dresden. Pity she didn&rsquo;t stop
-there. Fact o&lsquo; the matter is she&rsquo;s over-educated.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer looked a little dubious.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, Mossop. Not having a boy, I don&rsquo;t mind
-tellin&lsquo; you I&rsquo;ve been a bit too ambitious for that gel.
-And over-education is what this country is suffering
-from at the present time. It&rsquo;s the national disease.
-And women take it worse than men. School&mdash;college<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>&mdash;Paris&mdash;and
-Germany on the top of &rsquo;em. I must
-have been mad. However ... there it is! ... let
-me know when the document&rsquo;s ready and I&rsquo;ll look in
-at the office and sign it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer would have liked to continue his protest
-but the face of his client forbade. He crossed to his
-writing table, took up a pencil and a sheet of notepaper
-and said, &ldquo;Miss Sarah&lsquo;s portion to Mrs. Cockburn
-except&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Five thousand pounds to Gertrude Preston.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer made a brief note. &ldquo;Right,&rdquo; he said
-gravely. &ldquo;I hope a codicil will be sufficient; we&rsquo;ll avoid
-a new instrument, if we can. You shall know when
-it&rsquo;s ready.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah gave a curt nod.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Going to be war in Europe, do you think?&rdquo; said
-the solicitor in a lighter, more conversational tone.
-It was merely to relieve the tension; somehow the atmosphere
-of the room was heavy and electric.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Josiah. &ldquo;But I&rsquo;ll not be surprised
-if there is&mdash;and a big one.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mossop showed a courteous surprise. This
-question of a coming big war was a perennial subject
-for discussion in social and business circles. It had
-been for years and it had now come to rank in his
-mind as purely academic. He could not bring himself
-to believe in &ldquo;the big burst up&rdquo; that to some astute
-minds had long seemed inevitable.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Any particular reason for thinking so just now?&rdquo;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>To the lawyer it was hardly a live issue; somehow it
-was against all his habits of thought; but it was an act
-of charity at this moment to direct the mind of his
-client.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Stands to reason,&rdquo; Josiah spoke with his usual decision.
-&ldquo;Germany&rsquo;s got thousands of millions locked
-up in her army. She&lsquo;ll soon be looking for some return
-in the way of dividends.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But one might say the same of us and our navy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s our insurance.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s how they speak of their army, don&rsquo;t they?&mdash;with
-Russia one side of them, France the other.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I daresay, but&rdquo;&mdash;there was a pause which, brief
-as it was, seemed to confer upon Mr. Munt an air
-of profound wisdom&mdash;&ldquo;mark my words, Mossop,
-they&rsquo;re not piling up all these armaments for nothing.
-It&rsquo;s not their way.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But they are so prosperous,&rdquo; said the lawyer.
-&ldquo;They are hardly likely to risk the loss of their foreign
-markets.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing venture, nothing win. And they do say
-the German workingman is waking up and that he is
-asking for a share in the government.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;One hears all sorts of rumors, but in these matters
-one likes to be an optimist.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I daresay,&rdquo; Josiah looked very dour. &ldquo;But I&rsquo;ll tell
-you this. I&rsquo;m main glad I got out of all my Continental
-investments a year last March.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The solicitor had to own that that was a matter in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>which his client had shown uncommon foresight. The
-present state of the market was a remarkable vindication
-of his sagacity.</p>
-
-<p>There was another little pause in which the solicitor,
-himself an able man of business, could not help reflecting
-upon the native shrewdness of this client so
-keen, so hardheaded, so self-willed. And then it was
-broken by Mr. Munt taking a step towards the door
-and saying, &ldquo;When are you and the wife and daughter
-coming to see us, Mossop? Come to a meal one
-evening, won&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The invitation was point blank; but behind the lawyer&rsquo;s
-genial courtesy was the trained fencer, the ready-witted
-man of the world. &ldquo;Most kind of you,&rdquo; he
-said heartily. &ldquo;Only too delighted, but, unfortunately,
-my womenfolk are going up to Scotland to-morrow&rdquo;&mdash;he
-gave private thanks to Allah that it was so!&mdash;&ldquo;and
-I follow on Saturday, so perhaps if we may leave it
-till our return&rdquo;&mdash;the solicitor raised his frank and
-ready smile to the stern eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Quite so, Mossop!&rdquo; The client frowned a little.
-&ldquo;Leave it open. But I&rsquo;d like you to see the house.
-And Mrs. M. would like to know your wife and
-daughter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll like to know her, I&rsquo;m sure.&rdquo; The air
-of sincerity was balm. &ldquo;But they&rsquo;ve been so busy
-gadding about just lately&rdquo;&mdash;the laugh was charming&mdash;&ldquo;that
-they&rsquo;ve had to neglect their social duties.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah was far too elemental to feel slighted, even
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>if the lawyer had not been so disarming. &ldquo;But you
-people here on The Rise have the name of being a
-stuck-up lot, especially some of you old standards.
-And I&rsquo;m bound to say, Mossop, my experience is that
-you seem to live up to it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lawyer Mossop laughed his soft rich note as he
-followed Mr. Munt across the hall. He opened the
-front door for his client, and then, hatless as he was,
-accompanied the visitor down the short drive as far
-as the gate.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nice things here, Mossop,&rdquo; Josiah pointed to the
-flower beds on either side. &ldquo;That a Charlotte Fanning?&rdquo;
-A finger indicated a glorious white rose whose
-dazzling purity of color stood out beyond all the rest.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mossop said it was a Charlotte Fanning.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not sure you are going to beat mine, though.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mossop said modestly that he did not expect to
-do that. Mr. Munt had long been famous for his
-roses; and by comparison the lawyer declared he was
-but a novice. The client was flattered considerably by
-the compliment.</p>
-
-<p>At the gate, the proprietor of the Duke of Wellington
-pointed to the distant gables of Strathfieldsaye, and
-said, &ldquo;Well, come round when you get back. The
-garden won&rsquo;t be much of a show for twelve months
-yet, but the house is first class. I designed it myself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>With the winning charm which even Josiah, who
-felt that he paid for it on the High Court scale could
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>not resist, Mr. Mossop promised that he would come
-round when he got back.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;An&rsquo; don&rsquo;t forget the wife and daughter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The wife and daughter should come round too. And
-then as the lord of Strathfieldsaye said, &ldquo;Good-night,
-Mossop,&rdquo; and was about to turn away from the open
-gate, he felt suddenly the hand of the solicitor upon
-his shoulder and the impact of a pair of grave, kind
-eyes. &ldquo;I wish, my dear friend,&rdquo; said Lawyer Mossop,
-&ldquo;you could see your way to taking a fortnight to
-think over that little matter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was not mere conventional man-of-the-worldly
-good feeling. It was the human father, and the sheer
-unexpectedness of the obtrusion through the highly
-polished surface of the city&rsquo;s foremost solicitor caused
-his client to take a sharp breath. But Josiah&rsquo;s strength
-had always been that he knew his own mind. And he
-knew it now. &ldquo;No, Mossop.&rdquo; A final shake of the
-dour head. &ldquo;That gel is comin&rsquo; out of my will. Good-night.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The solicitor sighed gently and closed the gate. And
-then he stood a moment to watch the slow-receding
-lurch of the elephantine figure up the road.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="VII">VII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">&ldquo;I</span>F that boy had lived&mdash;which he didn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; reflected
-the lord of Strathfieldsaye as he opened carefully
-the fresh painted gate of his own demesne, &ldquo;I&rsquo;d like
-him to have been educated at Rugby.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lawyer Mossop had been educated at Rugby. Somehow
-that gentleman always left in the mind of this
-shrewd, oddly perceptive client an impression of being
-&ldquo;just right,&rdquo; of not having anything in excess. His
-reputation in Blackhampton was very high. Just
-as Dr. Perrin had been for years its leading physician,
-Mr. Mossop had been for years its leading lawyer.
-To be a patient of the one, a client of the other,
-almost conferred a diploma of merit. Not only was
-it a proof in itself of social standing, an ability &ldquo;to
-pay for the best,&rdquo; but it also expressed a knowledge,
-greatly valued by the elect, that the best was worth
-paying for. Josiah was a firm believer in that maxim.</p>
-
-<p>Still ... he closed the gate of Strathfieldsaye as
-carefully as he had opened it ... when all was said
-education was dangerous. Up to a point a good thing,
-no doubt. You couldn&rsquo;t be a Lawyer Mossop without
-it. But it was like vaccination: some people it
-suited, others it didn&rsquo;t.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There was a trim slight figure coming down the
-path, in a hat not without pretensions to fashion.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Leaving us, Gert?&rdquo; said Josiah. &ldquo;Better stop to
-supper.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Preston reluctantly declined the invitation.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why not? Always a knife and fork for you here,
-you know.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d love to, Josiah, but they&rsquo;ll be waiting for me
-at home.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, if you won&rsquo;t, you won&rsquo;t&mdash;but you&rsquo;d be very
-welcome.&rdquo; And then he embraced the house and its
-surroundings in a large gesture. &ldquo;One better than
-Waterloo Villa, eh?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is,&rdquo; said Gerty, with tempered enthusiasm. She
-looked at her brother-in-law with wary eyes. &ldquo;You
-must be a very rich man, Josiah.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He narrowed his gaze a little and scratched his
-cheek delicately with the side of his forefinger, an odd
-trick he had when thinking deeply on questions of
-money. &ldquo;So, so,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;So, so.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But a place like this means <i>heaps</i> of money,&rdquo;
-Gerty waved a knowledgeable parasol.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I daresay.&rdquo; It was the air of a very &ldquo;substantial&rdquo;
-man indeed. &ldquo;The year after next I expect to
-be mayor. And then&rdquo;&mdash;a note of triumph crept into
-his voice&mdash;&ldquo;we may be able to show some of &rsquo;em a
-thing or two.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Preston was diplomatically quite sure of that.
-And yet as she stood with the crude bulk of Strath<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>fieldsaye
-behind her, she looked somehow a little dubious.
-It was as if, respect this brother-in-law of hers
-as she might, she had certain mental reservations in
-regard to him.</p>
-
-<p>He was too busy with his own thoughts to detect
-what was passing in her mind; besides the curves of
-his own mind were too large for him to care very
-much even had he done so.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got to come to the show, Gert,&rdquo; he said
-abruptly. &ldquo;To-morrow week&mdash;don&rsquo;t forget.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gerty began to hedge a bit, but he would take no
-denial. It was her duty &ldquo;to bring Maria up to the
-scratch.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was no way out, it seemed, so finally she
-must make up her mind to yield and to suffer. It
-would be a horrible affair&mdash;common people, brass
-band, a general atmosphere of vulgarity and alcohol;
-it would be all that her prim soul abhorred. And the
-heat would be terrific. Her spirit quailed, but how
-could the miserable Maria hope to get through without
-her to lean upon! Besides if she showed the white
-feather Josiah might lose some of his respect for her.
-And she couldn&rsquo;t afford that, especially after it had
-cost her so much for him to gain it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She must get into the habit of showing herself to
-the public as she&rsquo;s going to be mayoress.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Preston quite saw that. She yielded with as
-much grace as she could muster. Josiah took her down
-to the gate and told her to mind the paint. And then
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>as she was about to pass through, her gloved hand
-was laid upon his arm, almost exactly as Lawyer Mossop&rsquo;s
-had been, and she said softly and gravely in a
-voice curiously similar, &ldquo;Josiah, if I were you, I should
-not be in a hurry about ... about Sally.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The grimness of the eyes that met hers would have
-scared most women, but Gertrude Preston was not
-one to be frightened easily. There was hesitancy, a
-slight nervousness, all the same.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah shook his head. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said slowly,
-&ldquo;that gel is coming&rsquo; out o&rsquo; my will.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The look of him as he stood there with the sun&rsquo;s
-shadow falling across his heavy face told her that
-argument would be worse than useless. Rather
-abruptly she said good-night and marched primly
-away along the road.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="VIII">VIII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE annual Flower Show and Gala in Jubilee
-Park was in part a serious function, in part a
-popular festival. But its secondary aspect was undoubtedly
-predominant.</p>
-
-<p>Jubilee Park was sacred to those who thronged the
-close-packed southern and eastern areas of the city.
-Among many other things, held by the people of
-Blackhampton to be vastly more important, the town
-and its suburbs had a reputation for flowers. It was
-odd that it should have. Except perhaps a subtle
-quality in the soil, there was little in its corporate life
-or in its physical expression to account for the fact
-that it had long been famous for its roses. Among
-the hundreds of allotment holders on the outskirts of
-the city, practical rose growers abounded and these
-claimed an apotheosis at the annual show in Jubilee
-Park.</p>
-
-<p>Almost the only vanity Mr. Josiah Munt had permitted
-himself in his earlier days was that he was a
-practical rose grower. He had competed at the show
-ever since there had been a show, and he had garnered
-so many prizes in the process that he now took
-rank as an expert. But he was more than that. He
-was now regarded as chief patron of a cult that was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>largely confined to the humbler and the poorer classes.
-A hard man, known throughout the city as very &ldquo;near&rdquo;
-in his business dealings, he was a despiser of public
-opinion and no seeker of popular applause. But of
-late years, having grown remarkably prosperous and
-a figure of ever-increasing consequence in the town,
-he made a practice just once in the year of &ldquo;letting
-himself out a bit&rdquo; at the function in Jubilee Park.</p>
-
-<p>For one thing the Park itself was almost within a
-stone&rsquo;s throw of the Duke of Wellington; and in Josiah&rsquo;s
-opinion its sole merit was its contiguity to that
-famous public house. Personally he despised Jubilee
-Park and the class of persons who frequented it&mdash;they
-were a common lot&mdash;but now he had taken rank
-as the great man of this particular neighborhood,
-wherein he had been born and had sown the seeds of
-his fortune, it did him no harm in his own esteem
-or in that of the people who had known him in humbler
-days, once a year to savor his preëminence.</p>
-
-<p>Tuesday, August the Fourth, was one of the hottest
-days within the memory of Blackhampton. And in
-that low-lying, over-populated area of which Jubilee
-Park was the center it seemed hotter than anywhere
-else. Being the day after Bank Holiday, a large section
-of the community &ldquo;had taken another day off,&rdquo;
-therefore several thousand persons of all ages and
-both sexes assembled on the brown bare grass in the
-course of the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>To say that the bulk of these had been attracted
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>to those shadeless precincts by a display of roses
-would be too polite a compliment. The Blackhampton
-Prize Brass Band was the undoubted magnet of the
-many. Then there were tea al fresco for the ladies,
-a baby show and a beauty competition, beer and bowls
-for the gentlemen, dancing to follow and also fireworks.
-When the Show was considered in all its aspects,
-the roses only appealed to a small minority; the
-roses in fact were hardly more than a pretext for
-a local saturnalia, but in the middle of the sward was
-a large tent wherein the competing blooms were displayed.
-Close by was a tent considerably less in size
-if intrinsically the more imposing, to which a square
-piece of cardboard was attached by a blue ribbon. It
-bore the legend &ldquo;President and Committee.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>At the entrance to this smaller tent a number of
-important looking but perspiring gentlemen were seated
-in a semicircle on garden chairs. And in the center
-of these, with rather the air of Jupiter among his
-satellites, was Mr. Josiah Munt. Several members
-of the committee, all badged and rosetted as they were,
-had removed their coats out of deference to the thermometer,
-but the President was not of these. Under
-the famous white pot hat, which in the southeastern
-district of his native city was as famous as
-the Gladstone collar and the Chamberlain eyeglass,
-was artfully disposed a cool cabbage leaf, and over
-all was a large white sun umbrella.</p>
-
-<p>The sun umbrella marked a precedent. It was a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>symbol, a herald of the President&rsquo;s ever advancing social
-status. All the same it was not allowed to mar a
-certain large geniality with which he always bore himself
-at the Rose Show. By nature the proprietor of
-the Duke of Wellington was not an expansive man,
-particularly in the world of affairs, but once a year,
-at least, he made a point of unbending as far as it
-was in him to do so.</p>
-
-<p>This afternoon the President was accessible to all
-and sundry as of yore. Moreover he had followed
-his time-honored custom of regaling the committee,
-most of whom were &ldquo;substantial men&rdquo; and the cronies
-of an earlier, more primitive phase in the ascending
-fortunes of the future mayor of the city, with whisky
-and cigars, conveyed specially from the Duke of Wellington
-by George the head barman. But it was clear
-as the afternoon advanced and the heat increased with
-the ever-growing throng, that the subject of roses and
-even the martial strains of Rule Britannia, Hearts of
-Oak and other accepted masterpieces rendered with
-amazing <i>brio</i> by the B.P.B.B. did not wholly occupy
-the thoughts of these distinguished men.</p>
-
-<p>Among the Olympians who sat in the magic semicircle
-at the mouth of their own private tent and enjoyed
-the President&rsquo;s whisky and cigars and the privilege
-of personal intercourse with him was a foxy-looking
-man with large ears and large spectacles. Julius
-Weiss by name, he had migrated from his native Germany
-thirty years before, and by specializing in what
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>was technically known as &ldquo;a threepenny hair-cut&rdquo; had
-risen to the position of a master hair-dresser with six
-shops of his own in the city. A man of keen intelligence
-and cosmopolitan outlook, there were times in
-the course of the afternoon when he seemed to claim
-more of the President&rsquo;s attention than the ostensible
-business in hand.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, I don&rsquo;t trust our gov&rsquo;ment,&rdquo; said Josiah for
-the tenth time, when a cornet solo, the Battle of
-Prague (&ldquo;Bandsman Rosher&rdquo;) had been brought to a
-triumphant close. &ldquo;Never have trusted &rsquo;em if it comes
-to that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s because you&rsquo;re a blooming Tory,&rdquo; ventured
-the only hungry looking member of an extremely well-nourished
-looking committee&mdash;an obvious intellectual
-with piercing black eyes and fiercely picturesque mustache
-whose hue was as the raven.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Politics is barred, Lewis!&rdquo; It was the President&rsquo;s
-Saturday morning manner at the City Hall, but its
-austerity was tactfully mitigated by a dexterous passing
-of the cigar box. &ldquo;We ought to go in now ...
-this minute. What do you say, Weiss?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The master hair-dresser screwed up a pair of vulpine
-eyes and then replied in a low harsh guttural, &ldquo;It is
-a big t&rsquo;ing to fight Chermany.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We are not afraid of you,&rdquo; interjected a pugnacious
-Committee-man. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you think that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The President held up a stern finger. &ldquo;No, no,
-Jennings.&rdquo; It was a breach of taste and the Presi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>dent
-glared at the offender from under his cabbage
-leaf. He had a deep instinct for fair play, a curious
-impartiality that enabled him to see the merits of
-Weiss as a taxpayer and a citizen. In the lump he
-approved of Germans as little as any one else, but
-such a man as Weiss with his unceasing industry, his
-organizing capacity, his business ability and his social
-qualities was a real asset to the city.</p>
-
-<p>The little hair-dresser broke a solemn pause. &ldquo;<i>We</i>
-are not ready for war.&rdquo; He stressed the &ldquo;we&rdquo; to the
-plain annoyance of several committee-men, although
-Josiah was not of the number. &ldquo;A month from now
-they&rsquo;ll be in Paris.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think,&rdquo; said the truculent Jennings.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll see, my tear,&rdquo; said Julius Weiss.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="IX">IX</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">A</span>T five o&rsquo;clock Maria and Aunt Gerty arrived on
-the scene. Blackhampton&rsquo;s future mayoress had
-been taken very firmly in hand by her step-sister who
-was fully determined that the social credit of Alderman
-Munt should not be lowered in the sight of the
-world. Gerty had really taken enormous pains with
-a naturally timid and weakly constituted member of
-society.</p>
-
-<p>After a battle royal, in which tears had been shed,
-the hapless Maria had been compelled to renounce a
-pair of old-fashioned stays which on common occasions
-foreshortened her figure to the verge of the grotesque,
-in favor of sinuous, long-lined, straight-fronted
-corsets. With such ruthless art had outlying and
-overlapping portions of Maria been folded away within
-their fashionable confines, that, as she breathlessly
-remarked to her torturer as she looked in the glass,
-&ldquo;She didn&rsquo;t know herself, she didn&rsquo;t really.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Maria could hardly breathe as she waddled across
-the parched expanse of Jubilee Park. She was more
-miserably self-conscious than she had ever been in
-the whole course of a miserably self-conscious existence.
-Her corsets, she was sure, filled the world&rsquo;s
-eye. At her time of life to take such liberties with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>the human form was hardly decent, it wasn&rsquo;t really.
-Moreover Gerty had perched a great hat on the top
-of her, almost a flower show in itself, the sort that
-was worn, Gerty assured her, by the local duchess on
-public occasions; and it was kept in place on a miraculous
-new-fangled coiffure by a white veil with
-black spots. Then her comfortable elastic-sided boots,
-the stand-bys of a fairly long and very honorable life,
-had gone by the board at the instance of the ruthless
-Gerty. She had to submit to patent leathered, buckled
-affairs, that could only be coaxed on to the human
-foot by a shoehorn. No wonder that Mrs. Alderman
-Munt walked with great delicacy across the baking expanse
-of Jubilee Park. And the intensely respectable
-black kid gloves that for more than half a century had
-served her so well for chapel goings, prayer meetings,
-weddings, funerals, christenings and the concerts of
-the Philharmonic Society had been forced to yield to
-a pair whose virgin whiteness in Maria&rsquo;s opinion carried
-fashion to the verge of immodesty. Nor did even
-these complete the catalogue of Gerty&rsquo;s encroachments.
-There was also a long-handled black and white parasol.</p>
-
-<p>As Maria and Gerty debouched across the grass,
-Josiah arose from his chair in the midst of the committee
-and strutted impressively past the bandstand
-to receive them.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why, Mother, I hardly knew you.&rdquo; There was
-high approval in the greeting. &ldquo;Up to the knocker,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>what!&rdquo; He offered a cordial hand to his heroically
-beaming sister-in-law, &ldquo;How are you, Gert?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The ladies had been careful to have tea before they
-came but this precaution did not avail. Josiah insisted
-on their going into the special tent labeled &ldquo;Refreshments.&rdquo;
-Here they had to sit on a form rickety and
-uncomfortably narrow which promised at any moment
-either to lay them prone beneath the tea urn
-or enable them to form a parabola over against the
-patent bread-cutter at the other end of the table.</p>
-
-<p>The tea was lukewarm and undrinkable, the bread
-and butter was thick and so uninviting that both ladies
-were sure it was margarine, but after a moment&rsquo;s
-hesitation in which she felt the stern eye of Josiah
-upon her, the heroic Gerty dexterously removed one
-white glove and came to grips with a plate of buttered
-buns. In the buns were undeniable currants, and
-their genial presence enabled Gerty to make a spirited
-bluff at consuming them.</p>
-
-<p>Where Gerty walked, Maria must not fear to tread.
-The ladies got somehow through their second tea and
-then they were haled into the open, past the bandstand
-and through the crowd surrounding it, to the
-large tent containing the exhibits. Here, in a select
-corner, draped with festoons of red cloth, were the
-prizes which Maria, half an hour hence, would be
-called upon to distribute with her own white-gloved
-hands to the victorious competitors.</p>
-
-<p>The heat in the tent being unbearable the Presi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>dent&rsquo;s
-party had it to themselves. Therefore Maria&rsquo;s
-audible groan at the sight of the task before her was
-heard by none save her lord.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Bear up, Mother,&rdquo; Josiah&rsquo;s tone was a highly judicious
-blend of sternness, banter and persuasion. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
-not as if you had to make a speech, you know. And
-if you did have there&rsquo;s nobody here who&rsquo;d bite you.
-I&rsquo;d see to that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>This was encouraging, yet certain gyrations of the
-black and white parasol betrayed to the lynx-eyed
-Gerty the sinister presence of stage fright. &ldquo;Maria,&rdquo;
-said the inexorable monitress, &ldquo;you must show Spirit.
-Hold your sunshade as I&rsquo;ve shown you. Keep your
-chin up. And try to smile.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>This counsel of perfection was, at the moment,
-clearly beyond Maria. But the President&rsquo;s nod approved
-it, and Gerty, one of those powerful spirits
-that loves to do with public affairs, proceeded on a
-flute-like note, &ldquo;Dear me, what lovely prizes!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was hyperbole to speak of the prizes as lovely,
-but it was, of course, the correct thing to say, and in
-the ear of Josiah the correct thing was said in the
-correct way. It would have been difficult for the
-duchess herself to have bettered that pure note of
-lofty enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not so bad, Gert, are they? What do you think
-o&rsquo; that little vawse? Presented by Coppin, the jeweler.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>To assess the gift of Coppin, the jeweler, it was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>necessary for Miss Preston to bring into action her
-famous tortoiseshell folders. She had no need for
-glasses at all. But Lawyer Mossop&rsquo;s aunt, the late
-Miss Selina Gregg, had aroused in her a passion for
-their use on appropriate occasions. &ldquo;A ducky little
-vahse!&rdquo; That vexed word was pronounced after the
-manner of the late Miss Gregg, from whose practice
-there was no appeal.</p>
-
-<p>&rdquo;Not so bad&mdash;for Coppin. Better anyway than his
-silver-plated eggstand last year.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gerty made an admiring survey of the bounty of
-the patrons of the Blackhampton Rose Growers&rsquo; Association.
-&ldquo;And here, I see, is the President&rsquo;s special
-prize.&rdquo; She had kept in reserve her appreciation of
-this <i>chef d&rsquo;&oelig;uvre</i> of public munificence, a much beribboned
-silver gilt goblet to which a card was attached,
-&ldquo;President&rsquo;s Special Prize for Rose of Purest
-Color. Donor Alderman Munt J.P.&rdquo; It was the first
-thing her eye had lit on, but she had worked up to it
-slowly, via the lesser gifts of lesser men, so that
-anything in the nature of anticlimax might be avoided.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Josiah, tell me, who is the fortunate winner?&rdquo; The
-archness of the tone verged upon coquetry.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Look and see, my gel.&rdquo; The response was unexpectedly
-gruff. But, as soon as Gerty had looked
-and seen, the reason for the President&rsquo;s austerity grew
-clear. On a second card, smaller but beribboned like
-the first, was inscribed in a fair clerkly hand, &ldquo;Presented
-to Mr. W. Hollis for Exhibit 16.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="X">X</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">H</span>AD a pin fallen in the tent at that moment, any
-one of those three people might have expected
-to hear it do so. Gerty was too wise to ask why the
-husband of the outcast Melia had come to enjoy the
-special gift of his father-in-law; Maria simply dare
-not. In truth it was an odd story. Josiah did his
-best to put a gloss on an incredible fact of which he
-was rather ashamed; it looked so much like moral
-weakness, a public giving in; but, as he informed
-Gerty with a half apologetic air, Jannock was Jannock.
-In other words, fair play in the eyes of honest
-men was a jewel.</p>
-
-<p>There could be no question that, in point of color,
-the fairest bloom sent in was Exhibit Sixteen. It
-was a rose of such a dazzling snowy whiteness that
-it had caught and held the expert eye of the President
-at the morning inspection. &ldquo;An easy winner,
-Jennings,&rdquo; he had said, as soon as he had seen it,
-&ldquo;Nothing to put beside it, my boy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The astute Jennings, a professional nurseryman
-along The Rise, made no comment. He had taken
-the trouble to find out the name of the grower before
-bringing a mature judgment to bear on the fruits of
-his craft. &ldquo;Sound&rdquo; criticism is always a priori. Crit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>ics
-who value their reputation are careful not to pronounce
-an opinion on any work of art until they know
-who has produced it. Otherwise mistakes are apt
-to occur. None knew better than Jennings that the
-grower of Exhibit Sixteen could not hope to receive
-the President&rsquo;s prize; indeed Jennings was amazed at
-the little tick&rsquo;s impudence in daring to compete at all
-for his father-in-law&rsquo;s silver gilt goblet. It was an
-act of bravado. Jennings, therefore, shook his head
-coldly. He declined to show enthusiasm in the presence
-of what to the unsuspecting eye of the President
-was an almost too obvious masterpiece.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;All over a winner, Jennings, that is.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Jennings shook the sober head of a professional expert.
-&ldquo;To me,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;Twenty-one &rsquo;as more quality.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Rubbish, man!&rdquo; The President threw up his head
-sharply, a favorite trick when goaded by contradiction.
-&ldquo;Twenty-one can&rsquo;t be mentioned on the same
-day o&rsquo; the week. What do you say, Penney?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Before Mr. Councilor Penney, an acknowledged
-light of the a priori school of criticism, ventured to
-express an opinion he winged a glance at Nurseryman
-Jennings. And that glance, in the technical language
-of experts, conveyed a clear request for &ldquo;the office.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The office&rdquo; was given sotto voce behind the adroit
-hand of Jennings, &ldquo;Mester Munt&mdash;Twenty-one, Sixteen&mdash;Bill
-Hollis.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Thereupon Mr. Councilor Penney closed one eye
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>and proceeded to examine the competing blooms.
-&ldquo;Well, Mester Munt,&rdquo; he said solemnly, &ldquo;I am bound
-to say, to my mind Twenty-one &rsquo;as it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The impetuous president had a short way with the
-Councilor Penneys of the earth. &ldquo;Have you no eyes,
-man! Twenty-one can&rsquo;t live beside Sixteen. Not the
-same class. Look at the color&mdash;look at the shape&mdash;look
-at the size&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was realized now that it had become necessary
-to warn the President. And the situation must be
-grappled with at once. The deeper the President
-floundered, the more perilous the job of extrication.
-Rescue was a man&rsquo;s work, but finally in response to
-a mute appeal from the pusillanimous Jennings, Mr.
-Councilor Penney took his courage in his hands. &ldquo;Mr.
-Munt,&rdquo; he said warily, &ldquo;don&rsquo;t you know that Twenty-one
-was sent in by Joe Mellers, your own gardener?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was the best that Mr. Councilor Penney could
-muster in the way of tact. But at all times a very
-great deal of tact was needed to handle the President.
-Clearly the shot was not a lucky one. &ldquo;Nowt
-to do with it, Penney.&rdquo; The great man nearly bit
-off his head. &ldquo;Ought to know that. Sixteen&rsquo;s the
-best bloom on the bench.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sixteen&rsquo;s that Hollis!&rdquo; It was an act of pure
-valor on the part of Mr. Councilor Penney. Nurseryman
-Jennings held his breath.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That Hollis!&rdquo; The President repeated the words
-calmly. For a moment it was not certain that human
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>dignity could accept their implication. But there was
-a world of meaning in the nervous frown of Mr. Councilor
-Penney, in the tense furtiveness of Nurseryman
-Jennings.</p>
-
-<p>Was it possible?... Was it possible that the little
-skunk had dared?... Had dared to compete at this
-show of all shows?... Had dared to win honestly
-that prize of all prizes?...</p>
-
-<p>The story of Bill Hollis and Melia Munt was a
-commonplace with every member of the Committee.
-They were familiar with all the circumstances; and
-though there might be those among them who felt privately
-that their august President carried family pride
-rather far, even these could not help admiring the
-rigidity of his attitude. It meant enormous strength
-of character; and character in the shrine at which the
-true Briton worships. But now that the Committee
-was up against the problem Bill Hollis had raised they
-keenly regretted that they had not taken steps to disqualify
-him from the outset, or had not apprised the
-President beforehand of the state of the case.</p>
-
-<p>The pause that followed was rather irksome for all
-parties. It was ended at last by Nurseryman Jennings.
-That practical expert, having enjoyed an afternoon
-of free whisky at the President&rsquo;s expense,
-was now able to clothe his judgment becomingly.
-&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t suppose the little Snot grew it hisself!&rdquo; said
-Jennings.</p>
-
-<p>Half the Committee saw at once that a way out had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>been found for the President. But the President was
-not of the number. &ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you?&rdquo; he said curtly.</p>
-
-<p>The practical expert was hardly prepared with reasons.
-Why should he be? His doubts were inspired
-by the purest altruism. &ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you, Jennings?&rdquo;
-repeated the President.</p>
-
-<p>Really there is no helping some people!</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Because I don&rsquo;t!&rdquo; It was rather lame, but Jennings
-was doing his best in extremely trying circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>The longer, tenser pause that followed none was
-stout enough to break. Up to a hundred might have
-been counted before the President said, slowly and
-gruffly, as a large and shaggy bear endowed with a
-few limited human vocables might have done, &ldquo;Have
-the goodness, Jennings, to mark Exhibit Sixteen for
-the President&rsquo;s Special.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XI">XI</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HUS it was, that among the successful competitors
-who lined up by the bandstand at six
-o&rsquo;clock to receive awards of merit from the fair hands
-of Mrs. Alderman Munt, was her son-in-law Mr.
-William Hollis.</p>
-
-<p>Wonders never cease to happen in a world of wonders.
-When in a moment of sheer bravado Bill Hollis
-had paid the necessary shilling and had entered the
-choicest bloom in his garden for the Annual Show he
-would have staked his davy that he stood about as
-much chance of walking off with the Special Prize as
-he did of going to heaven in a golden chariot. The
-Old Un himself would see to that.</p>
-
-<p>Taken on its merits, this pure white rose that had
-come as the crown of many years of loving labor
-would be hard to beat. But, as Bill Hollis knew,
-things are not taken on their merits by the a priori
-school of criticism. He knew that its judgments are
-conditioned by many things and that intrinsic worth
-is apt to weigh least in the scale. He had shown his
-bloom in pride and defiance; he had not expected to
-get anything by it; and now that the despised Committee
-had acted better than itself he was inclined to
-regret that it had not lived up to its reputation.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p>
-<p>The table containing the prizes had been carried out
-on to the grass. Beside it stood Mrs. Alderman
-Munt, white-gloved and anxious, her eyes not unlike
-those of a frightened rabbit. And yet lurking somewhere
-in the folds of a rather redundant frame was
-a certain dignity, as there is bound to be in one who
-has given four children to the state; in one, moreover,
-who has accompanied such a mate as Josiah step by
-step in his steady rise to wealth and power. Beside
-Mrs. Munt stood the secretary of the society, an important
-pince-nezed gentleman, with a scroll in his
-hand bearing the names of the prize winners; immediately
-behind these, on a row of chairs, were various
-notabilities, among whom Alderman Munt was conspicuously
-foremost; and then facing them, in a curious,
-rather impressed semicircle, were the members
-of that general public which not for worlds would
-miss anything in the nature of a giving of prizes by
-the wife of a real live alderman.</p>
-
-<p>The proprietor of the Duke of Wellington sat glaring
-fiercely from under his white billycock hat, clutching
-a little convulsively the knob of his sun umbrella.
-A ruthless eye raked the distant corps of successful
-competitors, as one by one they came round
-the corner of the bandstand and converged upon the
-timid lady whose task it was publicly to reward their
-skill. All were awkward, some were abashed, some
-tried to hide their feelings by an ill-timed facetiousness.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span></p>
-<p>There he was, the little dog! Josiah&rsquo;s grip tightened
-on the knob of the sun umbrella. If the little
-cur had &ldquo;had a drop,&rdquo; as he most probably had, he
-was very likely to insult Maria&mdash;it was such a great,
-such a golden, opportunity. Josiah was not troubled
-as a rule by vain regrets, but as the Secretary in his
-far flung voice announced, &ldquo;President&rsquo;s Special Prize
-for best Single Bloom, winner Mr. W. Hollis,&rdquo; and
-there came an expectant hush in which the meager
-form of Mr. W. Hollis emerged into the full glare of
-the public gaze, his father-in-law would have paid a
-substantial sum to be able to rescind his recent verdict.
-The little Stoat could not be expected to bear
-himself like a gentleman.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Gerty, standing prim and tense at the back of
-the invertebrate Maria, grew as white as if she had
-seen a ghost. But she drew in her thin lips sternly
-and, great warrior as she was, literally transfixed poor
-Melia&rsquo;s declassé husband with her tortoiseshell folders.
-How common he was! It was really very stupid
-of Josiah to let him have a prize in such circumstances.
-It was very stupid, indeed! He was just the kind of
-man who might be tempted to indulge in some form
-of cheap revenge.</p>
-
-<p>As Melia&rsquo;s husband shuffled across the grass Josiah
-held himself ready to spring upon him. Public or no
-public he would certainly do so if the little beast made
-any sign of insulting Maria. But as Bill Hollis came
-slowly and doggedly into the picture he was visited
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>by a reluctant grace. Half way across the grass,
-midway between the bandstand and the alderman&rsquo;s
-lady, he took his shabby hands from his shabby pockets;
-a little farther on several degrees of slouch passed
-from the unpleasing curve of his narrow shoulders.
-And finally, as the silver gilt goblet was bestowed upon
-him by a pair of trembling hands, he ducked solemnly,
-the best he could do in the way of a bow, and then
-retired modestly, silently, respectfully, the trophy under
-his arm.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah and Aunt Gerty breathed again. Great was
-their relief. And so intensely had they been preoccupied
-with the bearing of Melia&rsquo;s husband, that, very
-luckily for Maria, they were not able to notice hers.
-It was well this was so. For the alderman&rsquo;s lady
-had disgraced herself on an important public occasion
-by allowing her eyes to fill with tears.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XII">XII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">B</span>ILL&rsquo;S first thought was to take the trophy
-straight home to his wife. But for various reasons
-he didn&rsquo;t obey it. Relations had grown very
-strained between Melia and himself. For months past
-she had been giving him such a bad time that there
-was little pleasure to be got out of his home.</p>
-
-<p>He was a bit of an idealist in his way. Sixteen
-years ago, at any rate, he had begun married life by
-idealizing his home and Melia. But Melia was not an
-idealist. She was a decidedly practical person, and,
-like her father, endowed with much shrewd sense. In
-a perverse hour she had yielded against her better
-judgment to the quiet persistency of William Hollis;
-but almost before she married him she knew it
-wouldn&rsquo;t answer. In her heart she wanted somebody
-better. She felt that a daughter of Josiah Munt was
-entitled to somebody better. And in waiving all her
-rights as the eldest child of a tyrannical, overbearing
-father, the least she could ask of the man to whose
-star she had pinned her faith was that he should
-prove himself a forcible and successful citizen.</p>
-
-<p>Unhappily Bill had proved to be neither. He was
-a wordster, a dreamer; there was nothing at the back
-of his rose-colored ideas. It was not that he was a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>vicious man. For such a nature as Melia&rsquo;s it had
-perhaps been better if he had been. She asked for
-the positive in man, even positive badness; anything
-rather than muddling mediocrity, ignoble envy of
-other men&rsquo;s prosperity and continual whinings against
-fate.</p>
-
-<p>There were times when Melia was so bored with the
-inadequacy of this mate of hers that she half hoped
-to goad him into getting drunk enough to repay some
-of her insults with a good beating. At least it would
-have been an event, an excitement. But he was not
-even a thorough-going drinker; at the best, or the
-worst, he never drank enough beer to rise to the heroic,
-as a real man might have done; his deepest potations
-did not carry him beyond maudlin sentiment or
-vapid braggadocio, both very galling to a woman of
-spirit. And now, having realized that there was nothing
-to hope for, that they were going steadily down a
-hill at the bottom of which was the gutter&mdash;just as
-her clear-sighted father had predicted from the first&mdash;years
-of resentment had crystallized into a hard and
-fixed hostility. She had an ever-growing contempt
-for the spineless fool who was dragging her down
-in his own ruin.</p>
-
-<p>Bill&rsquo;s instinct was to go home at once with the silver
-gilt goblet. In spite of all the bitterness the last few
-years had brought him he still had a wish to please
-Melia. In spite of a cat and dog existence they were
-man and wife. They had lived sixteen years together
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>but he still wished to propitiate her. But hardly had
-he borne his prize through the throng by the bandstand
-and begun to steer for the main gate of Jubilee
-Park than there came a change of mind.</p>
-
-<p>It was one of those sudden, causeless changes of
-mind that was always overtaking him. He never
-seemed able to do anything now for the reason that
-almost before he had decided upon one thing he was
-overpowered by a desire to do another. He had not
-reached the park gate before he felt the humiliation
-of accepting such a prize from such hands; and Melia
-would probably tell him that he ought to have had
-more self-respect than to take it&mdash;if she thought it
-worth while to express herself on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>The President&rsquo;s Special Prize would bring no pleasure
-to Melia. True, there was no need to tell her
-whence it came. No ... there was no need! Suddenly
-the band broke into a hearty strain. Beyond a
-doubt the atmosphere of Jubilee Park was far more genial
-than that of Number Five Love Lane. Perhaps he
-ought to have brought Melia to witness his triumph.
-One reason was that he had been far from expecting
-it; another, that he daren&rsquo;t invite her. For many
-months now she had been careful to keep herself to
-herself, declining always to be seen with him in public.</p>
-
-<p>There was a vacant seat by the gate, out of the sun
-and within sound of the gay music. This, after all,
-was far better than Number Five Love Lane. For a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>few brief moments &ldquo;The Merry Widow&rdquo; (selection)
-made him feel happier. It would have been nice for
-Melia&mdash;still it couldn&rsquo;t be helped. He ought to have
-refused the prize&mdash;still he had honestly won it. But
-only an oversight on the part of the blinking Committee
-had given it him; he could read that in Josiah&rsquo;s
-ugly mug and in the face of that stuck-up Gerty Preston&mdash;so
-it was one in the eye for them after all! And
-what price Ma! Her son-in-law broke into a guffaw
-of melancholy laughter. The old barrel-bodied image
-got up like one of the Toffs! And yet ... how her
-hands trembled! ... white gloves on &rsquo;em too! ... and
-that was a queer look she gave him. The old girl,
-after all, was the best of a rotten bunch.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The Merry Widow&rdquo; crashed to an abrupt finale,
-and a light went out suddenly, as it so often did, in
-the heart of Bill Hollis. Again the stern edge of
-reality pressed upon him from every side, but almost
-at once it was swept away by a new excitement. And
-yet the excitement was not so new as it seemed. All
-the afternoon it had been present, a chorus, a background,
-thrilling and momentous, to a series of formal
-proceedings to which it had nothing in common, to
-which it did not bear the slightest relation, and yet
-with a power truly sinister to cast a pall over them.</p>
-
-<p>A youth with lungs of brass came through the gate
-crying the Blackhampton <i>Evening Star</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Terrible Fighting in Belgium! Awful German
-Losses! Great Speech by Sir Edward Grey!</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span></p>
-<p>A sharp thrill ran through the veins of Bill Hollis.
-It was one more lively variation on a theme that had
-been kindling his senses at short intervals throughout
-the afternoon. War, a real big war, was coming, had
-come. Of course to him personally it wouldn&rsquo;t matter,
-except that it might make life more interesting.
-Yes, somehow it was bound to do that. Whether it
-would make it interesting enough for a man like himself
-to care to go on living, that was another question.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Here y&rsquo;are, boy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The boy came across the grass, handed Bill an
-<i>Evening Star</i> and firmly declined the halfpenny that
-was offered him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Penny, sir.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A penny for a <i>Star</i> was unheard of. Even the result
-of the Derby, the result of the match with Yorkshire,
-the result of the Cup Final itself could not command
-a penny. Evidently this war, now that it had
-come at last, was going to be a Record.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, a Record. All the same he was not going to
-pay a penny for it. One halfpenny was the legal
-price of the Blackhampton <i>Evening Star</i>, and he told
-the boy &ldquo;that if he had any of his sauce he&rsquo;d have
-the police of him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XIII">XIII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">W</span>ILLIAM HOLLIS, having defeated the boy,
-turned his back to the sun and was assured by
-the Blackhampton <i>Star</i> that he was living in a great
-moment of the world&rsquo;s history. Germany had, it
-seemed, until twelve o&rsquo;clock that evening to decide
-whether she would take on England. She had taken
-on France, Russia and Belgium already; a few hours
-hence, if she wasn&rsquo;t careful, she would have to fight
-the British Empire.</p>
-
-<p>Even to Bill Hollis, dizzied by the sheer magnitude
-of the headlines of his favorite journal which actually
-surpassed those of the Crippen trial, the sinking of the
-<i>Titanic</i> and the late King Edward&rsquo;s visit to Blackhampton,
-that phrase &ldquo;the British Empire&rdquo; was full of
-magic. Lurking somewhere in a compound of half-baked
-inefficiencies was the vision of a poet, and at this
-moment it was queerly responsive to this symbol.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s all up with &rsquo;em if they take on Us.&rdquo; In strict
-order of priority that was the first message to flash
-through the sentient being of Mr. William Hollis to
-be duly recorded by the central office. Hard upon it
-came a second message. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ve got a Nerve&mdash;them
-Germans.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>In the column for late news were blurred fragments
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>of the speech of the Foreign Minister in the House of
-Commons. Intellectually William Hollis was not conspicuously
-bright, but, as he read the simple words,
-the nature of the terrible misprision against the human
-race came home to him and he could only gasp.</p>
-
-<p>He got up presently and moved away from the
-band. As always the band was very nice, but for some
-reason or other he didn&rsquo;t want to hear it just now.
-For a short time he walked about on the brown grass,
-the President&rsquo;s cup under his arm, wrapped in the
-<i>Evening Star</i>. But he wasn&rsquo;t thinking now of the
-President, of the cup, of Melia, of the injustice of
-Fate to a private citizen. His thoughts were centered
-on a Thing that made all these other things, painfully
-intimate as they were, of no moment at all. These
-were but trivial matters, and he was now in the presence
-of the inconceivable, the stupendous.</p>
-
-<p>Coming back to the throng, perhaps for the latent
-solace these clusters of fellow beings afforded him,
-he saw from their blank eyes, their set faces, that his
-own terrible thoughts were shared more or less by
-them all. The boy had sold his papers already. Other
-boys had sold theirs. The whole place was alive with
-fluttering news sheets, gleaming white and spectral
-in the sun. Already these people, these stout females
-in farcical clothes, for the most part trundling queer
-abortions on the end of a string, and these hard-faced,
-grasping men who were always overreaching one in
-trade, were living in a different world. They were
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>not thinking now of flowers and vegetables, of bands
-or dancing, although the first couples of juniors had
-just begun to sway rhythmically to the strains of
-&ldquo;Hitchy Koo.&rdquo; Something else had come into their
-lives.</p>
-
-<p>Passing the tent sacred to the President and Committee,
-it gave him one more thrill to mark the bearing
-of the grandees. The famous white hat no longer
-adorned the head of the President. The great man
-nursed it upon his fat loud-checked knees. All the
-reluctant geniality a public function had inspired had
-passed from his ugly face. Yet in the purview of his
-son-in-law it looked a little less ugly at that moment
-than he ever remembered to have seen it. Those fierce
-eyes were not occupied now with the narrow round of
-their own affairs, nor with a swelling vision of self-importance.
-The world was on fire. He was simply
-a man among his fellow men; and like them he was
-wondering what ought to be done.</p>
-
-<p>At seven o&rsquo;clock a vaguely excited but profoundly
-depressed William Hollis made his way out of Jubilee
-Park. He turned down Short Hill in the direction of
-his home. But by the time he had reached the foot of
-that brief declivity, and was involved in an airless
-maze of bricks and mortar, the thought of his home
-grew suddenly intolerable. He needed freedom and
-space, he needed an atmosphere more congenial. Melia
-would not understand. Or if she did understand she
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>would be dumb and just now he simply longed for a
-little human intercourse.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of Love Lane, a mean and crooked little
-street debouching from the Mulcaster Road which
-wound a somber trail to the very heart of the city, he
-stood a moment gazing at the dingy sign a few doors
-up on the left, W. Hollis, Fruiterer. The obvious
-course was to go and deposit the prize he had won on
-the dresser in the back sitting room, or still better,
-give it into the personal care of Melia. But instead,
-he wrapped up the trophy a little more carefully, resettled
-it under his arm, and then allowed himself to
-drift slowly with the throng in the direction of the
-Market Place.</p>
-
-<p>As was usual with him now, his actions were aimless
-and uncertain. There was no particular reason why
-he should be going to the Market Place beyond the
-fact that other people seemed to be going there, as
-somehow they always did seem to be going there at
-great moments in the national life. The factories and
-warehouses who happened to be working that day had
-disgorged their human cargoes and these under the
-stimulus of hourly editions of the <i>Evening Star</i> were
-moving slowly and solemnly towards the nodal point.</p>
-
-<p>What the Market Place is to the city as a whole,
-Waterloo Square is to the teeming, close-packed population
-of its southeastern area. And at the busiest
-corner of Waterloo Square, at its confluence with Mulcaster
-Road, that main artery which leads directly to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>the center of all things, is the Duke of Wellington public
-house. William Hollis, drifting with the tide, felt
-a sudden, uncontrollable desire to &ldquo;have one&rdquo; at this
-famous landmark of the local life.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke of Wellington was a &ldquo;free&rdquo; house and
-Mr. Josiah Munt had been able to maintain in its integrity
-the declining art of brewing Blackhampton Old
-Ale. This had a bite and a sting in it, with which the
-more diluted beverages of &ldquo;tied&rdquo; houses could not
-compare. At the Duke of Wellington you paid for the
-best and you got it; therefore it was patronized by all
-in the neighborhood who knew what was what; it had,
-moreover, peculiar advantages of tradition and geography
-which gave it a cachet of its own.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To have one&rdquo; at the Duke of Wellington, in the
-eyes of those who lived near by, was almost on a par
-with &ldquo;looking in&rdquo; at Brooks&rsquo;s or the Carlton. It conferred
-a kind of diploma of local worth and responsibility.
-At the same time no form of politics was
-barred, but the proprietor himself was a staunch conservative
-and it was very difficult to find a welcome
-in the bar parlor without sharing that faith.</p>
-
-<p>It could not be said that William Hollis had ever
-aspired to the good graces of the house. There were
-obvious reasons why this was the case. For sixteen
-years he had not passed through its doors; in that
-long period he had not even entered the humbler part
-of the premises known as &ldquo;the vaults,&rdquo; sacred to Tom,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>Dick and Harry, where the more substantial patrons
-of the establishment disdained to set foot.</p>
-
-<p>To-night, however, new and strange forces were at
-work in Bill. Borne along a tide of cosmic events as
-far as those fascinating doors he was suddenly and
-quite irrationally mastered by a desire to go in.</p>
-
-<p>Partly it may have been bravado; certainly it was a
-daring act to cross that threshold. But Josiah himself,
-for whose personal prowess his son-in-law had a
-wholesome respect, was safe at the Show; besides, the
-proprietor was too great a man these days to visit the
-house very often. Years ago he had ceased to reside
-there with his family; and in his steady social ascent
-he was careful not to emphasize a dubious but extremely
-lucrative connection with that which regarded
-in perspective was but a common public house.</p>
-
-<p>The chances were that Bill Hollis would be spared
-this evening an encounter with his father-in-law and
-former master. But why he should decide so suddenly
-to take the risk was hard to say, unless it was the half
-fantastic reaction of an exceedingly impressionable
-mind to a crisis almost without a precedent in human
-experience. By nature a sociable fellow, he had now
-an intense desire to exchange ideas with responsible,
-knowledgeable people, with those possessing more
-light than himself. The Duke of Wellington was the
-headquarters of such in that part of the city; it was
-the haunt of the quidnuncs and the well informed; and
-it may have been for that reason that Bill dived sud<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>denly
-through the swing doors, an act he had not performed
-for sixteen years, and crossed the dark, cool
-passage with its highly spiced but not unattractive
-odors.</p>
-
-<p>It may have been the magnitude of the situation in
-Europe which had suddenly rendered all private matters
-ridiculous, or it may have been the talisman under
-his arm which inspired him with an unwonted
-hardihood, but instead of turning into the taproom,
-the first on the left, which would have satisfied the
-claims of honor and wisdom, he pushed boldly on past
-the glass-surrounded cubicle of the celebrated but
-haughty Miss Searson, into the Mecca of the just and
-the good, sublimely guarded by that peri.</p>
-
-<p>In a kind of dull excitement he entered the famous
-Bar Parlor. To his surprise, and rather perversely,
-to his relief, it was empty, except that, behind a
-counter in a strategical angle that commanded the
-room as well as the passage, Miss Searson was overwhelmingly
-present, but absorbed apparently at that
-moment in crocheting a two-inch lace border to an
-article of female attire sacred to the pages of the realists.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing seemed to have altered in sixteen years,
-even to the fly-blown advertisement of Muirhead&rsquo;s
-Pale Brandy facing the door, and surrounding Miss
-Searson the double row of brass taps, it had once been
-a part of his duties to keep clean. And that lady
-herself, sixteen years had altered her surprisingly lit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>tle,
-if at all. She was what is known technically as a
-chemical blonde, a high-bosomed, high-voiced, large-featured,
-large-earringed lady, with remarkable teeth
-and an aloofness of manner which might almost be
-said to enforce respect at the point of the bayonet.</p>
-
-<p>When Miss Searson looked up from her crochet she
-could hardly believe her eyes. William Hollis, in his
-former incarnation, had been known to her as Bill the
-Barman, and she in that distant epoch had been known
-to him as a Stuck-Up Piece. Unofficially of course.
-Outwardly everybody paid deference to Miss Searson;
-even the proprietor himself, if he could be said to
-pay deference to any human being, had always adopted
-that attitude to Miss Searson; as for Bill the Barman,
-he had been hardly more than a worm in her
-sight. And then had come the Great Romance. It
-had come like a bolt out of clear sky, knocking a whole
-world askew as Miss Searson understood it; a whole
-world of sacred values by which Miss Searson and
-those within her orbit regulated their lives.</p>
-
-<p>The entrance of Bill Hollis into the bar struck Miss
-Searson dumb with surprise. In a mind temporarily
-bewildered sixteen years were as but a single day.
-This was the first occasion in that long period that the
-incredible adventurer who had suborned the eldest
-daughter of his stern master into marrying him had
-dared to revisit the scene of his crime. To weak
-minds a great romance, no doubt, but the lady behind
-the bar had not a weak mind, therefore she was not
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>in the least romantic. She saw things as they were,
-she knew what life was. It was very well for such
-things to happen in the pages of a novel, but in the
-daily round of humdrum existence they simply didn&rsquo;t
-answer.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed an age to Miss Searson before William
-the Incredible girded his courage to the point of ordering
-a pint of bitter. She drew it in stately silence,
-handed it across the counter and accepted threepence
-with superb hauteur.</p>
-
-<p>He drank a little. It was no mean brew; and he
-felt so much a man for the experience that he was
-able to ask Miss Searson what she thought of the
-news.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;News,&rdquo; said Miss Searson loftily. &ldquo;News?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;War with Germany.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, that!&rdquo; A Juno-like toss of Miss Searson&rsquo;s
-coiffure. But there she stopped. War with Germany
-was none of her business, nor was it going to
-be her business to be forced into conversation with
-a character whose standing was so doubtful as the
-former barman. Miss Searson was not a believer in
-finesse. Her methods had a brutal simplicity which
-made them tremendously effective.</p>
-
-<p>However, this evening they were less effective than
-usual. The world itself was tottering, and a deep,
-deep chord in the amazing Bill Hollis was responsive
-to the cataclysm. This evening he was not himself,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>he was more than himself; his appearance in the Private
-Bar was proof of it.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Searson was but a woman, a human female.
-She meant nothing, she meant less than nothing in
-this hour of destiny. &ldquo;Yes, that!&rdquo; He filled in the
-pause, after waiting in vain for her to do so. &ldquo;War
-with Germany. Do you realize it?&rdquo; His voice was
-full of emotion.</p>
-
-<p>But Miss Searson did not intend to be drawn into
-a discussion of anything so fanciful as war with Germany.
-She was practical. A censorious mouth shut
-like a trap. She regarded Bill with the eye of a codfish.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;D&rsquo;you realize what it means?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>By an adroit turn of the head towards the farther
-beer-engine she gave William Hollis the full benefit of
-a pile of stately back hair. And then she said slowly,
-as if she were trying to bite off the head of each blunt
-syllable, &ldquo;Do you realize that the Mester sometimes
-looks in about this time of a Thursday?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XIV">XIV</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">A</span> NORMAL Bill Hollis would not have been
-slow to analyze this speech and to find a lurking
-insult. But he was not a normal Bill Hollis this evening;
-it was the last place he was likely to be in if he
-had been. Therefore he shook his head gently at Miss
-Searson without submitting her to any more destructive
-form of criticism. What a fool the woman was,
-what a common fool not to understand that in the
-presence of a war with Germany nothing else could
-possibly matter.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think I&rsquo;d stop here&mdash;if I was you.&rdquo; Yes,
-there was a bluntness about Miss Searson which at
-ordinary times had a unique power of &ldquo;getting there.&rdquo;
-But Bill merely smiled at her now. The chrysanthemum-topped
-fathead! Suddenly he reached the limit
-of his endurance; he expressed a boundless contempt
-for her and all her tribe by recourse to a spittoon.</p>
-
-<p>How <i>could</i> Melia ever have married him ...
-Melia Munt who might have married an architect!...</p>
-
-<p>Bill Hollis defensively went on with his bitter. He
-was consumed with scorn of a person whom he had
-once respected immensely. She was found out, the
-shallow fool, fringe and back hair included! When
-he came to the end of the pint, he paused a moment
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>in the midst of the pleasant sensations it had inspired
-and then decided that he would have another,
-not because he wanted another, but because he felt
-that it would annoy this Toplofty Crackpot.</p>
-
-<p>The second pint did annoy the T.C., annoyed her
-obviously; emotionally she was a very obvious lady.
-But it was odd that Bill Hollis, shaken to the depths
-by a world catastrophe, should desire a cheap revenge
-and stoop to gratify it. Perhaps it was a case of
-multiple personality. There were several Bill Hollises
-in this moment of destiny.</p>
-
-<p>There was the Bill Hollis who gave the defiant
-order for another pint of bitter, the Bill Hollis who
-paid for it with truculent coolness, the Bill Hollis who
-bore it to the window the better to regard the somber
-stream of fellow citizens flowing steadily in the direction
-of the Market Place, the Bill Hollis who took a
-beer-stained copy of the Blackhampton <i>Tribune</i> from
-a table with a marble top and glanced at the portentous
-headings of its many columns. And finally there
-was the Bill Hollis who suddenly heard with a sick
-thrill that came very near to nausea a footfall heavily
-familiar and a voice outside in the passage.</p>
-
-<p>Could it be...! Could it be that...!</p>
-
-<p>There was a look of obvious triumph on the almost
-unnaturally fair countenance of Miss Searson. In
-her grim eyes was &ldquo;I told you so!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The ex-barman, in the peril of the moment, glanced
-hastily around, but the eyes of Miss Searson assured
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>him that he was a rat and that he was caught in a
-trap. Moreover they assured him that if ever rat deserved
-a fate so ignominious, William Hollis was the
-name of that rodent. And the loathsome animal had
-time to recall before that voice and those footsteps
-were able to enter the private bar that sixteen years
-ago Miss Searson had been the witness of a certain
-incident. And if her warlike bearing meant anything
-she was now looking for a repetition, with modern
-improvements and variations.</p>
-
-<p>Escape was impossible, that was clear. And on the
-strength of a fact so obvious all the various kinds of
-Bill Hollises promptly came together and decided to
-hand over the body politic to the only Bill Hollis who
-could hope to deal with the crisis. This was the Bill
-Hollis who had had a pint and a half of his father-in-law&rsquo;s
-excellent bitter and felt immeasurably the better
-for it.</p>
-
-<p>As a measure of precaution this Bill Hollis spread
-wide the <i>Tribune</i> and by taking cover behind it greatly
-reassured his brethren. None of the others would
-have had the wit to think of that. Even as it was only
-a pint and a half of a very choice brew enabled the
-device to be put coolly and quietly into practice.</p>
-
-<p>He had hardly taken cover when Josiah came in.
-Following close behind were Julius Weiss and Councilor
-Kersley. It was a tense moment, but these grandees
-were occupied with a matter more important than
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>the identity of the man behind the newspaper in the
-corner by the window.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Miss Searson!&rdquo; The tone of the proprietor was
-like unto that of Jove. &ldquo;Ring up Strathfieldsaye and
-tell them I am going to eat at the Club.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Bill Hollis was sensible of a thrill. He was a mere
-cat in the presence of a king, except that this was a
-king whom he dare not look at. It was a disgusting
-feeling yet somehow it was exalting. And this sense
-of uplift grew when Josiah and his friends disposed
-themselves augustly at one of the tables with a marble
-top, and three tankards of an exclusive brew were
-brought to them and they began to talk.</p>
-
-<p>It was &ldquo;inner circle talk&rdquo; and in the ear of William
-Hollis that lent it piquancy. Really it was what he
-was there for. The newspapers were unsatisfying.
-He craved to hear the matter discussed by men of substance,
-standing, general information, by men of the
-world. Sitting there behind his paper in the private
-bar, he felt nearer to the heart of things than he had
-ever been in his life.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Is it going to make so much difference?&rdquo; Councilor
-Kersley, the eminent retail grocer, asked the
-question.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s going to alter everything, Kersley&mdash;you mark
-me.&rdquo; The tone of Josiah was as final as an act of
-parliament and Julius Weiss slowly nodded in deep
-concurrence with it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Of course we shall down &rsquo;em,&rdquo; said Councilor
-Kersley.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, we shall down &rsquo;em, but&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Josiah&rsquo;s &ldquo;but&rdquo;
-left a good deal to the imagination.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be too sure, my friends,&rdquo; said the master-hair-dresser.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Our Navy&rsquo;ll settle it at the finish,&rdquo; Josiah&rsquo;s growl
-was that of a very big dog.</p>
-
-<p>Julius Weiss shook his head solemnly but he didn&rsquo;t
-speak again. An odd, uneasy silence settled on the
-three of them while they drank their beer. But of
-a sudden there came a wholly unexpected obtrusion
-into the conversation.</p>
-
-<p>The man by the window lowered his paper. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re
-not going to have a walk over, so don&rsquo;t let us think
-we are.&rdquo; For a reason he could not have explained
-had his life depended on it, William Hollis revealed
-his presence and plunged horse, foot and artillery into
-the matter in hand.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XV">XV</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">J</span>OSIAH gave him a look. But it was not the look
-he might have expected to receive. It was less the
-look of a vindictive parent and employer than the gesture
-a Chamberlain might have bestowed on a Jesse
-Collings or a Gladstone on a John Morley.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re right, my lad&mdash;not a walk over.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>For a few minutes these great men talked on and
-William Hollis by sheer force of some innate capacity,
-now first brought to life in the stress of an overwhelming
-affair, talked with them as an equal. These were
-proud moments in which the power of vision, the understanding
-heart seemed to come by their own. The
-world was on fire, and if the flames were to be brought
-under control many estimates must be revised, many
-standards must go by the board. Self-preservation,
-the primal instinct, was already uppermost. Brains,
-foresight, mental energy were at a premium now.
-Any man, no matter who or what he might be, who
-had it in him to contribute to the common stock was
-more than welcome to do so. The conflagration had
-only just begun but a new range of ideas was already
-rife. Men were no longer taken on trust, institutions
-no longer accepted at their face value.</p>
-
-<p>But all too soon for William Hollis the proceedings
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>came to an end. He would have liked to sit there all
-night, tossing the ball among his peers, listening politely
-and now and again throwing in a word. Suddenly,
-however, the door of the private bar opened and
-a flaming-haired, shirt-sleeved appearance in a green
-baize apron abruptly thrust in its head. At the sight
-of the grandees it was thrust out again even more
-abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That George?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>George it was.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Go out and step that there Bus.&rdquo; In the command
-of Josiah was all the power of the man of privilege,
-the almost superhuman authority of a city alderman.
-Bill Hollis, who had once worn the green apron himself,
-was thrilled by the recollection that even in his
-day, when Josiah was first elected to the town council,
-the public vehicle plying for hire between Jubilee Park
-and the Market Place was always at the beck and call
-of Mr. Councilor Munt. Few had a good word for
-him, but even in those days in that part of the city
-his word was law.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah rose and his friends rose with him. But as
-he moved to the door he turned a dour eye upon Bill
-Hollis. Whole volumes were in it, beyond tongue or
-pen to utter. To-night even he, in the stress of what
-was happening to the world in which he had prospered
-so greatly, was less than himself and also more.
-An eye of wary truculence pinned the ex-barman to
-the wainscot while the master of the house uttered his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>slow, unwilling growl. &ldquo;Not a bad bloom ye sent in,
-my lad.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was a very big dog to a very little dog, but somehow
-it told far more than was intended. Almost in
-spite of himself, the man who on a day had abused
-the confidence of his master by marrying his eldest
-daughter was forced to realize that no matter what
-Josiah Munt might be, he was ... well, he was Jannock!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XVI">XVI</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>WENTY minutes later William Hollis, feeling
-inches taller, and more in harmony with himself
-than for many a day, went forth to grapple with
-the situation in Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Half Blackhampton, at least, if its streets meant
-anything, was bent on a similar errand. From every
-part of the city, its people were slowly filtering in twos
-and threes to the Great Market Place, that nodal point
-of the local life and of the life of the empire. Blackhampton
-claims to be the exact center of England,
-speaking geographically, and its position on the map
-is reflected in its mental outlook. It combines a healthy
-tolerance for the ways and ideas of places less happily
-situated with a noble faith in itself. Time and again
-history has justified that faith; time and again it has
-chosen the famous town as the scene of a memorable
-manifestation, as its castle, its churches, its ancient
-buildings, its streets and monuments bear witness.
-Here an ill-starred king declared war on his people,
-here a great poet was born, to give but a single deed
-and a single name among so much that has passed into
-history. Many of its sons have shed luster on their
-birthplace. Here is a street bearing the name of one
-who revolutionized industry; yonder the humble abode
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>of the prizefighter who gave his name to one of the
-most important towns of Australia; over there the obscure
-conventicle of the plain citizen who founded a
-world religion; &ldquo;up yond&rdquo; the early home of one
-whose name is a household word on five continents;
-across the road the public house where a famous athlete
-has chosen to live in a modest but honored retirement.</p>
-
-<p>Biologists say that all forms of organic life are
-determined by climate. Blackhampton owed much, no
-doubt, to its happy situation as the exact center of
-the Empire, but no city in the kingdom could have
-lived more consciously in that fact. London was not
-without importance as places went; the same might be
-said for New York; but in the eyes of the true Blackhamptonian,
-after all, these centers of light were comparatively
-provincial.</p>
-
-<p>This evening the streets of the city were alive with
-true Blackhamptonians. In the sight of these only
-Blackhampton mattered. Its attitude was of decisive
-consequence in this unparalleled crisis. No matter
-what other places were doing and thinking, Blackhampton
-itself was fully determined to pull its weight
-in the boat.</p>
-
-<p>The press of citizens was very great by the time
-Bill Hollis arrived in the Market Place. In particular,
-they were gathered in serious groups before the
-City Hall, the Imperial Club and the offices of the
-Blackhampton <i>Tribune</i>, which continued to emit hourly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>editions of the <i>Evening Star</i> with fuller accounts of
-the proceedings in Parliament and the latest telegrams
-concerning the fighting in Belgium.</p>
-
-<p>The British Cabinet had given Germany until midnight,
-but Blackhampton had fully made up its mind
-in the matter by five minutes past nine, which was the
-precise hour that Mr. William Hollis arrived to bear
-his part in the local witenagemot. His part was the
-relatively humble one of standing in front of the
-Imperial Club and gazing with rather wistful eyes
-into that brightly tiled and glazed and highly burnished
-interior as it was momentarily revealed by the
-entrance of a member.</p>
-
-<p>Even so early in the world&rsquo;s history as five minutes
-past nine it was known to those privileged sons of the
-race who had assembled in front of the sandstone and
-red brick façade of the Blackhampton Imperial Club
-that Germany &ldquo;was going to get it in the neck.&rdquo; There
-must be a limit to all things and Germany had already
-exceeded it. The Cabinet having unluckily
-omitted to provide itself with even one Blackhampton
-man was yet doing its best to keep pace with informed
-Blackhampton opinion, but events were moving very
-quickly in front of the Imperial Club. At a quarter
-past nine Sir Reuben Jope, the chairman of <i>the</i> Party,
-drove up in his electric brougham, a bearded fierce-eyed
-figure whose broadcloth trousers allied to a prehistoric
-box hat seemed to make him a cross between
-a rather aggressive Free Kirk elder and an extraor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>dinarily
-respectable pirate. At twenty minutes past
-nine Mr. Whibley, the Club porter, an imposing vision
-in pale brown, gold braid, and brass buttons, came
-down the steps and informed a friend on the curb
-&ldquo;that the Fleet was fully mobilized.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Other luminaries continued to arrive. It was like
-the night of a very hotly contested election, except
-for the fact that every one of the thousands of human
-beings thronging the Market Place were of one
-mind. But there was neither boasting nor revelry.
-This was a sagacious, a keen-bitten, a practical race.
-A terrible job was on hand, but it was realized already
-that it would have to be done. The thing had
-gone too far. There were no demonstrations; on the
-contrary, a quietude so intense as to seem unnatural
-gave the measure and the depth of Blackhampton&rsquo;s
-feeling upon the subject.</p>
-
-<p>Had Bill Hollis used the forty-one years of his life
-in a way to justify his early ambitions he would have
-been inside the Club on this historical evening, sitting
-on red leather and smoking a cigar with the best of
-them. As it was he had to be content with a foremost
-place in the ever-growing throng outside the Club
-portals, from which point of vantage he was able to
-witness the arrival of many renowned citizens and
-also to gaze through the famous bow window which
-abutted on to the Square at the array of notables
-within. In the intensity of the hour the Club servants
-had omitted to draw down the blinds.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At ten minutes to ten Mr. Alderman Munt, sustained
-by roast saddle of mutton and green peas, fruit
-tart and custard, appeared in the embrasure with a
-large cigar. Seen from the street he looked a tremendously
-imposing figure. Even in the midst of the
-men of light and leading who surrounded him he was
-a Saul towering among the prophets. Not even his
-admirers, and in the city of his birth these were singularly
-few, ventured to call him genial, but there was
-power, virility, unconscious domination in the far flung
-glance that marked the press beyond the Club
-windows. Somehow there was a bulldog look about
-him that was extraordinarily British. Somehow he
-looked a good man in a tight place and a bad one to
-cross.</p>
-
-<p>Had the question been asked there was not one
-among that throng of hushed spectators who could
-have explained his own presence in the Market Place,
-nor could he have said just what he was doing there.
-A powerful magnet had drawn the many together into
-a limited space on an airless evening in August to
-gaze at one another and to wonder what was going
-to happen, yet well knowing that nothing could happen
-as far as that evening was concerned. But in
-this strange gathering, in the solemn hush that came
-upon it from time to time, was the visible evidence
-that the people of Blackhampton were standing together
-in a supreme moment. Perhaps it gave a feeling
-of security that each was shoulder to shoulder
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>with his neighbor in this hour so fateful for themselves,
-for Blackhampton, for the human race.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing happened, yet everything happened. The
-throng grew denser inside and outside the Imperial
-Club, but casual remarks became even less frequent,
-newsboys ceased to shout, and presently the hour of
-midnight boomed across the square from the great
-clock on the Corn Exchange and from many neighboring
-steeples. Nothing happened. But it was
-Wednesday, August the fifth. The silent multitude
-began slowly to disperse. A new phase had opened
-in history.</p>
-
-<p>It was not until a quarter past one, by which time
-four-fifths of the crowd had gone away as quietly as
-it had assembled, that Bill Hollis slowly made his
-way home to Love Lane. In his hand was the prize
-he had so unexpectedly gained, wrapped in the <i>Evening
-Star</i>, but somehow the Show and all the other
-incidents of a crowded, memorable, even glorious day
-seemed very far off as his boots echoed along the narrow
-streets. An imaginative man in whom psychic
-perception was sometimes raised to a high power, he
-was oppressed by a stealthy sense of disaster. It was
-as if an earthquake had shaken the world from pole
-to pole. It was as if all the people in it were a little
-dizzy with a vibration they could hardly feel which
-yet had shivered the foundations of society.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XVII">XVII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">B</span>LACKHAMPTON was in the war from the first
-moment. Never its custom to do things by
-halves, this body of clear thinking Britons did its best
-to rise to the greatest occasion in history. Its best
-was not enough&mdash;nothing human could have been&mdash;but
-as far as it went it was heroic.</p>
-
-<p>In the first days of the disaster none could tell its
-magnitude. Forces had been set in motion whose colossal
-displacement was beyond human calculation.
-Something more than buckets of water are required
-to cope with a prairie fire, but at first there seemed
-no other means at hand of dealing with it.</p>
-
-<p>Within the tentative and narrow scope of the machinery
-provided by the state wonders were performed
-in the early weeks of the holocaust. Every bucket the
-country could boast was called into use, but the flames
-seemed always to gain in power and fury.</p>
-
-<p>From the outset this midland city, like the kingdom
-itself, betrayed not a sign of panic. In the presence
-of fathomless danger it remained calm. British
-nerves lie deep down, and in those first shattering
-weeks the entire nation stood stolidly to its guns under
-the threat of night and disruption.</p>
-
-<p>The energy shown by Blackhampton in organizing
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>hospitals and in raising men to fill them was truly
-amazing, yet in this it was no more than the mirror
-of the whole country. City vied with city, shire vied
-with shire, in voluntary service to a state, that, no
-matter what its defects, was able to maintain a sense
-of proportion which may be claimed as the common
-measure of the republic. The curious anachronism,
-magniloquently miscalled the British Empire, rose at
-once to a moral height without a precedent in the history
-of the world. It would have been fatally easy in
-the circumstances of the case for a brotherhood of
-free peoples to have turned a deaf ear to the voice
-of honor. The mine was sprung so quickly, the issues
-at stake were so cunningly veiled, that only &ldquo;a decent
-and a dauntless people,&rdquo; unprepared as they were and
-taken by surprise, would have cast themselves into
-the breach at an hour&rsquo;s notice, fully alive to the nature
-of the act and by a divine instinct aware of its
-necessity, yet without fully comprehending what it
-involved.</p>
-
-<p>Governments and politicians, like books and writers,
-exist to be criticized, and it is their common misfortune
-that impudence is now the first function of
-wisdom. History is not likely to deny the great part
-played in a supreme moment by certain brave and enlightened
-men. In the end the mean arts of the party
-journal will not rob of their need those who have made
-still possible a decent life.</p>
-
-<p>Within a fortnight of the outbreak arose a crying
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>need for men. Few, even at that moment, were bold
-enough to breathe the word &ldquo;conscription.&rdquo; Britain
-was a maritime power. Armies on the Continental
-scale were none of her business. Russia and France
-bred to European conditions, with a fundamental man
-power fully equal to that of the Central Empires could
-be trusted to hold their own. But these fallacies were
-soon exposed.</p>
-
-<p>Still, even then, the country hesitated to take the
-plunge. Conscription seemed to many the direct negation
-of what it had stood for in the past. These still
-pinned their faith to the system of voluntary levies.
-The rally of the country&rsquo;s manhood to a cause only
-indirectly its own was beyond all precedent. Field
-Marshal Viscount Partington mobilized his very best
-mop and sent it to deal with the Atlantic. For all
-that the flood did not subside and it gradually dawned
-on the public mind that more comprehensive methods
-might be needed.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime the Hun was at the gate of Paris.
-The Channel ports, if not actually in the hands of
-the enemy, were as good as lost. Belgium was being
-ground under the heel of a savage conqueror. And
-in the city of Blackhampton, as elsewhere in Britain,
-these things made a very deep impression.</p>
-
-<p>Among the many forcible men that a new world
-phase revealed Blackhampton to possess, none stood
-out more boldly in those first grim weeks than Josiah
-Munt. The proprietor of the Duke of Wellington
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>was a man of peculiar gifts, and it was soon only too
-clear that not only Blackhampton, but England herself,
-had need of them. His was the ruthless energy
-that disdains finesse. It sees what to do, or believes
-it does&mdash;almost as important in life as we know it!&mdash;and
-goes straight ahead and gets it done.</p>
-
-<p>One evening in the middle of September Josiah
-came home to dinner in a very black mood. It was
-not often that he yielded to depression. But he had
-had a hard day on local war committees in the course
-of which he had been in contact with men nearer to
-the center of things than he was himself. Moreover,
-these were men from whom this shrewd son of the
-midlands was only too ready to learn. They were
-behind the scenes. Sources of information were open
-to them which even a Blackhampton alderman might
-envy; and they were far from echoing the airy optimism
-of the public press. The fabric of society, stable
-but elastic, by means of which Josiah himself and so
-many like him had been able in the course of two or
-three decades to rise from obscurity to a certain power
-and dignity was in urgent danger. The whole of the
-western world was in the melting pot. That which
-had been could never be again. Cherished institutions
-were already in the mire. And all this was but
-the prelude to a tragedy of which none could see the
-end.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah&rsquo;s mood that evening was heavy. Even the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>presence at the meal of his sister-in-law, as a rule a
-natural tonic, did little to lighten it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They won&rsquo;t get Paris now,&rdquo; she affirmed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We don&rsquo;t know that.&rdquo; He shook his head with
-the gesture of a tired man. &ldquo;Nobody knows it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, I suppose they don&rsquo;t.&rdquo; Miss Preston read in
-that somber manner the need for mental readjustment.
-&ldquo;But the papers say that General Joffre has
-the situation in hand.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah renounced a plate of mutton broth only half
-consumed. &ldquo;Mustn&rsquo;t believe a word you see in the
-papers, my gel. They don&rsquo;t know much, and half of
-what they do know they are not allowed to tell.&rdquo;
-Miss Preston discreetly supposed that it was so. &ldquo;But
-things are going better, aren&rsquo;t they?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll hope they are.&rdquo; Josiah&rsquo;s fierce attack upon
-the joint in front of him seemed to veto the subject.</p>
-
-<p>The silence that followed was broken by Maria,
-whose entrance into the conversation was quite unexpected
-and rather startling. &ldquo;Did you know,&rdquo; she
-said, &ldquo;that Melia&rsquo;s husband has joined the army?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah suspended operations to poise an interrogatory
-carving knife. &ldquo;Who tells you that?&rdquo; he said
-frostily.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The boy from Murrell&rsquo;s, the greengrocer&rsquo;s,&rdquo;&mdash;somehow
-the infrequent voice of Maria had an odd
-precision&mdash;&ldquo;said to Alice this morning that he heard
-that Mr. Hollis had gone for a soldier.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah returned to the joint, content for the time
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>being with the remark, &ldquo;that it was a bad lookout for
-the Germans,&rdquo; a sally that won a timely laugh from
-his sister-in-law. On the other hand, Maria, who had
-never been known to laugh at anything in all her
-anxious days, began to wonder somberly whether
-Melia would be able to carry on the business.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;From all that I hear,&rdquo; growled Josiah, &ldquo;there ain&rsquo;t
-a sight o&rsquo; business to be carried on.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>In the silence which followed Maria gave a sniff
-that was slightly lachrymose, and then the strategic
-Gerty after a veiled glance towards the head of the
-table, ventured on &ldquo;Poor Amelia.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah was in the act of giving himself what he
-called &ldquo;a man&rsquo;s helping&rdquo; of beans. &ldquo;She made her
-own bed,&rdquo; he said in a tone that gained in force by
-not being forcible, &ldquo;and now she&rsquo;s got to lie in it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>For the first time in many years, however, Maria
-seemed to be visited by a spark of spirit. &ldquo;Well, I
-think it&rsquo;s credible of that Hollis, very creditable.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah raised a glass of beer to the light with a
-connoisseur&rsquo;s disparagement of its color, and then he
-said, &ldquo;In my opinion he&rsquo;s running away from his
-creditors. I hear he owes money all round.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s going to risk his life, though,&rdquo; ventured Aunt
-Gerty. &ldquo;And that&rsquo;s something.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is&mdash;if he risks it,&rdquo; Josiah reluctantly allowed.</p>
-
-<p>Maria became so tearful that she was unable to continue
-her dinner.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XVIII">XVIII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE next morning, about a quarter to ten, Josiah
-boarded a Municipal tram at the foot of The
-Rise, earning in the process the almost groveling respect
-of its conductor, and paid twopence for a journey
-to Love Lane. Five doors up on the left was a
-meager house that had been converted into a greengrocer&rsquo;s
-shop. By far the most imposing thing about
-it was a signboard, which, although sadly in need of
-a coat of paint, boldly displayed the name William
-Hollis Fruiterer, in white letters on a black ground.
-For the last sixteen years, whenever the proprietor
-of the Duke of Wellington had occasion to pass this
-eyesore which was clearly visible from the busy main
-thoroughfare that ran by the end of the street, he
-made it a fixed rule to look the other way. But this
-morning when he got off the tram car at the corner,
-he set his teeth, faced the signboard resolutely and
-walked slowly towards it.</p>
-
-<p>A stately thirty seconds or so of progress brought
-him to the shop itself. For a moment he stood looking
-in the window, which was neither more nor less
-than that of a visibly unprosperous greengrocer in a
-very small way of business. He then entered a rather
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>moribund interior, the stock in trade of which consisted
-in the main of baskets of potatoes and carrots
-and an array of stale cabbages laid in a row on the
-counter.</p>
-
-<p>The shop had no one in it, but the first step taken
-by an infrequent customer across its threshold rang
-a bell attached to the underside of a loose board in
-the floor, thereby informing a mysterious entity beyond
-a glass door draped with a surprisingly clean
-lace curtain that it was required elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>The entity did not immediately respond to Josiah&rsquo;s
-heavy-footed summons. When it did respond it was
-seen to be that of a thin faced, exceedingly unhappy
-looking woman of thirty-five whose hair was beginning
-to turn gray. Her print dress, much worn but
-scrupulously clean and neat, had its sleeves rolled
-back beyond the elbows; and this fact and a coarse
-sackcloth apron implied that she had been interrupted
-in the task of scrubbing the floor of the back premises.</p>
-
-<p>The interior of the shop was rather dark and Josiah,
-having taken up a position in its most sunless corner,
-was not recognized at once by his eldest daughter.</p>
-
-<p>They stood looking at each other, not knowing what
-to say or how to carry themselves after a complete
-estrangement of sixteen years. Josiah, however, had
-taken the initiative; he was a ready-witted man of
-affairs and he had been careful to enter the shop with
-a formula already prepared to his mind. It might
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>or might not bridge the gulf, but in any case that did
-not greatly matter. He had not come out of a desire
-to make concessions; he was there at the call of duty.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They tell me your man&rsquo;s joined th&rsquo; army.&rdquo; That
-was the formula, but it needed speaking. And when
-spoken it was, after a moment uncannily tense, it was
-not as Alderman Munt J.P. had expected and intended
-to utter it. Instead of being quite impersonal, the tone
-and the manner were rude and grim. Somehow they
-had thrown back to an earlier phase of autocratic parenthood.</p>
-
-<p>Melia turned very white. It did not seem possible
-for her to say anything beyond a defiant &ldquo;yes.&rdquo; Breathing
-hard, she stood looking stonily at her father.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;When did he go?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Monday.&rdquo; The tone of Melia was queerly like
-his own.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah rolled the scrub of whisker under his chin
-between his thumb and forefinger, and then slowly
-transferred the weight of his ponderous body from
-one massive foot to the other. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t seem to be
-doing much trade.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not much.&rdquo; But the tone of Melia rather implied
-that it was none of his business even if such
-was the case.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Will ye be able to carry on?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Melia didn&rsquo;t know. Her father didn&rsquo;t either. He
-was inclined to think not, but without expressing that
-opinion he stood with narrowed eyes and pursing his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>lips somberly. &ldquo;Where&rsquo;s the books?&rdquo; he said abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>The desire uppermost in Melia was to tell him in
-just a few plain words that the books were no concern
-of his and that she would be much obliged if
-he would go about his own affairs. But for some
-reason she was not able to do so. She was no longer
-afraid of him; years ago she had learned to hate and
-despise him; but either she was not strong enough,
-not a big enough character to be openly rude to him,
-or the subtle feelings of a daughter, long since rejected
-and forgotten, may have intervened. For after
-a horrible moment, in which devils flew round in her,
-she said impassively, &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t keep none.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not books! Don&rsquo;t keep books!&rdquo; The man of affairs
-caught up the admission and treated it almost
-as a young bull in a paddock might have treated a
-red parasol. &ldquo;Never heard the like!&rdquo; He cast a truculent
-glance round the half denuded shop. &ldquo;No wonder
-the jockey has to make compositions with his creditors.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Melia flushed darkly. She would have given much
-had she been able at that moment to order this father
-of hers out of the shop, but every minute now seemed
-to bring him an increasing authority. The Dad, the
-tyrant and the bully whom she had feared, defied and
-secretly admired, was now in full possession. At bottom,
-sixteen years had not changed him and it had
-not changed her. Had the man for whom she had
-wrecked her life had something of her father&rsquo;s qual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>ity
-she might have forgiven his inefficiency, his tragic
-failure as a human being, or at any rate have been
-more able to excuse herself for an act which, look
-at it as one would, was simply unforgivable.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what you mean.&rdquo; Her hard voice
-trembled and then broke harshly&mdash;but anger and defiance
-could not go beyond that. &ldquo;He paid the quarter&rsquo;s
-rent before he went. He owes a few pounds but
-he&rsquo;s going to send me a bit every week until it&rsquo;s paid.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose you&rsquo;ve got a list of his liabilities.&rdquo; Even
-his voice shook a little, but he treated the scorn, the
-anger, the hard defiance in her eyes as if they were
-not there.</p>
-
-<p>Again the paramount desire was to insult this father
-of hers, had it been humanly possible to do so. But
-again was she bereft of the power even to make the
-attempt. &ldquo;Yes, I have,&rdquo; she said sullenly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let me see it, gel.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>For nearly a minute she stood biting her lips and
-looking at him, while for his part he coolly surveyed
-the shop in all its miserable inadequacy. She still
-wanted to order him out. His proprietary air enraged
-her. Yet she could not repress a sneaking admiration
-for it and that enraged her even more. But
-she suddenly gave up fighting and retired in defeat to
-the mysterious region beyond the curtained door,
-whence she returned very soon with a piece of paper
-in her hand.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah impressively put on his gold-rimmed eye<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>glasses,
-a recent addition to his greatness, and examined
-the paper critically. The amount of William
-Hollis&rsquo;s indebtedness, declared in hurried, rather illiterate
-pencil, as if the heart of the writer had not
-been in his task, came to rather less than twenty
-pounds.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;This the lot?&ldquo; He spoke as if he had a perfect
-right to ask the question.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is.&rdquo; Her eyes and her voice contested the right,
-yet in spite of themselves they admitted it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who owns this here property?&rdquo; Again the half
-truculent glance explored every nook and cranny of
-the meager premises.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Whatmore the builder.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah rubbed a thick knuckle upon his cheek.
-&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; That was his only comment. &ldquo;Owns the row,
-I suppose?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Melia supposed he did.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What rent do you pay?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Twenty-five.&rdquo; She resented the question, but the
-growing magnetism of having again a real live man
-to deal with was making her clay in his hands.</p>
-
-<p>He took a step to the shop door, the paper still in
-his hand, and stood an instant looking up the dreary
-length of narrow street. It was only an instant he
-stood there, but it was long enough to enable him to
-make up his mind. Suddenly he swung round on his
-heel to confront the still astonished and resentful
-Melia.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Want more window space,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Casement
-ought to be lower and larger. Those flowers&rdquo;&mdash;he
-pointed to a bowl of stocks on the counter&mdash;&ldquo;ought to
-be where people can look at &rsquo;em. But this isn&rsquo;t a
-neighborhood for flowers. Offer vegetables and fruit
-at a low price, but more shop room&rsquo;s needed so that
-folks can see &rsquo;em and so that you can buy in bigger
-quantities. Who is your wholesaler?&rdquo; He looked
-down the list. &ldquo;Coggins, eh? Coggins in the Market
-Place?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Melia nodded. Should she tell him that Coggins
-had that morning refused to supply anything else until
-the last delivery of potatoes, bananas and tomatoes
-had been paid for? Pride said no, but a force more
-elemental than pride had hold of her now.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Owe him six pound, I see. What does he let you
-have in the way of credit?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t let me have anything else until I&rsquo;ve paid
-his account,&rdquo; said the reluctant Melia. &ldquo;And he says
-it&rsquo;s all got to be cash for the future.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;When did he say that?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s just been up to see me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Can you pay him?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I promised him two pounds by Saturday.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah made no comment. Once more his eyes made
-the tour of the shop. And then he said with the slow
-grunt that Melia knew so well:</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Very creditable to your man to join up ... if he
-sticks it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The four last little words were almost sinister.
-And then in the unceremonious way in which he had
-entered the shop the great man walked out. The place
-was as distasteful to him as his presence in it was
-distasteful to his eldest daughter. Yet for both, and
-in spite of themselves, their meeting after long years
-had had an extraordinary grim fascination.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XIX">XIX</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">A</span>T Christmas Private Hollis was granted forty-eight
-hours&rsquo; leave. He had been a member of
-the Blackhampton Battalion rather less than three
-months, but this was a piece of luck for which he felt
-very grateful.</p>
-
-<p>Those three months had been a grueling time. His
-age was forty-one, and, in order to comply with the
-arbitrary limit of thirty-eight imposed by Field Marshal
-Viscount Partington in the first days of strife,
-it had been necessary to falsify his age. Many another
-had done likewise. Questions were not asked,
-and if a man had physical soundness and the standards
-of measurement demanded by the noble Viscount
-there seemed no particular reason why they should
-be. All the same the sudden and severe change from
-a soft life found some weak places in Private Hollis.</p>
-
-<p>How he stuck it he hardly knew. Many a time in
-those trying early weeks he was sorely tempted to
-go sick with &ldquo;a pain in his hair.&rdquo; But ever at the back
-of his mind hovered the august shade of Troop Sergeant
-Major William Hollis, the distinguished kinsman
-who had fought at Waterloo, whose spurs and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>sword hung in the little back sitting room of Number
-Five, Love Lane; and that old warrior simply would
-not countenance any such proceeding. Therefore,
-Christmas week arrived without Private Hollis having
-missed a single parade. Although not one of the
-bright boys of the Battalion, he was not looked upon
-unfavorably, and on Christmas Eve, about four
-o&rsquo;clock, he returned to his home from the neighboring
-town of Duckingfield.</p>
-
-<p>His home in the course of the sixteen years he had
-lived in it had brought him precious little in the way
-of happiness. More than once he had wondered if
-ever he would be man enough to break its sinister
-thrall; more than once he had wished to end the ever-growing
-aversion of man and wife by doing something
-violent. He had really grown to hate the place.
-And yet after an absence of less than three months he
-was returning to it with a thankfulness that was surprising.</p>
-
-<p>All the same he was not sure how Melia would receive
-him. When at last he had made the great decision
-and had told her that he was going to join up
-he had said she must either carry on the business in
-his absence, or that it could be wound up and she must
-be content with the separation allowance. Her answer
-had been a gibe. However, she proposed to
-carry on in spite of the fact that W. Hollis Fruiterer
-as a means of livelihood was likely to prove a stone
-about her neck. Still there was a pretty strong vein
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>of independence in her and if she could keep afloat by
-her own exertions she meant to do so.</p>
-
-<p>During his three months&rsquo; absence in camp their correspondence
-had been meager; it had also been formal,
-not to say cold. The estrangement into which they
-had drifted was so wide that even the step he had
-recently taken could not bridge it. He had told her
-on a picture postcard with a view of Duckingfield
-Parish Church that he was quite well and he hoped
-that she was and that things were going on all right;
-and with a view of the Market Place she replied that
-she was glad to know that he was quite well as it left
-her at present. However, he was careful to supplement
-this marital politeness with a few words every
-Saturday when he sent her five shillings, all he could
-spare of his pay. The money was always acknowledged
-briefly and coldly. No clew was given to her
-feelings, or to her affairs, but when he told her he
-was coming home at Christmas for two days she
-wrote to say that she would be pleased to see him.</p>
-
-<p>As he stepped off the tram into the raw Blackhampton
-mirk which awaited him at the end of Love
-Lane that formal phrase came rather oddly into his
-mind. It gave him a sort of consolation to reflect that
-Melia was one who said what she meant and meant
-what she said. But, whether or not she would be
-pleased to see him at the present moment, he was genuinely
-pleased to be seeing her.</p>
-
-<p>It was strange that it should be so. But Melia with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>all her grim humors stood for freedom, a life of physical
-ease and cushioned independence, and this was
-what a slack fibered man of one and forty simply
-longed for after three months&rsquo; &ldquo;grueling.&rdquo; For a man
-past his physical best, of slothful habits and civilian
-softness, the hard training had not been child&rsquo;s play.
-Besides, his home meant something. It always had
-meant something. That was why in the face of many
-difficulties he had struggled in his spasmodic way to
-keep it together. It had seemed to give him no pleasure,
-it had seemed to bring nothing into his life, but
-somehow he had felt that if once he let go of it, as
-far as he was concerned it would mean the end of all
-things. He would simply fall to pieces. He would
-sink into the gutter and he would never be able to
-rise again.</p>
-
-<p>Getting off the tram at the end of Love Lane he felt
-a sensation that was almost pride to think that he had
-a place of his own to come home to. After all it stood
-for sixteen years of life and struggle. And at that
-moment he was particularly glad that he had sent that
-five shillings a week regularly. Unless he had done
-so he would not now have been able to go and face
-Melia.</p>
-
-<p>There was not much light in the little street, but
-it was not yet quite dark. And the first sight of his
-home gave him a shock. The outside of the shop had
-changed completely. Not only was the signboard and
-the rest of the woodwork resplendent with new paint,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>but the window was more than twice the size it had
-been. Moreover it was brilliantly lighted; there was
-a fine display of apples, oranges, prunes, nuts, even
-boxes of candied fruits and bonbons; and in the center
-of this amazing picture was a large Christmas tree,
-artfully decorated, in a pot covered with pink paper.</p>
-
-<p>William Hollis gave a gasp. And then a slow chill
-spread over him as he realized the truth. Somebody
-had taken over the business, somebody with capital,
-brains, business experience. But that being the case
-why had Melia kept it all so dark? And why, if the
-business belonged to somebody else, was his name
-still on the signboard? And why had it had that new
-coat of paint?</p>
-
-<p>The sheer unexpectedness struck him internally, as
-if a bucket of water had been dashed in his face. It
-was the worst set-back he had ever had in his life.
-Not until that moment did he realize how much the
-shop meant to him. He was bitterly angry that such
-a trick had been played. It showed, as hardly anything
-else could have done, the depth of Melia&rsquo;s venom;
-it showed to what a point she was prepared to
-carry her resentment.</p>
-
-<p>It took him a minute to pull himself together, and
-then he walked into the shop, not defiantly, not angrily,
-but with a sense of outrage. There was nobody
-in it, but, as he cast round one indignant glance at its
-new and guilty grandeur and then crossed heavily to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>the curtained door, he held himself ready to meet the
-new proprietor.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond that mysterious portal the small living room
-was very spick and span. Almost to his surprise he
-found Melia there. She matched the room in appearance
-and at the moment he came in she was putting a
-log of wood on the fire. Great Uncle William&rsquo;s sword
-and accouterments, hanging from the wall, were decorated
-with holly, the pictures also and a new grocer&rsquo;s
-almanac, and a small bunch of mistletoe was suspended
-from the gas bracket in the middle of the
-ceiling. Everything was far more cheerful and homelike
-than he ever remembered to have seen it. The
-note of Christmas was there, which in itself meant
-welcome and good cheer.</p>
-
-<p>He stood at the threshold of the curtained door, a
-neat soldierlike figure with a chastened mustache,
-looking wonderfully trim and erect in his uniform.
-She greeted him with a kind of half smile on her hard
-sad face, but he didn&rsquo;t offer to kiss her. Not for long
-years had they been on those terms; they were man
-and wife in hardly more than name. And if in his
-absence, as there was reason to suspect, she had played
-him a trick in revenge for her years of disappointment,
-he somehow felt man enough at that moment to make
-an end of things altogether so far as she was concerned.
-There were faults on both sides, no doubt.
-Perhaps he hadn&rsquo;t quite played jannock; but if the
-business now belonged to somebody else, he would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>simply walk straight out of the place and he would
-never enter it again.</p>
-
-<p>She stood looking at him, as if she expected him to
-speak first. But he didn&rsquo;t know what to say to her,
-with that doubt in his mind. Braced by the stern
-discipline which he felt already had made him so
-much more a man than he had ever been in his life, he
-had come home fully prepared to make a fresh start.
-In spite of her embittered temper, he had not lost quite
-all his affection for her. He was the kind of man who
-craves for affection; absence and hardship had made
-him realize that. He had looked forward to this
-homecoming, not merely as a relief from the grind of
-military routine, which galled him at times so that
-he could hardly bear it, but as an assertion of the
-manhood, of the husbandhood, that had long been
-overdue.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Evenin&rsquo;, Melia,&rdquo; he said at last.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Evenin&rsquo;, Bill,&rdquo; as she spoke she dropped her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Happy Christmas to you.&rdquo; Somehow his voice
-sounded much deeper than ever before.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Same to you. Bill.&rdquo; There was almost a softness
-in the fall of the words that took his mind a long way
-back.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How goes it?&rdquo; Her reception was thawing him a
-little in spite of himself, but he hesitated about taking
-off his overcoat. If this fair seeming was intended
-to mask a blow there was only one way to meet it.
-There was a pause and then he took the plunge. &ldquo;Busi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>ness
-good?&rdquo; He held himself ready for the consequences.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pretty fair.&rdquo; The tone told nothing.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Seems to be that,&rdquo; he said mordantly. &ldquo;Had a
-coat o&rsquo; paint, I see, outside.&rdquo; He steeled himself
-again. &ldquo;Had a new window put in an&rsquo; all.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How did you manage it?&rdquo; Again the plunge.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Got a new landlord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Ha! they were coming to it now. He held himself
-tensely. &ldquo;Old Whatmore gone up the spout or something?&rdquo;
-He remembered that some time back there
-had been rumors of an impending bankruptcy on the
-part of Whatmore the builder.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, Whatmore&rsquo;s all right, but he&rsquo;s sold this shop
-and the whole row with it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sold it, eh?&rdquo; His excitement was so great that
-in spite of a cool military air it was impossible to disguise
-it. All the same she waited for him to ask the
-all-important question, but he was slow to do so.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who&rsquo;s bought it?&rdquo; he said at last.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Father&rsquo;s bought it.&rdquo; She did her best to speak
-quite casually, but she didn&rsquo;t succeed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XX">XX</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">I</span>T was a knife. Yet it had not dealt exactly the
-kind of blow that he had looked for. Even if the
-stab was softer, and of that at the moment he was
-not quite sure, undoubtedly there was poison in the
-wound. In a flash he saw that, somehow, it had
-strengthened her position and weakened his. &ldquo;You
-never told me he&rsquo;d bought the business.&rdquo; The tone
-was a confession of impotence.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He hasn&rsquo;t bought it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But, in face of the facts, the fine exterior and the
-large and expensive stock this was a quibble and it was
-too palpable. &ldquo;How did you come by all that stuff
-in the window then?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s helping me to run it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Helping you to run it!&rdquo; His face was a picture
-of simple incredulity.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He paid up all we owed so that we could start
-fair. And he looks in every Monday morning and
-tells me what to buy and where to buy it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Does he pay for it?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He does.&rdquo; There was something like pride in her
-voice. &ldquo;He pays cash. And I have to keep books&mdash;like
-I used to at the Duke of Wellington. Of course
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>he&rsquo;s only lending the money. I pay him back at the
-end of the month when I balance the accounts.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He was dumfounded by this precise statement. The
-hand of his mean, narrow father-in-law was not recognizable.
-Somehow it seemed to alter everything, but
-not at once was he able to turn his mind to the new
-and unexpected situation.</p>
-
-<p>One thing was clear, however; it would be vain to
-resent Josiah&rsquo;s interference. He had bought the property
-over their heads and he could do what he liked
-with his own. Again Melia had been left in debt and
-her husband knew well enough that unless some special
-providence had intervened she might not have been
-able to carry on. Exactly why Josiah had done as he
-had done neither his daughter nor his son-in-law could
-fathom. They hated to receive these belated favors,
-yet as things were there was no way of escaping them.</p>
-
-<p>A little reluctantly, yet with a feeling of intense relief,
-Bill took off his good khaki overcoat and hung it
-on the nail provided for the purpose on the curtained
-door. Melia toasted a pickelet at the clear fire, buttered
-it richly, set it in a dish in the fender to keep warm;
-then the kettle began to boil and she brewed the tea.</p>
-
-<p>As she did all this Bill noticed that there was a new
-air of alertness, of competence about her; there was a
-light in her eyes, a decision in her actions; she seemed
-to have more interest in life. And for himself, as he
-sat at the table with its clean cloth and shining knives
-and spoons and bright sugar bowl and she handed him
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>his tea just as he liked it, with one lump of sugar and
-not too much milk, he felt something changing in him
-suddenly. In a way of speaking it was a kind of rebirth.</p>
-
-<p>They didn&rsquo;t talk much. Melia was not a talking
-sort, nor was he except when he had &ldquo;had a drop,&rdquo; and
-he didn&rsquo;t get &ldquo;drops&rdquo; now. Besides, in any case,
-the army seemed to have taken anything superfluous
-in the way of talk out of him, as it did with most.
-But he was honestly glad to be back in the peaceful
-four walls of his home. And it was not certain, although
-Melia carefully refrained from hinting as
-much, that she was not honestly glad to see him there.
-At all events she got his slippers for him presently
-out of the boot cupboard; and then, unasked, she made
-a spill of paper for him and laid it on the table by
-his elbow, a sufficient intimation that he was expected
-to light his pipe.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXI">XXI</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HEY went to bed at a quarter to ten. For a time
-they talked and then Bill fell asleep. And he
-slept as perhaps he had never slept in that room in all
-the years of their married life. How good the old
-four-poster seemed! It was a family heirloom in
-which he had been born forty-one and a half years
-ago. Many a miserable, almost intolerable night had
-he passed in it, but this Christmas Eve in the course
-of ten minutes or so it was giving him one of the best
-sleeps he had ever known.</p>
-
-<p>He woke in pitch darkness. Melia was breathing
-placidly and regularly by his side. He didn&rsquo;t venture
-to move lest he should disturb her, and he lay motionless
-but strangely comfortable; somehow it had never
-given him such exquisite pleasure to lie in that old
-bed.</p>
-
-<p>Everything was very still; there was none of the intolerable
-fuss and clatter of barrack life at all hours
-of the day and night. It was so peaceful that he was
-just about to doze again when a distant clock began
-to strike. It was the familiar clock of Saint George&rsquo;s
-Church, along Mulcaster Road, a hundred yards or so
-away, and it told the hour of seven.</p>
-
-<p>Two or three minutes later bells began to ring. It
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>was Christmas morning; they were proclaiming peace
-on earth and good will towards men. How rum they
-sounded! Yet as he lay motionless in that bed, with
-a slow succession of deeply harmonious breaths near
-by, he wished harm to no man, not even to the Boche.
-Peace on earth and good will towards men ... yes,
-and women! Then it was, just in that pulse of time,
-the inspiration came to him to make Christmas morning
-memorable.</p>
-
-<p>The idea was very simple. He would steal out of
-bed without harm to the slumbers of Melia, slip on
-his clothes in the dark, go downstairs, light the kitchen
-fire, boil the kettle and presently bring her a cup of
-tea. Never before had it occurred to him to pay her
-such a delicate attention, but this morning he appeared
-to have a new mind and a new heart; somehow,
-this morning he was seeing things with other
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Without disturbing her he was able to carry out
-his plan. But twenty minutes later when he returned
-to the room with a cup of tea on a small tray, Melia
-was awake and wondering what the time was.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Needn&rsquo;t get up yet,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve lit the fire.
-Happy Christmas to you!&rdquo; Then he handed her the
-tea.</p>
-
-<p>She seemed much surprised and just for a moment
-a little embarrassed. But she drank the tea gratefully,
-yet wondering all the time what had made him
-bring it to her. Then she announced her intention
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>of getting up, but he bade her lie quiet as it was Christmas
-morning and he was well able to cook the breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>Quite a pretty passage of arms developed between
-them on the subject, but in the end she prevailed in
-spite of his protests, and came downstairs to deal in
-person with the vital matter of the bacon and eggs.</p>
-
-<p>Somehow their half playful contention made a good
-beginning to the day. And, take it altogether, it was
-quite the best they had ever known in that ill-starred
-house. There had been times when week had followed
-week of such hostility that they had hardly exchanged
-a look or a word, times in fact of soul-destroying antipathy
-in which they almost loathed the sight of one
-another. But there was nothing of that now. So
-much had happened in three short months of separation
-that there were a hundred things to talk about;
-both of them seemed to be living in a different world.</p>
-
-<p>Their outlook on life had altered. Everything they
-did now had a purpose, a meaning; it was not merely
-a question of getting through a day that had neither
-reason nor rhyme. He was a soldier in a uniform,
-he felt and looked a man in it, he stood for something.
-She was proud, in a way she had never been proud,
-of having a husband in the army. It was her duty
-and her privilege to keep his home together against
-his return to civil life.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after breakfast they were visited by a second
-inspiration, but this time it came to Melia. Suppose
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>they attended the eleven o&rsquo;clock service at Saint
-George&rsquo;s Church? In their early married life they
-had gone there together once or twice, but for many
-years now when Melia went there on Sunday evenings
-she had invariably been alone.</p>
-
-<p>It may have been a desire to let the neighbors see
-how well his khaki suited him, or life in the army
-had aroused an odd craving for religion, or perhaps it
-was simply a wish to give pleasure to Melia; at any
-rate Bill fell in with the idea. She had just time to
-arrange with the lady next door, Mrs. Griggs by name,
-who had once been a cook in good service, to give an
-eye to the turkey which was set cooking in the oven,
-then to put on her best dress, not much of a best, it
-was true, but to have gone to church in any other
-would have been unthinkable, to put on her only decent
-hat and a sorely mended pair of black cotton
-gloves, and to get there on the stroke of eleven, just
-as the bells ceased and the choir were moving down
-to their stalls. Melia, at any rate, had seldom enjoyed
-a service so much as this one, and her friend the
-Reverend Mr. Bontine, who called to see her regularly
-once a quarter, preached the finest sermon she had
-ever heard in the course of long years of worship.</p>
-
-<p>For all that, it was not certain that Private Hollis
-was not bored a little by the Reverend Mr. Bontine.
-He could not help a yawn in the middle of the homily,
-but this may have been a concession to his length of
-days as a civilian when &ldquo;he didn&rsquo;t hold with persons,&rdquo;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>but as Melia was too much absorbed to notice him, her
-sense of a manly and fruitful discourse was not
-marred; and she was able to enjoy the same happy
-oblivion of martial restiveness during the long prayer.
-Taking one consideration with another Private Hollis
-may be said to have borne extremely well an ordeal
-to which he had not submitted for many years; and
-at the end of the service as he came out of church
-he grew alive to the fact that in the sight of the congregation
-he was a person of far more consequence
-than he had ever been in his life.</p>
-
-<p>More than one pair of eyes, once hostile or aloof,
-were upon him and also upon Melia. People looked
-at him as if they would have been only too proud to
-know him, substantial people like Wilmers, the insurance
-agent, and Jenkinson the tailor; but the climax
-came as he stepped on to the flags of Mulcaster
-Road and no less a man than Mr. Blades, the druggist
-of Waterloo Square, took off his tall hat to Melia and
-said, &ldquo;Happy Christmas to you, Mr. Hollis.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A year ago that was an incident that simply could
-not have happened. But after all it was just one
-among many. He was an equal now with the best of
-his neighbors, no matter what their substance and
-standing. He was a man who counted. In the Blackhampton
-Battalion he was merely Private Hollis, and
-not much of a private at that, as many loud voiced
-and authoritative people made a point of telling him,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>but in civilian circles apparently the outlook was different.</p>
-
-<p>When they turned into Love Lane they were met by
-further evidence of the new status of W. Hollis Fruiterer.
-A flaming-haired youth in a green baize apron
-had been knocking in vain on the shuttered door of the
-shop. There was a parcel in his hand whose shape
-was familiar but not on that account the less intriguing.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mester Munt&rsquo;s compliments&mdash;sir.&rdquo; It was against
-the tradition of the green baize apron to indulge the
-general public with promiscuous &ldquo;sirs,&rdquo; but, in handing
-ceremoniously the parcel to Private Hollis, democracy
-in its purest form deferred a little to his martial
-aspect.</p>
-
-<p>Bill never felt less in need of his father-in-law&rsquo;s
-compliments than at that moment, but the abrupt departure
-of George the Barman somehow forced them
-upon him. All the same, as Private Hollis fitted the
-key into the shop door he wondered what the Old
-Swine was up to now.</p>
-
-<p>Divested of its trappings on the sitting room table
-the parcel turned out to be a handsome bottle of port
-wine. It would not have been human for William
-Hollis to remain impervious to this largesse from the
-famous cellar of the Duke of Wellington. And he
-knew by the screen of cobwebs that it was out of the
-sacred corner bin.</p>
-
-<p>Bill was puzzled. What had come over the Old
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>Pig! However.... With the care of one who knew
-the worth of what he handled he put the royal visitor
-in the cupboard, among plebeian bottles of stout
-and beer, and then proceeded, chuckling rather grimly
-at certain thoughts, to help Melia &ldquo;set the dinner.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was a modest feast, but when in the course of
-time he sat down to carve a roast turkey, a plump and
-proper young bird, flanked with sausages and chestnuts,
-he informed Melia &ldquo;that he wouldn&rsquo;t give a thank
-you to dine with the King of England.&rdquo; She could
-not help smiling at this disloyal utterance, which so
-ill became his uniform, as she freely ladled out bread
-sauce, that purely Anglo-Saxon dainty, for which his
-affection amounted almost to a passion, and helped
-him hugely to potatoes and Brussels sprouts, so that
-it should be no fault of hers if he was unable to plead
-provocation for his lapse. Plum pudding followed.
-It was of the regulation Blackhampton pattern and
-Melia, no mean cook when she gave her mind to it,
-had given her mind to this one, so that it expressed
-her genius and the festive genius of her native city
-in a hearty time of cheer.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the meal, in spite of the fact that he
-was told rather sternly &ldquo;to set quiet,&rdquo; he insisted like
-a soldier and a sportsman in helping to clear the table
-and in bearing a manly but subordinate part in the
-washing up. And when the table had once more assumed
-the impersonal red cloth of its hours of leisure,
-a couple of wine glasses were produced, which,
-al<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>though polished twice a week, had not seen active
-service for fifteen years, and then William drew the
-cork of the cobwebbed bottle.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not a drop for me, Bill.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got to have it, Mother.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, Bill.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes. Fairation!&rdquo; He gave one deep sniff at the
-glass he had measured already with a care half reverent,
-half comic. &ldquo;By Gum, it&rsquo;s prime.&rdquo; In spite of
-protests he poured out another glass. &ldquo;Fairation!
-Better drink the health, eh, of the Old Un as it&rsquo;s
-Christmas Day.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They honored the Old Un discreetly, in a modest
-sip of a wine which of itself could not have denied
-him a claim to honor, and then with equal modesty
-they drank to each other.</p>
-
-<p>Melia then had an inspiration, though not subject to
-them as a rule, and due in this case, no doubt, to the
-juice of the grape. She procured a plate full of walnuts
-from beyond the curtained door and they entered
-on a further phase of discreet festivity. Bill
-insisted on cracking three nuts and peeling them for
-her with his own delicately accomplished fingers; and
-in the process he complimented her on the Christmas
-fare and hoped piously that &ldquo;the Chaps had had half
-as good.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mention of the Chaps moved him for the first time
-to reminiscence. As was to be expected, the Blackhampton
-Battalion was one of the wonders of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>world. To begin with, its members were nearly all
-gentlemen. All the nobs of the town under forty were
-tommies in the B.B. It was very remarkable that it
-should be so, but there the fact was. And it made
-men of his sort who liked to think a bit when they
-had the time to spare feel regular democratic when
-they saw real toffs like Lawyer Mossop&rsquo;s nephew,
-Marling the barrister, carting manure, or the son of
-Sir Reuben Jope on his knees scrubbing the floor of
-the sergeants&rsquo; mess.</p>
-
-<p>To mix in such company was a rare opportunity
-for a man who knew how to use it. Melia had noted
-already that Bill had learned to express himself better,
-that his conversation was at a higher level and that
-it was full of new ideas. And these facts were never
-so palpable as when, slowly and solemnly, a furtive
-light of humor in his blue eyes, he went on to tell of
-his great Bloomer.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that the cubicle next to his was occupied
-by a man named Stanning, and he had got to be rather
-pals with him. Stanning was a serious sort of cove
-with hair turning gray at the temples, but Private
-Hollis had been attracted to him because he was one
-of the right sort and because it was clear from his talk
-that he had thought and seen a bit. He was a good
-kind of man to talk to, a sympathetic sort of card,
-one of those who made you feel that you had things
-in common.</p>
-
-<p>Private Hollis gradually got so &ldquo;thick&rdquo; with Private
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>Stanning that they began to discuss things in an intellectual
-way, politics one time, education another,
-so on and so on, until one evening they found themselves
-talking of Art. As Melia knew, Private Hollis
-had a feeling for Art. Many an hour had he spent in
-the City Museum, looking at its collection of famous
-pictures; and he told Private Stanning of the water
-color he had done of the Sharrow at Corfield Weir,
-inspired by the great work on the same subject of his
-celebrated namesake Stanning, R.A., which had been
-bought by the City Authorities for the fabulous sum
-of a thousand guineas....</p>
-
-<p>Over the walnuts and the wine Private Hollis began
-to chuckle hugely as his great Bloomer came back to
-his mind in all its entrancing details....</p>
-
-<p>P.H. When I first see the price mentioned in the
-<i>Evening Star</i> I says to my Missus that&rsquo;s the way they
-chuck public money about. No picture was never
-painted, not a Hangelo nor even a Lord Leighton that
-was ever worth a thousand guineas. It&rsquo;s a fancy
-price.</p>
-
-<p>P.S. &rsquo;Tis in a way. A matter of sentiment, I
-suppose.</p>
-
-<p>P.H. Just what I said to the Missus. However,
-being a bit of a critic I went to examine that picture
-for myself. And would you believe it, Stanning&mdash;I&rsquo;m
-not saying this to flatter you because the chap who
-done it has the same name as yours&mdash;when I see that
-picture it fair knocked me endways. You see I know
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>every yard of Corfield Weir; in my time I&rsquo;ve had
-more than one good fish out of it; and as soon as I set
-eyes on it, I said to myself, &ldquo;Stanning R.A.&rsquo;s a fisherman.
-He&rsquo;s chosen one of them gray days that&rsquo;s good
-for barbel.&rdquo; I give you my word, he&rsquo;d got just the
-proper light coming out of the valley and stealing
-along the Sharrow. Only an artist and a fisherman
-could have done it.</p>
-
-<p>P.S. Did you ever get bream there?</p>
-
-<p>P.H. I should say so. And I&rsquo;ve had trout in my
-time.</p>
-
-<p>P.S. Trout?</p>
-
-<p>P.H. I&rsquo;m talking of twenty years back. But to
-resume. I see at a glance why the City Authorities
-had paid a thousand guineas for that picture. It was
-not because Stanning, R.A., was a local man; it was
-pure merit and I felt very glad it was so.</p>
-
-<p>P.S. Glad you thought so.</p>
-
-<p>P.H. You know, of course, that Stanning, R.A.,
-is Blackhampton born?</p>
-
-<p>P.S. So I&rsquo;ve heard.</p>
-
-<p>P.H. Born in that old house with the high-walled
-garden along Blue Bell Hill that was pulled down to
-widen the road.</p>
-
-<p>P.S. That so?</p>
-
-<p>P.H. By the way, Stanning, is he a relation of
-yours? Of course, it&rsquo;s a very common name in the
-City.</p>
-
-<p>P.S. Ye&mdash;es, I suppose he is in a way.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>P.H. That&rsquo;s something to be proud of. I&rsquo;m not
-saying it to flatter you, but at this minute I&rsquo;d rather
-be Stanning, R.A., than any one else in the wide world.</p>
-
-<p>Private Stanning laughed like a good one.</p>
-
-<p>P.H. Honest. I&rsquo;m not talking out of the back of
-my neck. Stanning, R.A., for me. You can have all
-my share of the Kitcheners and the Joffres and the
-von Klucks. If I could be born again and born somebody
-as mattered I&rsquo;d like to be Stanning, R.A. Why,
-what the hell are you grinning at?</p>
-
-<p>P.S. That&rsquo;s rheumatism. And if you&rsquo;ll only take
-it over, old son, you can have all the remainder of
-my interest in Stanning, R.A., as a going concern.</p>
-
-<p>P.H. What! do you mean to say&mdash;&mdash;!</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I told you, Mother,&rdquo; concluded Private Hollis in
-his port-wine-inspired narrative, &ldquo;that he was going
-gray at the temples. And there he set like a himage
-at the foot of his shakedown all twisted with rheumatics,
-groaning like one o&rsquo;clock. And then he began
-to laugh. Queer world, ain&rsquo;t it, what?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Melia, however, was one of those precise but rather
-immobile intellects with which her tight little native
-island is full to overflowing. &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t mean to
-say, Bill, it was Stanning, R.A., himself?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You bet your life it was.&rdquo; Private Hollis handed
-a peeled walnut, his masterpiece so far, across an expanse
-of red tablecloth. &ldquo;One of the youngest R.A.&rsquo;s
-on record, but a bit long in the tooth for the Army.
-And we&rsquo;re pals, I tell you. One of these days I&rsquo;m
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>going to take him barbel fishing at Gawsey&rsquo;s Pool.
-And he&rsquo;s given me a couple of lessons in drawing already.
-If only I&rsquo;d begun sooner I think I might have
-done something.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was such an incredible story that Melia was fain
-to smile, but Private William Hollis, inspired by port
-wine and enthusiasm, lingered lovingly over his portrait
-of one who stood forth in his mind as the greatest
-man the city of Blackhampton had yet produced.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXII">XXII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">F</span>ORTY-EIGHT hours is not a long time even as
-time is reckoned in a world war, when the infinitely
-much can happen in a little space. Only one-fourth
-of that term, a meager twelve hours, was permitted
-to Russia by Germany in which to decide
-whether she should yield unconditionally to an unheard
-of demand, on pain of provoking that conflict,
-the end of which even some of the most penetrating
-minds in Blackhampton were hardly able to predict
-with certainty. So much may happen in a little while.
-Yet Private Hollis had just four times as long to re-establish
-terms of conjugal felicity with his wife
-Melia. In that period he kissed her twice.</p>
-
-<p>Whether that Christian practice would have continued
-as a regular thing is difficult to say. This was
-a special occasion and these were not demonstrative
-natures. Even in the heyday of their romance, when
-Love not being quite strong enough to turn the door
-handle, peered once or twice through the keyhole, yet
-without ever proving quite bold enough to come in
-and make himself at home on that childless hearth,
-they were too practical to acquire a permanent taste
-for that particular kind of nonsense.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span></p>
-<p>Still, it hardly does to dogmatize in time of war.
-For as the forty-eight hours went on, Melia seemed to
-grow more and more impressed by Private Hollis, his
-martial bearing. Or it may have been the uniform.
-Why is it that any kind of uniform has such a fatal
-attraction for the ladies?</p>
-
-<p>In this case, at any rate, it seemed to make a remarkable
-difference. There is no doubt it suited Bill.
-He looked so much more a man in it; his chest was
-bigger, his back was straighter, his hair was shorter,
-his chin was cleaner and the ragged mustache that
-used to be all over his face was now refined to the extreme
-point of military elegance. Really he came
-much nearer to the ideal of manhood there had been
-in Melia&rsquo;s mind when she had first married him. Besides
-he was so much surer of himself, his voice was
-deeper, his bearing more authoritative, his talk was
-salted with infinitely more knowledge and wisdom.</p>
-
-<p>When the time came for Private Hollis to return to
-his regiment, the boy who delivered the vegetables
-was left in charge of the shop, while Melia in Sunday
-attire went to see her man off at the Central Station.
-It was a compliment he had hardly looked for; all
-the same it was appreciated. Somehow it made a difference.
-Other wives, mothers, sisters, sweethearts
-were thick on the ground for a similar purpose, but
-Private Hollis was of opinion that Melia with her serious
-face and a figure you couldn&rsquo;t call stout and in a
-hat she had trimmed herself with black and white
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>wings was somehow able to hold her own with the
-best of them.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover they parted at the carriage door as if they
-meant something to each other now. It was a public
-place but he kissed her solemnly and she said, &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll
-write me a bit oftener, Bill, won&rsquo;t you?&rdquo; in the manner
-of the long ago. Then the train began to move,
-he waved a hand and she waved hers; and each trundled
-back alone to a hard life with its many duties,
-yet somehow, in a subtle way, the stronger and the
-happier for that brief interregnum.</p>
-
-<p>Life had altered for them both in that short time.
-They saw each other with new eyes or perhaps with
-old eyes reawakened. Sixteen years had rubbed so
-much of the bloom off their romance that it was a
-miracle almost that they were able to renew it. Yet
-the delicate process was only just beginning. It was
-very odd, but the trite and difficult business of existence
-was colored now continually with new thoughts
-about each other. Neither had ever been a great hand
-at writing letters, but Bill suddenly burgeoned forth
-into four closely written pages weekly, and Melia,
-flattered but not to be outdone, burst out in equal
-volume.</p>
-
-<p>His letters were really very interesting indeed and
-so were hers, although of course in an entirely different
-way. She was kept abreast of the military situation
-and the latest Service gossip, with spicy yarns
-of the Toffs with whom he rubbed shoulders as an
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>equal in the B.B., not omitting the details of an ever-ripening
-friendship with Private Stanning, who, however,
-was soon to acquire the rank of a full corporal.
-Melia, of course, had not the advantage of this range
-of information or contiguity to high affairs, nor did
-her letters sparkle with soldierly flashes of wit and
-audacity, but week by week they gave a conscientious
-account of the state of the business, of sales and purchases,
-of current prices and money outstanding, all
-in the manner of a careful bookkeeper, who, now she
-had been put on her mettle, was able and willing to
-show that the root of the matter was in her.</p>
-
-<p>Bill, in consequence, had to own that the business
-in all its luckless history had never been so flourishing.
-They didn&rsquo;t like admitting it, but in their hearts
-they knew that this new prosperity was directly due
-to &ldquo;the damned interference&rdquo; (military phrase) of the
-august proprietor of the Duke of Wellington. Some
-men are hoo-doos, they are born under the wrong set
-of planets; whatever they do or refrain from doing
-turns out equally unwise. W. Hollis Fruiterer had always
-been one of that kind. If he bought a barrel
-of Ribstone Pippins they went bad before he could
-sell them, if he bought William pears they refused to
-ripen, if he bought peas or runner beans he would have
-done better with gooseberries or tomatoes; anything
-he stocked in profitable quantities was bound to be
-left on his hands. But the lord of Strathfieldsaye was
-another kind of man altogether. He simply couldn&rsquo;t
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>do wrong when it came to a question of barter. Up
-to a point a matter of judgment, no doubt, but &ldquo;judgment&rdquo;
-does not altogether explain it. There is a subtle
-something, over and beyond all mundane wisdom, that
-confers upon some men the Midas touch. Everything
-they handle turns to gold. Josiah Munt was notoriously
-one of that kind.</p>
-
-<p>Certainly from the day he touched the moribund
-business of W. Hollis Fruiterer with his magic wand,
-it took a remarkable turn for the better. Mr. Munt&rsquo;s
-own explanation of the phenomenon was that for the
-first time in its history it was run on sound business
-lines. That had something to do with the mystery of
-course; not only was Josiah a man of method and
-foresight, he was also a man of capital. Money makes
-money all the world over; and of that fact Josiah&rsquo;s
-ever-growing store was a shining proof.</p>
-
-<p>Not until the middle of the summer did Bill get
-leave again. And then there was a special reason
-for it. The Battalion had been ordered to France.
-That was an epic Saturday evening in July when he
-came home with full kit, brown as a bean, hard as
-a nail, in rare fighting trim. Time was his own until
-the Thursday following, when he had to go to
-Southampton to join the Chaps.</p>
-
-<p>Martial his bearing at Christmas, but it was nothing
-to what it was now. There seemed to be a consciousness
-of power about him. For one thing he was wearing
-the stripe of a lance corporal. Then, too, he was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>a small man, and, as biologists know, small men always
-have a knack of looking bigger than they are
-really. Physically speaking, great men are generally
-on the small side, perhaps for the reason that they
-have more vitality. Certainly Corporal Hollis, on the
-eve of his Odyssey, looked more important than the
-neighbors ever thought possible. Poor Melia began
-to wonder if she would be able to live up to him.</p>
-
-<p>Melia had never been to London and when Bill proposed
-that she should accompany him to the metropolis
-and see him off from Waterloo the suggestion
-came as quite a shock to a conservative nature. It
-meant almost as much as a journey to the middle of
-Africa or the wilds of the Caucasus to more traveled
-people. She was not easily fluttered; hers was a mind
-of the slow-moving sort, but it was only after a night
-and a day, fraught with grave questionings, that she
-finally consented to do so.</p>
-
-<p>For one thing the shop would have to close for
-twenty-four hours, at least; besides, and a more vital
-matter, even her best dress was nothing like fashionable
-enough for London, the capital city of the
-empire. Both these objections were promptly overruled.
-An obliging neighbor&mdash;during the last few
-months the neighbors had proved wonderfully obliging&mdash;consented
-to take charge of the shop in Melia&rsquo;s
-absence; while at the psychological moment a paragraph
-appeared in the <i>Evening Star</i> saying that as
-the Best people were making a point of wearing old
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>clothes, any attempt at fashion in war time was bad
-taste. This interesting fact left so little for further
-discussion that at a quarter past nine on the morning
-of an ever-memorable Wednesday they steamed out
-of Blackhampton Central Station, London bound.</p>
-
-<p>It was the beginning of a day such as Melia had
-never known. Looking back upon it afterwards, and
-she was to look back upon it many times in the days
-to follow, she felt it would have been impossible to
-surpass it in sheer human interest. Even the journey
-to such a place as London was thrilling to one
-whose travels by train had been confined to half a
-dozen visits to Duckingfield, two to Matlock Bath and
-one to Blackpool at the age of seven, nice places yet
-relatively unimportant in comparison with the capital
-city of the British Empire.</p>
-
-<p>As the train did not leave for Southampton until
-well on in the evening they had about eight hours in
-which to see the sights. And so much happened in
-those eight hours that they made a landmark in their
-lives. Indeed they began with so signal an event that
-the muse of history peremptorily demands a past chapter
-in which to relate it.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXIII">XXIII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">A</span>S soon as he arrived in the metropolis, Corporal
-Hollis with Melia rather nervously gripping his
-arm stepped boldly into the Euston Road to have a
-look at London. Almost the first thing he saw was
-a Canteen, a token that at once reminded him that
-his rifle and kit were heavy, that the wife and he had
-breakfasted rather early and rather hurriedly and that
-nothing at that moment could hope to compare with
-a couple of ham sandwiches and a cup of coffee.</p>
-
-<p>When the question was put to Melia she was inclined
-to think so too, although far too bewildered
-by the mighty flux around her to give any special
-thought to the matter. However very wisely, nay
-providentially, as it turned out, after a moment&rsquo;s hesitation
-they decided to cross the road and follow the
-promptings of nature. As they passed through the
-inviting doors of the Canteen there was nothing to
-tell them that anything particular was going to happen,
-yet perhaps they ought to have remembered that
-this was London where the Particular is always happening.</p>
-
-<p>They had not to fight their way through a crowd in
-order to get in or anything of that sort. Nor were
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>people walking on one another&rsquo;s heads when they did
-get in. There was plenty of room for all. Full privates
-were in the majority, but the non-commissioned
-ranks were also represented, among whom was a
-Scotsman who had risen to be a sergeant. But Corporal
-Hollis appeared to be the only warrior who had
-brought his lawful wedded missus. It was a breach
-of the rules for one thing, but there was any amount
-of room, and he managed to stow her away in a quiet
-corner where they could have a table to themselves;
-and then he moved across to a cubbyhole where a
-nice fatherly old sportsman with side whiskers and
-brown spats relieved him of his rifle and kit and gave
-him a card with a number in exchange. Then the
-gallant Corporal, a composite of well-bred diffidence
-and martial mien, sauntered up to the counter at the
-end of the room where a Real Smart Piece in a mob
-cap and jumper gave him the smile interrogative.
-After a moment&rsquo;s survey of the good things around
-him, he magnificently went the limit. The limit was
-ninepence: to wit, two fried eggs, a rasher of bacon,
-bread and butter and a cup of tea; in this case ditto
-repeato, once for himself, once for Melia.</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal was by no means sure that the R.S.P.
-would stand for a Twicer but she was one of the noble
-breed that prefers to use common sense rather than
-raise obstacles. After one arch glance in the direction
-of Melia she booked the order without demur.</p>
-
-<p>In the process of time the order was executed and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>they set to upon this second breakfast with a breadth
-of style which almost raised it to the dignity of luncheon.
-By the time they were through it was half-past
-midday already, and they were discussing this fact
-and its bearing on the general program when the great
-Event began to happen.</p>
-
-<p>It came about unobtrusively, in quite a casual way.
-Neither the Corporal nor his lady paid much attention
-at first, but of a sudden the nice fatherly old sportsman
-who had relieved the former of his rifle and kit
-came out of his cubbyhole and a dashing trio of
-R.S.P.&rsquo;s emerged from a mysterious region at the back
-of beyond, proving thereby that the counter had no
-monopoly of these luxuries, and the Scotch sergeant
-moved a pace or two nearer the door, where the London
-daylight seemed a bit better in quality, and then
-Bill&rsquo;s R.S.P., who was absolutely the pick of the
-bunch, although such comparisons are invariably as
-idle as they are to be deplored, was heard to use a word
-that appeared to rhyme with Mother.</p>
-
-<p>Of course it could not have been Bother or any
-word like it. And whatever it may have been, was
-not, at that moment, as far as the Corporal and
-his lady were concerned, of the slightest importance.
-To them it meant nothing. It meant less than nothing.
-For a startling rumor was afoot....</p>
-
-<p>The Queen was coming.</p>
-
-<p>William was a military man and fully determined
-to bear himself with the coolness of one on parade,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>but his air of stoicism was but a poor cloak to his
-feelings. As for Melia, if not exactly <i>flustered</i>, she
-was excited more than a little. Still in this epic moment
-it was a strengthening thought that she had
-had that yard and a half of new ribbon put on her
-hat.</p>
-
-<p>That was an instance of subconscious but prophetic
-foresight. There was nothing to tell her that
-the first lady in the land would nip across from Buckingham
-Palace as soon as she heard that Bill was in
-London. It was hardly to have been expected. In
-the first place it was truly remarkable that she should
-so soon have heard of his arrival. And of course it
-was by no means certain that this casual and informal
-visit of hers was inspired by William. In fact if you
-came to think of it&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>But there was really no time to weigh the pros and
-the cons of what after all was a superfluous inquiry,
-for a commotion had arisen already beyond the farther
-door. And even at this late moment, and in spite of
-a general stiffening of the phalanx of R.S.P.&rsquo;s and
-other details, and the stately advance of the nice old
-warrior through the swing doors into the Euston
-Road, even then Corporal Hollis, with true military
-skepticism, was not sure that it was not an Oaks.</p>
-
-<p>However the question was soon settled. The commotion
-increased, the throng of important looking
-people surprisingly grew, and in the midst of it appeared
-a lady whom William and Melia would have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>known anywhere. She was remarkably like her portraits
-except that the reality surpassed them. There
-was a great deal of bowing and walking backwards
-and the serried rows of R.S.P.&rsquo;s made curtsys, and
-then all ranks stood up and removed their hats. William
-and Melia stood up too, but only William doffed
-his helmet.</p>
-
-<p>It was the Scotsman who claimed the first share
-of the august visitor&rsquo;s notice. Her eye lit at once on
-this son of Caledonia, who unconsciously, by sheer
-force of climate, began to tower above all the rest,
-returning answer for question with inimitable coolness
-and mastery. All the Saxons present were lost
-in envy, but they were fain to acquiesce in the stern
-truth that nature has made it impossible to keep back
-a Scotsman. In spite of top hats and swallow-tails
-it was clear at a glance that he was the best man
-there.</p>
-
-<p>All the same the august visitor, helped by a simple
-and friendly lady who accompanied her, contrived to
-distribute her favors impartially. The son of Caledonia
-was so compelling that it would have been a
-pleasure to talk to him for an hour, but duty and justice
-forbade, and she found a smile and a word for
-humbler mortals. Among these, and last of all in
-her tour of the large room were Bill and Melia.</p>
-
-<p>Corporal Hollis could not be expected to display
-the entrain of a sergeant of the Black Watch. Be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>sides
-he had yet to cross the water whereas Caledonia&rsquo;s
-son was a hero of Mons and the Marne. But
-the gallant corporal did his regiment no discredit in
-that great moment, likewise his wife Melia, nor famed
-Blackhampton, his fair natal city.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXIV">XXIV</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">W</span>HEN about twenty minutes later William and
-Melia, haloed with history, emerged from the
-precincts of the Canteen, and as they did so treading,
-in a manner of speaking, the circumambient air, they
-were at once confronted by the spectacle of Bus 49
-next the adjacent curb. And Bus 49, according to its
-own account of the matter, was going amongst other
-places to Piccadilly Circus.</p>
-
-<p>It was the first visit of the Corporal to the metropolis,
-but in his mind was lurking the sure knowledge
-that Piccadilly Circus was the exact and indubitable
-center thereof; and by an association of ideas, he also
-seemed to remember that Piccadilly Circus was where
-the King lived. Such being the case, the apparition
-at that moment of Bus 49 was about as providential
-as anything could have been.</p>
-
-<p>It was the work of an instant to get aboard the
-gracious engine, so swift the workings of the human
-mind in those dynamic moments when Fate itself
-appears, as the sailors say, to stand by to go about.
-Moreover the conductor had politely informed the
-Corporal that there was room for two on the top.</p>
-
-<p>That was a golden journey, a kind of voyage to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>silken Samarcand and cedared Lebanon, allowing of
-course for reduction according to scale. So miraculously
-were their hearts attuned to venturing, that for
-one rapt hour they drank deep of poetry and romance
-this glorious midday of July.</p>
-
-<p>Bus 49 knew its business thoroughly, no bus better.
-Instead of turning pretty sharp to the left into
-that complacent purlieu Portland Place, as a bus of
-less experience might have done in order to follow
-the line of flight of some mythical crow or other, it
-chose to go on and on, past Madame Tussaud&rsquo;s, the
-Hotel Great Central, and then by a series of minor
-but hardly less historic landmarks along Edgware
-Road to the Marble Arch, thence via Park Lane to
-Hyde Park Corner.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt Bus 49 had ideas. The ordinary machine
-of commerce would have got from Euston to Piccadilly
-Circus in two shakes of a duck&rsquo;s tail. Not so
-this accomplished metropolitan, this gorgeous midday
-of July. From Hyde Park Corner it proceeded to
-Victoria, thence via the Army and Navy Stores to the
-Houses of Parliament, down Whitehall, past the lions
-and Horatio, Viscount Nelson, past the Crédit Lyonnais,
-up the Haymarket and so at last to Swan and
-Edgar&rsquo;s corner, where William and Melia dismounted,
-thrilled as never before in all their lives.</p>
-
-<p>Piccadilly Circus, all the same, was a shade disappointing.
-It was not quite so grand as they expected.
-The Criterion was just opposite, but they looked in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>vain for the King&rsquo;s residence. There did not appear
-to be a sign of that. Bill, however, noticed a policeman,
-and decided to make inquiries.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I want Buckingham Palace, please,&rdquo; said the
-wearer of the King&rsquo;s uniform.</p>
-
-<p>Constable X 20, an intelligent officer, told the gallant
-corporal to walk along Piccadilly, to which famous
-thoroughfare he pointed with professional majesty,
-to turn down the street of Saint James, to keep
-right on until he got to the bottom and then to ask
-again.</p>
-
-<p>The constable was thanked for his lucidity and William
-and Melia proceeded according to instructions.
-Along Piccadilly itself their progress was a triumph.
-For, as Melia was quick to observe, all the best people
-saluted Bill. Of course they could tell by the
-stripe on his sleeve that he had been made a corporal,
-but such open, public and official recognition of his
-merit was intensely gratifying. Brass-hatted, beribboned,
-extraordinarily distinguished looking warriors
-were as punctilious as could be in saluting Bill. Those
-placed less highly, the rank and file, the common
-herd, paid him less attention, but what were these in
-the scale of an infinitely larger and nobler tribute?
-By the time William and Melia turned down Saint
-James's street, had an observant visitor from Mars
-had the privilege of walking behind them he would
-have been bound to conclude that the most important
-man in the Empire was Corporal Hollis.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He would not have been alone in that feeling for
-Melia was in a position to share it with him. In fact
-by the time they had traversed the historic thoroughfare
-and had reached Pall Mall the feeling dominated
-her mind. On every hand the great ones of the earth
-mustered thicker and thicker, but they kept on saluting
-Bill. Such a reception was hardly to have been
-expected at the center of all things, yet in those thrilling
-moments so proud was Melia of her man that it
-did not seem very surprising after all.</p>
-
-<p>They crossed the road to the fine and ancient building
-with the clock on it, and after making quite sure
-that the King didn&rsquo;t live there&mdash;a pardonable delusion
-under which for a moment they had labored&mdash;they
-proceeded past it, leaving Marlborough House on
-the port bow, and then suddenly, as they came into
-the Mall, they caught a first glimpse of that which
-they were out for to see.</p>
-
-<p>Converging slowly upon the King&rsquo;s residence Melia&rsquo;s
-courage began to fail.</p>
-
-<p>It was a very warm day for one thing. And the sentry
-in his box, not to mention his brethren marching
-up and down in front of the railings, may have
-daunted her. Moreover, the Palace itself was an
-exceeding stately pile. Besides, she had seen the
-Queen already. And Bill had passed the time of day
-with her. Thus it was, gazing in silent awe through
-those stern railings across that noble courtyard, Melia
-suddenly made up her mind.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, Bill, I don&rsquo;t think I&rsquo;ll see the King to-day&mdash;not
-in this dress.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Corporal Hollis looked solemnly at the dress in question
-and then at its wearer. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s as <i>you</i> like, you
-know, Mother,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXV">XXV</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">A</span>FTER that they walked about for a while, but
-the day was terribly hot, and all too soon the
-process of seeing London on foot amid the dust of a
-torrid July began to lose its charm for Melia. Besides,
-had they not seen the best of London already?
-Piccadilly Circus, it was true, was a washout; but
-they had seen Buckingham Palace, the Houses of Parliament,
-Westminster Abbey, Trafalgar Square, and
-the outside of Madame Tussaud&rsquo;s. Even in such a
-place as London what else was there to compare with
-these glories?</p>
-
-<p>Such skepticism, however, was not according to the
-book, and the Special Providence which had been detailed
-to look after them on this entrancing day was
-soon able to bring that fact to their notice. For when
-they had come to the quadriga at the southwestern
-extremity of the Green Park, an equestrian piece which
-in the opinion of Corporal Hollis would have done no
-discredit to the recognized masterpieces in Blackhampton&rsquo;s
-famous gallery, and they had sincerely admired
-it and the Corporal had placed his judgment on record,
-lo! beyond the arch, a short stone&rsquo;s throw away,
-a certain Bus, 26 by name, the exact replica of Bus
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>49, that immortal machine, was miraculously awaiting
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Bus 26 was going to the Zoölogical Gardens. And
-the highly efficient Special Providence who had the
-arrangements in hand had contrived to book two
-places on the top. That is to say its conductor informed
-the Corporal with an indulgent smile that
-there was just room outside for one and a little one.
-Whether the conductor would have extended the same
-accommodating politeness to a mere civilian belongs
-to the region of conjecture, but room was undoubtedly
-found for the Corporal&rsquo;s lady, and by taking upon
-his knee a future Wellington&mdash;under the shadow of
-whose effigy the pleasing incident occurred&mdash;in the
-person of a Boy Scout in full panoply of war, the
-gallant Corporal contrived to make room for himself
-also.</p>
-
-<p>At the Zoölogical Gardens they admired George,
-although rather glad to find that he was only a distant
-relation. They pitied the polar bears, they shuddered
-at the pythons, the parrots charmed them, the larger
-carnivora impressed them deeply! and then the Corporal
-looked at his watch, found it was a quarter to
-four and promptly ordered an ample repast for two
-persons.</p>
-
-<p>The Genie in attendance made no bones at all about
-finding a small private table for them, beneath the
-shade of a friendly deodar which gave a touch of
-the Orient to the northwestern postal district and there
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>they sat for one sweet and memorable hour. Perhaps
-it was the sweetest, most memorable hour that
-life so far had given them. She admired this man
-of hers in a way she had long ceased expecting to
-admire him; she was proud of him, she was grateful
-to him for the great sacrifice he was making. And
-when the inner Corporal had been comforted, a crude
-fellow who has to be humored even in moments of
-feeling, and he had lit a Blackhampton Straight Cut,
-a famous sedative known from Bond Street to Bagdad,
-he took the hand of the honest woman opposite.</p>
-
-<p>Somehow he was glad to think that she belonged
-to him. The rather pale face, the careworn eyes,
-the tired smile were all he had to nerve him for the
-task ahead. These his only talisman in this grim hour.
-Yet, a true knight, he asked no more. She was his,
-a homely thing but a good and faithful one, who
-had once believed in him, who had come to believe
-in him again. He was able to recall the sacrifices
-she had made for him, for her faith in him, for her
-vision of him. As he looked across at her he felt
-content to bear the gauge of this honest, doggedly
-courageous woman who had helped to buckle on his
-armor. He must see that he didn&rsquo;t disgrace her.</p>
-
-<p>There was not much to say to one another. At the
-best of times they were seldom articulate. But she
-was able to tell him that she would be very lonely
-without him. And she made him promise solemnly
-to do his best to come back to her safely.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span></p>
-<p>&ldquo;You mean it?&rdquo; He knew she meant it, but he
-allowed himself the luxury of embarrassing her.
-There was a subtle pleasure in it, even if it was not
-quite fair.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You know I do, Bill. I&rsquo;ll be that lonely.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Poor old girl! Of course she would be lonely. It
-made him sigh a little when he thought how lonely
-she would be. He looked at her with a rather queer
-softness in his eyes. Their marriage seemed to have
-brought them no luck in anything. A time there had
-been, a time less than a year ago, when he had felt
-very thankful that there had been no children to hasten
-their steady, hopeless drift downhill. Now, however,
-it was a different story. Poor Melia! Her hand
-responded to the pressure of his fingers; and a large
-tear crept slowly into eyes that had known them perhaps
-too seldom.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never mind, Mother,&rdquo; he said softly. &ldquo;I mean
-to come back.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Bill.&rdquo; The words had a curious intensity.
-&ldquo;I mean you to. I&rsquo;ve set my mind on it. And if
-you really set your mind on a thing happening&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He loved the spirit in her, even if he felt obliged to
-touch wood as a concession to the manes of wisdom.
-It didn&rsquo;t do to boast in times like these.</p>
-
-<p>Presently they noticed that the heat was less. Bill
-looked again at his watch and then they realized that
-the hour of parting had drawn much nearer. Reluctantly
-they got up and left the gardens, so putting an
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>end to an hour of life they would never forget. Then
-arm in arm they walked to Euston which was not far
-off, where the Corporal retrieved his kit from the
-Canteen and exchanged a valedictory smile with a
-R.S.P., although he didn&rsquo;t feel like smiling. Thence
-by Tube to Waterloo. It was their first experience
-of this medium of travel. Even in Blackhampton,
-in so many ways the home of modernity, Tubes were
-unknown; they seemed exclusively, rather bewilderingly,
-metropolitan.</p>
-
-<p>The attendant Genie had to be watchful indeed to
-prevent their going all round London en route from
-Euston to Waterloo, but it was so alive to its duties
-that they were only once baffled and then but temporarily.
-Thus in the end they found themselves on
-a seat on Platform Six with a full hour to wait for
-the Southampton train.</p>
-
-<p>She left him at the carriage door, a few minutes
-before he was due out on his own grim journey, so
-that she might have plenty of time to catch the train
-for the north. Minute instructions had to be given
-to enable her to do this, for London is a bewildering
-maze to those not up to its ways. But the Corporal&rsquo;s
-lady had a typical Blackhampton head, a thing cool,
-resolute, hardy in the presence of any severe demand
-upon it; and he was quite sure, and she was quite
-sure, that she would be able to catch the 8:55 from
-Euston, no matter what traps were laid for her.</p>
-
-<p>It was a very simple good-by, but yet they were
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>torn by it in a way they had hardly expected. She
-with her worn face and tired eyes was all there was
-to hold him to life&mdash;she and a terrible, impersonal
-sense of duty which seemed to frighten him almost.
-As he watched the drab figure disappear among the
-crowd on the long platform he couldn&rsquo;t help wondering....</p>
-
-<p>But it was no use wondering. He must set his
-teeth and get his head down and try to stick it no
-matter what the dark fates had in store.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXVI">XXVI</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE Corporal even at his best was not a great
-hand at writing letters. And the series he
-wrote from France did not flatter his powers. Really
-they told hardly anything and that which they did
-tell might have been far more vividly rendered. Still
-in the eyes of Melia they were precious; and they did
-something to soften months of loneliness and toil.</p>
-
-<p>One other gleam there was in that sore time; a
-fitful one, no doubt, and the ray it cast upon her life
-so dubious, that, all things considered, it meant small
-comfort. Yet, perhaps, it may have been wrong not
-to accept this doubtful boon more gratefully.</p>
-
-<p>One morning, about a fortnight after Bill&rsquo;s departure
-for France, her father paid one of his periodical
-visits to Love Lane. Since W. Hollis Fruiterer had
-taken a turn for the better he was content with a
-monthly survey instead of a weekly one in order to
-assure himself that the enterprise was shipshape and
-its affairs in order.</p>
-
-<p>Melia&rsquo;s reception of her father was invariably cool.
-She had a proud, unyielding nature, and Josiah&rsquo;s
-tardy concession to the sternness of the times even if
-it had thawed the ice a little had not really melted
-it. Neither was quite at ease in the presence of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>other; in both was a smoldering resentment and the
-spirit of unforgiveness.</p>
-
-<p>The books, on inspection, proved to be in very fair
-order. They were carefully and neatly kept and, in
-comparison with the state of affairs before a business
-man came on the scene to direct them, they
-showed a refreshing change for the better. The accounts
-had been made up to the half year. And as
-a result of eight months trading under new conditions
-there was a clear profit of forty-five pounds after
-a full allowance for expenses.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah expressed himself well satisfied. In common
-with the great majority of his race, material
-success was the shrine at which he worshiped. Success
-in this case, moreover, was doubly gratifying;
-it lent point to his own foresight and judgment and
-it exhibited a latent capacity in his eldest daughter.
-Time alone would be able to disperse the bitterness
-he cherished against her in his heart, but it did him
-good to feel that she was not wholly a fool and that
-in some quite important particulars she was a chip
-of the old block.</p>
-
-<p>He congratulated her solemnly in the manner of a
-Chairman of Directors addressing a General Manager
-and hoped she would go on as she had begun. Resentful
-as she still was, she was secretly flattered by
-the compliment; and she hastened to offer to repay the
-sum he had advanced for the satisfaction of the former
-creditors.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let it stand over,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;until your position&rsquo;s
-a bit firmer.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She insisted, but he was not to be shaken; and
-then, as was his way when at a loss for an argument,
-he gave the contest of wills a new, unexpected turn.
-&ldquo;Doing anything particular Sunday afternoon?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>No, she was not doing a thing particular.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Better come up home and have a cup of tea with
-us.&rdquo; Then in a tone less impersonal: &ldquo;Your mother
-would like to see you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The blood rushed over Melia&rsquo;s face. At first she
-feigned not to hear, but that did not help her. Dignity
-had many demands to make, but the brusque insistence
-of this father of hers seemed to cut away the
-ground on which it stood.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Say what time and I&rsquo;ll send the car for you.&ldquo;</p>
-
-<p>The tone was so final that anything she could raise
-in the way of protest seemed weakly ridiculous. But
-the car for <i>her</i>! She didn&rsquo;t want the car and she
-mustered force enough to say so.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Might as well have it. Doing nothing Sunday.
-Save you a climb up the hill this hot weather.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Of one thing, however, she was quite sure. She
-didn&rsquo;t want the car. This recent and remarkable expression
-of her father&rsquo;s wealth and ever-growing social
-importance had taken the form of a superb motor
-and a smart lady chauffeur in the neatest of green
-liveries which already she had happened to see on
-two occasions in Waterloo Square. No, such a ve<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>hicle
-was not for her; and she contrived to say so with
-the bluntness demanded by the circumstances, yet
-tempered a little by a certain regard for anything her
-father might be able to muster in the way of feelings.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Might as well make use of it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Eating
-its head off Sunday afternoon.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But she remained quite firm. The car was not for
-her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s there for you if you want it.&rdquo; His air
-was majestic. &ldquo;Better pay that money into the bank.
-And I shall tell your mother to expect you Sunday
-tea time.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was left at that. He had gained both his points.
-The third was subsidiary; it didn&rsquo;t matter. All the
-same it was like Josiah to raise it as a cover for those
-that did.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXVII">XXVII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">M</span>ELIA was frankly annoyed with herself for
-not having put up a better resistance. The
-sight of her father strutting down the street with
-the honors of war upon him was a little too much for
-her. He had been guilty of sixteen years of tyrannical
-cruelty and she was unable to forgive. In those
-sixteen years she had suffered bitterly and her stubborn
-nature had great powers of resentment.</p>
-
-<p>Who was he that he should walk down Love Lane
-not merely as if he owned it&mdash;in sober truth he now
-owned half&mdash;but also the souls of the people who lived
-there? She could not help resenting that invincible
-flare, that overweening success, particularly when she
-compared it with the fecklessness of the man she had
-so imprudently married. After all, she was the first-born
-of this vain image and she knew his shortcomings
-better than he knew them himself. He had had
-more than his share of luck. No matter what the
-world might think of him, however fortune might
-treat him, he was not worthy of the position he had
-come to occupy.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the ponderous broadcloth back had
-turned the corner of Love Lane and was lost in that
-strong-moving stream, Mulcaster Road, she made up
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>her mind that she would not go up to tea on Sunday
-afternoon. It was not that he really cared whether
-she went or not; had he done so he would have asked
-her sooner. Maybe his conscience was pricking him
-a bit, but he was not one to be much troubled in that
-way. In any case let it hurt him&mdash;so much the better
-if it did. This was a matter in which she would
-like him to be hurt as he had never been hurt before.</p>
-
-<p>Here again, however, her father had an unfair advantage.
-If she stayed away on Sunday she might
-punish him a little&mdash;and even that was doubtful&mdash;but
-she would certainly punish her mother far more.
-And she had not the slightest wish to do that. She
-was sorry for her mother, whose sins of omission
-sprang from weakness of character. Nature had
-placed her in a very different category. She had
-fought this tyrant as hard as it was in her to fight
-any one, but she was one of nature&rsquo;s underlings whose
-lot was always to be trampled on.</p>
-
-<p>Alas, if Melia didn&rsquo;t turn up on Sunday it was her
-mother who would suffer. And it was a matter in
-which she had suffered too much already. Melia had
-no particular affection now remaining for her mother;
-she even despised her for being so poor a creature,
-but at least her only crime was weakness and it was
-hardly fair that she should endure more than was necessary.
-Melia&rsquo;s was rather a masculine nature in some
-ways; at any rate her father and she had one trait
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>in common. They had a sense of justice. Hence she
-was now on the horns of a dilemma.</p>
-
-<p>It was not until Sunday itself, after morning service
-at Saint George&rsquo;s, that the decision was finally
-made. And then fortified by Mr. Bontine, a clergyman
-for whom Melia had a regard, she decided much
-against her inclination to go up to The Rise in the
-afternoon. It was a reluctant decision, made in soreness
-of heart; the only satisfaction to be got out of
-it would arise from the dubious process which the
-reverend gentleman described as &ldquo;conquest of self.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She set out rather later than she meant to, in a
-decidedly heavy mood. And it was not made lighter
-by the fact that the afternoon was sultry with the
-promise of thunder, and that the long and tedious
-climb to The Rise had to be made without the help
-of the tram on which she had counted. Long before
-the trams from the Market Place had reached the
-end of Love Lane they were full to overflowing, as
-she ought to have known they would be on a fine
-Sunday afternoon in the middle of the summer. In
-the process of painfully mounting the stuffy length
-of mean streets to achieve the space and grandeur of
-The Rise she grew vexed and hot. When at last
-she reached the famous eminence she was far indeed
-from the frame of mind proper to the paying of a
-call in its exclusive society. But it served her right.
-She should have stayed at home, or at least have allowed
-the motor to be sent for her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As it was, it was nearly five o&rsquo;clock when, limp
-and fagged, she came at last in view of the many-windowed,
-much-gabled elevation of Strathfieldsaye.
-In spite of herself the sight of it made her feel nervous.
-It was the home of her father and mother, but
-its note of grandeur gave her a cruel sense of her
-own inadequacy. At the brilliantly painted gate she
-lingered a moment. Courage was called for to walk
-up the broad gravel path as far as the porch with its
-fine oak door studded with brass nails.</p>
-
-<p>At last, however, she went up and rang the bell.
-An extremely grand parlor maid received her almost
-scornfully, and led her across a slippery but superb
-entrance hall which was disconcertingly magnificent.
-It was hard to grasp at that moment that such an interior
-was the creation of her commonplace parents,
-harder still to believe that this servant whose clothes
-and manners were superior to her own was at their
-beck and call.</p>
-
-<p>However, she would go through the ordeal now she
-had got so far. But this afternoon luck was heavily
-against her. The ordeal proved to be more severe
-than even her gloomiest moments had foreshadowed.
-She was ushered just as she was, in her shabby hat
-and much mended gloves, straight into the drawing-room
-into the midst of company. And the company
-was of the kind she would have given much to avoid.</p>
-
-<p>She had hoped that she might find her mother alone,
-or at the worst, drinking tea with her father. In<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>stead,
-the first person she saw was the insufferable
-Gertrude Preston, that mass of airs and graces which
-always enabled their wearer to stand out in Melia&rsquo;s
-mind as all that a woman ought not to be. And as
-if the sight of Gertrude was not sufficiently chilling
-and embarrassing, the second person she realized as
-being present was her own stuck-up sister Ethel, invariably
-known in the family as Mrs. Doctor Cockburn.
-She was accompanied, however, by her two
-children, little peacocks of six and seven, spoiled
-fluffy masses of pink ribbons and conceit.</p>
-
-<p>Last of all was her mother. She was always last
-in any assembly. Somehow she never seemed to
-count. In the old days even in her own home she could
-always be talked down, or put out of countenance or
-elbowed to the wall; and now, after the flight of
-years, in these grand surroundings, she had not altered
-in the least. She still had the eyes of a rabbit
-and a fat hand that wobbled; and on Melia&rsquo;s entrance
-into the room Gerty and Ethel at once took the lead
-of her in the way they had always taken it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why, I do declare!&rdquo; Gerty rose at once with
-cleverly simulated surprise tempered by a certain
-stock brand of archness, kept always on tap, and unfailingly
-effective in moments of sudden crisis or
-emotional tension. &ldquo;How are you, Amelia?&rdquo; She
-would have liked to offer her cheek, but the look in
-Amelia&rsquo;s eyes forbade her risking it. Therefore, a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>hand had to suffice, an elegant hand, but a wary one
-which met with scant ceremony.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel, Mrs. Doctor Cockburn, also rose, but not
-immediately. &ldquo;Glad to see you, Amelia.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Melia knew it was a lie on Ethel&rsquo;s part, and had
-she had a little more self-possession might have been
-moved to say so.</p>
-
-<p>The three daughters of Mr. Josiah Munt marked
-three stages in his meteoric career. Melia, the eldest,
-was the child of the primitive era. Compared with
-her sisters she was almost a savage. Between her
-and Ethel had been a boy, Josiah, whose birth had
-nearly killed Maria and who had died untimely in his
-babyhood. She was not allowed in consequence to
-bear any more children for ten years, and Ethel was
-the natural fruit of the interregnum. Ethel was generally
-allowed to be the masterpiece of the family.
-Five years after her had come Sally who perhaps in
-point of time and opportunity should have put out the
-light even of Ethel; but in her case it seemed the
-blessed word progress had moved a little too fast.
-Sally, as the world knew only too well, was over-educated;
-from the uplands of high intellectual development
-Sally had slipped over the precipice into a mental
-and moral abyss.</p>
-
-<p>From the social and even the physical standpoint
-Ethel was indubitably the pick of Mr. Josiah Munt&rsquo;s
-three daughters. And Mrs. Doctor&rsquo;s rather frigid
-reception of her eldest sister showed a nice perception
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>of the fact. Amelia had thrown her back to a prehistoric
-phase. She had something of the air and manner
-of a charwoman. When she entered the room,
-little shivers had crept down Ethel&rsquo;s sensitive spine.
-She could hardly bear to look at her.</p>
-
-<p>Melia also felt very uncomfortable. She couldn&rsquo;t
-find a word to say and the children stared at her. But
-she sat on the edge of a chair that Gerty provided; tea,
-bread and butter and cake were given her; she began
-to eat and drink mechanically, but still she felt
-strangely hostile and unhappy. She resented the
-bright plumage, the amazing prosperity of those
-among whom she had been born; above all, she resented
-Ethel&rsquo;s superciliousness and Gerty&rsquo;s patronage.
-Ethel, of course, had a right to be supercilious, and
-that fact was an added barb. Her light shone. SHE
-was the only one who had shed any luster on the family;
-her marriage with a doctor rising to eminence in
-the town was a model of judicious ambition. Ethel
-&ldquo;had done very well for herself,&rdquo; and even the set
-of her hat, black tulle and white feathers and the opulent
-lines of her spotted muslin dress, seemed to proclaim
-it. Her bearing completed the picture. She
-had not been in the same room with Amelia for many
-years, although she had passed her once or twice in
-the street without speaking; and at the moment her
-judicious mind was fully engaged with the problem
-as to whether Gwenneth and Gwladys could or could
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>not call her &ldquo;Auntie.&rdquo; Finally, but not at once, the
-answer was in the negative.</p>
-
-<p>Amelia, without a word to say for herself, and
-suffering acutely from a social awkwardness which
-a lonely life in sordid circumstances had made much
-worse, was altogether out of it. Ethel and Gerty had
-charm and elegance; they spoke a different language;
-they might have belonged to a different race. Amelia&rsquo;s
-natural ally should have been her mother. They had
-much in common but that depressed and inefficient
-woman was nearly as tongue-tied as her eldest daughter.
-Ethel and Gerty were almost as far beyond the
-range of Maria as they were beyond the range of
-Amelia; their expensive clothes and their correct talk
-of This and That and These and Those, with clear,
-high-pitched intonation filled her with dismay. Maria,
-even in her own drawing-room, was in such awe of
-them that she could make no overtures to Amelia, although
-she simply longed to point to the vacant sofa
-beside her and to say, &ldquo;Come and sit over here, my
-dear.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The eldest daughter of the house bitterly regretted
-the folly that had brought her among them again after
-so many years of outlawry. But in a few minutes
-her father came in and then she got on better. He
-was the real cause of her present sufferings, but his
-own freedom from self-consciousness or the least tendency
-to pose amid surroundings which seemed to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>crave that form of weakness was exactly what the situation
-called for.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hulloa, Melia,&rdquo; he said heartily. &ldquo;Pleased to see
-you, gel.&rdquo; His lips saluted her cheek with a loud
-smack. There was not a suspicion of false shame
-about him. He was master in his own house at any
-rate. And when he made up his mind to do a thing
-he did it thoroughly. &ldquo;What do you think on &rsquo;em?&rdquo;
-He pointed to his grandchildren rather proudly.
-&ldquo;That&rsquo;s Gwennie. And that&rsquo;s Gladdie. This is your
-Auntie Melia.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The ears of Mrs. Doctor Cockburn began to burn
-a little as the eyes of Gwennie and Gladdie grew
-rounder and rounder.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gladdie favors her ma. Don&rsquo;t you think so, eh?
-And they&rsquo;ve both got a look of Grandma&mdash;what?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I see a look of you, you know, Josiah,&rdquo; said
-Auntie Gerty with an air of immense discretion.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Um. Maybe. Have they had any strawberries,
-Grandma?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Their mother thought they ought not to have strawberries,
-but their grandfather was convinced that a
-few would not hurt them and chose half a dozen himself
-from a blue dish on the tea table and presented
-them personally.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There, Gwenneth, what do you say?&rdquo; Mrs. Doctor
-Cockburn&rsquo;s own mouth was full of prunes and
-prisms. &ldquo;Thank you what&mdash;thank you, Grandpa.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a good little gel.&rdquo; There was a geniality,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>an indulgence, in the tone of Josiah that he had never
-thought of extending to his own children in their nursery
-days. &ldquo;And I tell you what, Ma&mdash;if they get
-a pain under their pinnies they must blame their old
-grand-dad.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Altogether, a pleasant episode, and to everybody,
-Gwenneth and Gwladys included, a welcome diversion.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Have some more tea, Melia.&rdquo; Her father took her
-cup from her in spite of the protest her tongue was
-unable to utter and handed it to the inefficient lady
-in charge of the teapot. &ldquo;And you must have a few
-strawberries. Fresh picked out of the garden. Ethel,
-touch that bell.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Doctor, with an air of resolute fineladyism,
-pressed the electric button at her elbow. The grand
-parlor maid entered with a smile of imperfectly concealed
-cynicism.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Alice, more cream!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Melia wondered how even her father was able to
-address Alice in that way; but his coolness ministered
-to the reluctant respect he was arousing in her by his
-manly attitude to his own grandeur.</p>
-
-<p>The cream appeared. Gwenneth and Gwladys were
-forbidden to have any&mdash;their lives so far had been a
-series of negations and inhibitions&mdash;but Melia had
-some, although she didn&rsquo;t want it, but the will of her
-father was greater than her powers of resistance. And
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>then he said to her, "When you&rsquo;ve had your tea, I&rsquo;ll
-show you the greenus.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Conservatory, Josiah,&rdquo; said Aunt Gerty with an
-arch preen of features and a show of plumage. &ldquo;Much
-too big for a mere greenhouse.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Greenus is more homelike, Gert. What do you
-say, Mother?&rdquo; He laughed almost gayly at Maria.
-The eldest daughter was amazed at the change that
-seemed to be coming over her father. In the dismal
-days of drudgery and gloomy terrorism at the public
-house in Waterloo Square which now seemed so far
-away in the past, there was not a trace of this large
-and rich geniality. Prosperity, power, worldly success
-must have mellowed her father as well as enlarged
-him. He seemed so much bigger now, so much riper,
-he seemed to care more for others.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel and Gertrude were quite put into the shade
-by the force and the heartiness of Josiah, but Mrs.
-Doctor was not one lightly to play second fiddle to
-any member of her own family. &ldquo;I hear,&rdquo; she said,
-pitching her voice upon an almost perilous note of
-fashion&mdash;there was even a suspicion of a drawl which
-brought an involuntary curl to Melia&rsquo;s lip&mdash;&ldquo;that
-young Nixey, the architect, has been recommended
-for the M.C.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Has he so?&rdquo; Josiah&rsquo;s eye lighted up over his
-suspended teacup. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve always said there was something
-in that young Nixey. And I&rsquo;m not often mis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>taken.
-He designed that row of cottages I built down
-Bush Lane.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A row of cottages in Bush Lane, have you, Josiah?&rdquo;
-said Aunt Gerty with an air of statesmanlike
-interest. &ldquo;You seem to be what they call going into
-bricks and mortar.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You bet I am&mdash;for some time now. And bricks
-and mortar are not going to get less in value if this
-war keeps on, take it from me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose not,&rdquo; said Mrs. Doctor Cockburn, a
-judge of values.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve one regret.&rdquo; It was not like Josiah to harbor
-regrets of any kind, and Aunt Gerty visibly adjusted
-her mind to hear something memorable.
-&ldquo;That young Nixey&rsquo;s as smart as paint. I nearly
-let him have the contract for this house. In some
-ways he might have suited us better.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But this house is splendid,&rdquo; said Gerty with flagrant
-optimism. She knew in her heart that the house
-was too splendid.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Young Nixey&rsquo;s idea was something neater, more
-in the Mossop style. I didn&rsquo;t see at the time, so I
-got Rawlins to do it to my own design. Of course,
-what I didn&rsquo;t like about Nixey was that he would
-have it that he knew better than I did, and I&rsquo;m not
-sure&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Josiah hovered on the brink of a very
-remarkable admission.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t agree, Josiah. This house is almost perfect.&rdquo;
-The specious Gertrude was amazed that he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>of all men should be so near a confession that he
-might have been wrong. Dark influences were at
-work in him evidently.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I agree with you, Father.&rdquo; Mrs. Doctor had
-nothing of Gerty&rsquo;s finesse. &ldquo;The Gables is so refined,
-a house for a gentleman.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t know about that,&rdquo; Josiah frowned. &ldquo;Never
-heard of a house being refined. Comes to that, this
-place is good enough for me, any time.&rdquo; If he went
-so far as to own that he might have been wrong it
-was clearly the duty of others to hasten to contradict
-him. &ldquo;But The Gables is more compact. More comfort
-somehow, and less show.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Stands in less ground, must have cost less,&rdquo; said
-Gerty softly. &ldquo;Compared to Strathfieldsaye, The Gables
-to my mind is rather niggardly.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That is so, Gert.&rdquo; He nodded approvingly. She
-was always there with the right word. &ldquo;All the same
-I believe in that young Nixey. Started, you know,
-at the Council School. Won a scholarship at the
-University. Why, I remember his mother when she
-used to come to the Duke of Wellington and sew for
-Maria. Done everything for himself. And now he&rsquo;s
-a commissioned officer in the B.B. Give honor where
-honor&rsquo;s due, I say.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gerty and Ethel agreed, perhaps a little reluctantly.
-Maria expressed a tacit approval. And then Melia
-made the discovery that her mind had wandered as
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>far as France; and for a moment or so the world&rsquo;s
-pressure upon her felt a little less stifling.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Wonderful, how that young man&rsquo;s got on!&rdquo; There
-was reverence in the tone of Gerty whose religion
-was &ldquo;getting on.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is.&rdquo; Josiah was emphatic. &ldquo;You can&rsquo;t hold
-some people back. I give him another ten years to
-be the first architect in this town ... if he comes
-through This.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a big &lsquo;if.&rsquo;&rdquo; Before the words were out of
-Gerty&rsquo;s mouth she remembered Amelia&rsquo;s husband and
-wished them unsaid. She had not had the courage to
-mention William Hollis with poor Amelia so rigidly
-on the defensive, but she had hoped that some one
-would introduce the subject so that a tribute might be
-paid him. But no one had done so, and now that
-Josiah was there the time seemed to have gone by.
-His views in regard to Amelia&rsquo;s husband were far
-too definite to be challenged lightly.</p>
-
-<p>Interest in young Nixey, the architect, began to
-wane and then suddenly Ethel startled them all by
-the statement that she had just had a letter from
-Sally.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah&rsquo;s geniality promptly received a coating of
-ice. His mouth closed like a trap. Sally had not
-been forgiven by her father and those who knew him
-best had the least hope that she would be. Her conduct
-had struck him in a very tender place, and Gerty
-could not help thinking that it was most imprudent
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>of Ethel to mention Sally in his presence in any circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel, however, had long ceased to fear her father.
-For one thing, in the eyes of the world her position
-was too secure. Besides, she was obtuse. Where angels,
-etc., Mrs. Doctor could always be trusted to
-walk with a certain measure of assurance, mainly because
-she didn&rsquo;t see things and feel things in the way
-that most people did. For that reason she was not
-at all disconcerted by the silence that followed her
-announcement. And she supplemented it with another
-which compelled Gerty, the adroit, to steal a veiled
-glance at the sphinx-like face of her brother-in-law.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She writes from Serbia, giving a long and wonderful
-account of her doings with the Red Cross. I
-think I have her letter with me.&rdquo; Ethel opened a
-green morocco bag that was on the sofa beside her.
-&ldquo;Yes ... here it is ... a long account. Care to
-read it, Father?&rdquo; She offered the letter unconcernedly
-to Josiah.</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head somberly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not read it now.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let me leave it with you. Well worth reading.
-But I&rsquo;d like to have it back.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, take it with you, gel.&rdquo; The words were
-sharp. &ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t much time for reading anything these
-days. Happen I&rsquo;ll lose it or something.&rdquo; It was
-lame and obvious, but Josiah had been taken too much
-by surprise to do anything better. Gerty was annoyed
-with Ethel. She had no right to be so tact<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>less.
-None knew so well as Ethel the state of the
-case in regard to Sally. At the same time Gerty&rsquo;s
-respect for Josiah which amounted to genuine regard
-was a little wounded. He ought to have been big
-enough to have read the letter.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel had contrived to banish the ease and the sunshine
-from the proceedings. The light of genial humor
-in the eyes of her father yielded to the truculence
-of that earlier epoch so familiar to Amelia. It
-was a great pity that it should be so; and after a
-tense moment the gallant Gerty did her best to pour
-oil on the vexed waters. &ldquo;The other day in the
-<i>Tribune</i> they were praising you finely, Josiah.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Was they?&rdquo; The King&rsquo;s English was not his
-strong point in moments of tension. But in any moment,
-as Gerty knew, he had his share of the legitimate
-vanity of the rising publicist. &ldquo;What did they
-say?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The <i>Tribune</i> said you deserved well, not only of
-your fellow townsmen, but of the country at large
-for the excellent work you had done in the last nine
-months for the national cause. They said your work
-on the Recruiting and Munitions Committees had
-been most valuable.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah was visibly mollified by this piping. &ldquo;Very
-decent of the <i>Tribune</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll make an excellent mayor, Josiah. Your
-turn next year, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah nodded. The light came again into his eyes.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no saying what sort of a mayor I&rsquo;ll make.
-It&rsquo;s a stiff job when you come to tackle it. Big responsibility
-in times like these.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are not the man to shirk responsibility.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah allowed that he was not, but the office of
-mayor in a place like Blackhampton in times like
-these was no sinecure for a man with a sense of civic
-duty. Once more he clouded. From what he heard
-things were looking pretty bad. If England was going
-to win the war she should have to find a better
-set of brains.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But surely the Allies are quite as clever as the
-Germans?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They may be, but they haven&rsquo;t shown it so far.
-We are a scratch lot of amateurs against a team of
-trained professionals. The raw material is just as
-good, if not better, but it takes time to lick it in to
-shape. And we&rsquo;ve got to learn to use it.&rdquo; His gloom
-deepened. &ldquo;Still we shall never give in to the Hun
-... not in a hundred years.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Ethel concurred in this robust sentiment. And then
-again she obtusely referred to Sally&rsquo;s letter. It was
-such a wonderful letter that her father really ought
-to read it. He was clearly annoyed by her tactless
-persistence. In order to cloak his feelings he called
-upon Melia in the old peremptory way to come and
-look at his tomatoes.</p>
-
-<p>As they rose for that purpose, Mrs. Doctor Cockburn
-rose also. She must really be going; it was the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>cook&rsquo;s evening out. Gwenneth and Gwladys were
-bidden to say good-by to Grandpa. They did so shyly
-but rather prettily.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Now let me see you shake hands with your Auntie
-Melia,&rdquo; said Josiah.</p>
-
-<p>Gwenneth and Gwladys accomplished this task less
-successfully. They were half terrified by this shabby,
-gloomy, silent woman who had not a word to say.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXVIII">XXVIII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">W</span>EEKS went by and Melia settled down to a
-hard and lonely winter in Love Lane. She
-missed Bill sadly now he was no longer there. Absence
-had conferred all sorts of virtues upon him.
-She quite forgot that for many years and up till very
-recently she could hardly bear the sight of him about
-the place. Their relations as man and wife had entered
-upon a new and very remarkable phase.</p>
-
-<p>About once a fortnight or so life was made a bit
-lighter for her by a penciled scrawl from somewhere
-in France. Bill&rsquo;s letters told surprisingly little, yet
-he maintained a kind of grim cheeriness and seemed
-more concerned for the life she might be leading than
-for anything that was happening to himself. He was
-very grateful for the small comforts she sent him
-from time to time, he was much interested in the continued
-prosperity of the business, and he mentioned
-with evident pleasure that her mother had sent him
-a pair of socks and a comforter she had knitted herself,
-also a &ldquo;nice letter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>From his mother-in-law, whom Bill had always suspected
-of being a good sort at heart, &ldquo;if the Old Un
-would give her a chance,&rdquo; he had an account of Melia&rsquo;s
-visit to Strathfieldsaye. Her mother said what plea<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>sure
-it would give her father if she would go there
-every Sunday. The statement was incredible on the
-face of it; Bill frankly didn&rsquo;t know what to think,
-but there it was. No doubt the old girl meant kindly.
-Perhaps it was her idea of bucking him up.</p>
-
-<p>In his letters to Melia he made no comment on the
-life he was leading, but in one he told her that they
-had moved up into the Line; in another that &ldquo;the
-Boche had got it in the neck&rdquo;; in another that &ldquo;he
-had got the rheumatics so that he could hardly move,&rdquo;
-but that he meant to carry on as long as possible,
-adding, &ldquo;We are very short of men.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Somehow the letters of that dark winter made her
-more proud than ever of this man of hers. There
-was a determined note of quiet cheerfulness that she
-had never known in him before. Instead of the eternal
-grumbling that had done so much to embitter her,
-there was a tone of whimsical humor which at a time
-made her laugh, although as a general rule few people
-found it harder than she did to laugh at anything.
-She had little imagination, still less of the penetration
-of mind that goes with it, but there was one
-phrase he used that was hard to forget. In one letter
-he was tempted to complain that the Boche had
-taken to raiding them in the middle of the night, but
-he added a postscript, &ldquo;It&rsquo;s no use growsing here.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Somehow that phrase stuck in her mind. When
-she rose before daylight in the bitter mornings of
-midwinter to light the kitchen fire and prepare a meal
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>she would have to eat alone, she would remember
-those words which he of all men had used, he who was
-a born growser if ever there was one. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s no use
-growsing here.&rdquo; She tried to take in their meaning,
-but the task was not easy. He wrote so cheerfully
-that he could hardly mean what he said. And it was
-his nearest approach to complaint, he whose life in
-peace time had been one long complaint. Now and
-again she read in the <i>Tribune</i> of things that made
-her shiver. Sometimes in the winter darkness she
-awoke with these things in her mind. Bill&rsquo;s letters,
-however, gave no details. If he spoke of &ldquo;a scrap,&rdquo;
-he did so casually, without embroidery, yet she remembered
-that once when he had cut his thumb, not
-very badly, he fainted at the sight of blood.</p>
-
-<p>Such letters were a puzzle; they told so little. She
-couldn&rsquo;t make them out. Reading between the lines,
-he seemed to be enjoying life more than he had ever
-done, he seemed to realize the humor of it more. It
-was very strange that it should be so, especially on the
-part of one who had always taken things so hard.
-In one letter he said that spring was coming and that
-the look of the sky made him think of the crocuses
-along Sharrow Lane, and then added as a brief postscript,
-&ldquo;Stanning&rsquo;s gone.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Some weeks later he wrote from the Base to say
-that &ldquo;he had had a whiff of gas, nothing to speak of,&rdquo;
-but that he was out of the Line for a bit. And then
-after a cheerful letter or two in the meantime, he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>wrote a month later to say that he had got leave for
-ten days and that he was coming home.</p>
-
-<p>It was the middle of June when he turned up in
-Love Lane late one evening, without notice, laden
-like a beast of burden, looking very brown and well
-but terribly worn and shabby. So much had he
-changed in appearance that Melia felt it would have
-been easy to pass him in the street without recognizing
-him. He was thin and gray, even his features,
-and particularly his eyes, seemed to have altered. The
-tone of his voice was different; he spoke in a different
-way; the words and phrases he used were not
-those of the William Hollis she had always known.</p>
-
-<p>He was glad to be back in his home, if only for a
-few days, and the sight of him with his heavy pack
-and his gas mask and his helmet laid on the new linoleum
-in the little sitting room behind the shop gave
-her a deeper pleasure than anything life had offered
-her so far. Strange as he was, new almost to the
-point of being somebody else, the mere sight of him
-thrilled her. She was thrilled to the verge of happiness.
-It was something beyond any previous emotion.
-Long ago she had given up believing that ever
-again he would appeal to her in the way of that brief
-time which had been once and had passed so soon.</p>
-
-<p>He took off his heavy boots and lit his pipe and
-seemed childishly glad to be home again. But he
-didn&rsquo;t talk much. He sighed luxuriously and smiled
-at her in his odd new way, yet he was interested in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>the excellent supper she gave him presently and in
-the account she furnished of the business which was
-still on an ascending curve of prosperity. The old
-wound, still unhealed, would not allow her to praise
-her father, but there was more than one instance to
-offer of that tardy repentance; and it was hard to
-repress a note of pride when she announced that he
-was now Mayor of Blackhampton and by all accounts
-a good one.</p>
-
-<p>She tried to get her husband to speak of France,
-but some instinct soon made it clear to her that he
-wanted to forget it. He could not be induced to speak
-of his experiences, made light of his &ldquo;whiff of gas,&rdquo;
-but confessed it was hell all the time; he also said
-that the German was not a clean fighter. As he sat
-opposite to her, eating his supper, his reticence made
-it impossible for her to realize what he had been
-through. He did not seem to realize it himself, except
-that in a subtle way he was altogether changed.</p>
-
-<p>He was eight days at home and they spent a lot
-of the time together. They had a new kind of intimacy;
-the world of men and affairs had altered for
-them both. Everything came to them at a fresh angle.
-They were dwellers in another atmosphere. The
-most commonplace actions meant much more; events
-once of comparatively large importance meant much
-less. She half suggested that they should go up on
-Sunday afternoon to Strathfieldsaye, but the idea
-evidently did not appeal to him and she did not press
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>it. Still she threw out the hint, because it was an
-opportunity to let bygones be bygones and she was sure
-that he would meet with a good reception. A sense
-of justice impelled her to be grateful to her father,
-much as she disliked him; in his domineering way he
-had tried to make amends; all the same she was not
-sorry that Bill was determined to hold himself aloof.
-It was not exactly that he bore a grudge against her
-father; at the point he had reached men did not bear
-grudges, but he had some decided views on the matter
-and they gained in power by not being expressed.</p>
-
-<p>On the afternoon of Wednesday, which was early
-closing day in Blackhampton, Bill insisted on taking
-Melia to the Art Gallery. It was in the historic low-roofed
-building in New Square&mdash;which dated from
-the Romans&mdash;known as the old Moot Hall. It was
-now the home of one of the finest collections of pictures
-in the country. Among ancient masterpieces
-and some modern ones were several characteristic examples
-of his friend, Stanning, R.A., whom he had
-carried dying into a dugout not four months ago.</p>
-
-<p>Corporal Hollis had it from Sergeant Stanning&rsquo;s
-own lips that the best picture he had ever painted was
-hung in the middle room, and that it was not the
-Sharrow at Corfield Weir, which the Corporal himself
-admired so much, but the smaller, less ambitious
-piece called, &ldquo;The Leaves of the Tree&rdquo;&mdash;a picture of
-the woods up at Dibley in the sunlight of October,
-stripped by the winds of autumn, with the bent figure
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>in the foreground of a very old man raking the dead
-leaves together.</p>
-
-<p>They had no difficulty in finding it. &ldquo;As the leaves
-of the trees are the lives of men.&rdquo; That legend on
-the gilt frame seemed to them both at that moment
-strangely, terribly prophetic. Bill did not tell Melia
-as they stood in front of the picture that he had risked
-his own life in a vain attempt to save the man who
-had painted it, nor did he tell her that the blood of
-the artist had dyed the sleeves of his tunic.</p>
-
-<p>The large room was empty and they sat down solemnly
-on the settee in front of this canvas, looking
-at it in silence, yet as they did so holding the hand
-of each other like a pair of children. Once before
-had they sat there, in the early days of their marriage,
-when he had talked to her of those ambitions
-that were never to materialize. And now, again, with
-the spirit of peace upon him and stirred by old memories,
-he sighed to himself and spoke for a moment
-or two of what might have been. One of these days
-he had hoped to do something. He had always intended
-to do something but the time had slipped away.</p>
-
-<p>They were still sitting there looking at the picture
-when two people came into the room. One was a
-commonplace elderly woman, the other a young man
-in khaki. Although they were totally unlike in the
-superficialities of outward bearing it was easy to tell
-that they were mother and son. His trained movements
-and upright carriage, his poise and alertness,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>were not able to conceal an odd resemblance to the
-wholly different person at his side.</p>
-
-<p>William and Melia were concealed by the high-backed,
-wide-armed settee on which they sat; and
-as these two people came up the room and took up
-a position behind it, they did not seem to realize that
-they could be overheard.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I want you, mother,&rdquo; said the young man in an
-eager voice, &ldquo;to look at what to my mind is the picture
-of this collection. Stand here and you&rsquo;ll get it
-just right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal and his lady on the high-backed settee
-offered a silent prayer that the young man had as much
-wisdom and taste as the owner of such a clear, confident
-voice ought to have. &ldquo;As the leaves of the
-tree are the lives of men.&rdquo; The Corporal breathed
-more freely; the young man&rsquo;s voice had not belied
-him. &ldquo;Homer&rsquo;s words.&rdquo; He reeled off pat a large-sounding
-foreign language. &ldquo;I want you to catch
-the ghost of the sun glancing through these wind-torn
-branches. You&rsquo;ll get the light if you stand just
-here. Wonderful composition ... wonderful vision
-... wonderful harmony ... wonderful everything.
-The big artists feel with their eyes.&rdquo; It was
-charming to hear the voice in its enthusiasm. &ldquo;They
-look behind the curtain of appearances as you might
-say. The life of man is but the shadow of a shadow
-... you remember that bit of Lucretius I read you
-last night? Look at the figure in the foreground gath<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>ering
-the leaves. Modern critics say symbolism is not
-art, but it depends on how it&rsquo;s done, doesn&rsquo;t it? The
-eyes of the mind ... imagination ... and that&rsquo;s
-the only key we have to the Riddle of the Sphinx.&rdquo;
-He ran on and on, laughing like a child. &ldquo;Look at
-his color. And how spacious!&mdash;imagination there!&mdash;the
-harmony, the drawing! A marvelous draughtsman.
-If he&rsquo;d lived he&rsquo;d have been a second Torrington,
-although you hear people say that Torrington
-couldn&rsquo;t draw.&rdquo; He laughed like a schoolboy and
-then his voice fell. &ldquo;I like to think that Jim Stanning
-was one of us, that he was born among us, and
-it&rsquo;s good to think that our old one-horse Art Committee
-has had the luck to buy his magnum opus without
-knowing it. They paid twice as much for Corfield
-Weir in the other room, which is not in the same
-class. However ... posterity....&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Prattling on and on the young man came round the
-corner of the settee, followed by the old lady.</p>
-
-<p>And then his flow of words failed suddenly as he
-caught a glimpse of William and Melia, whose presence
-he had been far from suspecting. His little start
-of guilt betrayed a feeling that he had made rather
-an ass of himself, for he said half shamefacedly,
-&ldquo;Come on, my dear, let&rsquo;s go and look at the Weir.
-We&rsquo;ll come back here later.&rdquo; The Corporal and his
-lady could only catch a glimpse of him as he led his
-mother abruptly into the next room; but Melia saw
-he was an officer with two pips on his sleeve and that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>his tunic was adorned with a tiny strip of white and
-purple ribbon with a star on it. In answer to her
-questions the Corporal was able to inform her that
-the young man was a Captain in the B.B. and that
-his decorations was the M.C. with Bar.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And he looks so young!&rdquo; said Melia.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A very good soldier,&rdquo; said the Corporal with a
-professional air.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who is he, Bill? I seem to remember his mother.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s young Nixey, the architect.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Of course! But his uniform had altered him. He
-looked so handsome. And that was Emma Nixey&mdash;Emma
-Price that was. How proud she must be to
-have a boy like that!</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s a good soldier.&rdquo; The deep voice of the Corporal
-broke in upon Melia&rsquo;s thoughts. &ldquo;A good soldier&mdash;that
-young feller.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Bill, you remember Emma Price that used to live
-at the bottom of Piper&rsquo;s Hill?&rdquo; There was a note
-of envy in the tone of Melia.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I remember old Price, the cobbler.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Emma was his eldest girl&mdash;no, not the eldest.
-Polly who married Ford, the ironmonger, was the
-eldest. Emma was the second. Married Harry Nixey,
-whose mother kept the all-sorts shop in Curwood
-Street. A drunken fellow, but very clever at his
-trade. Bolted with another woman when this lad
-Harold was twelve months old. Emma never saw nor
-heard of him again. Went to Australia, people said
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>at the time. But I&rsquo;ll say this for Emma, she was
-always a good plucked one.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was a moment of silence and then the Corporal
-demanded weightily, &ldquo;Has she any others?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s the only one. But brought up very respectable
-... she&rsquo;s managed to give him a rare good education.
-How she did it nobody knows. Tremendous
-worker, was Emma. But that boy does her credit, I
-must say.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He does that.&rdquo; The Corporal stared hard at the
-picture in front of him. &ldquo;Nothing like education.&rdquo;
-He sighed softly. &ldquo;If only I&rsquo;d had a bit of education
-I sometimes think I might have done something myself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXIX">XXIX</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">O</span>N the afternoon of the day before the Corporal
-returned to France he went with Melia by bus
-to Sharrow Bridge and they walked thence to Corfield
-Weir. Many hours had he spent with rod and
-tackle in this hallowed spot. Those were the only
-hours in his drab life that he would have desired to
-live over again. Many a good fish had he played in
-the bend of the river below the famous Corfield Glade,
-much commemorated by the local poets in whom the
-town and county were exceptionally rich. In particular
-there was the legend of the fair Mary Corfield
-who in the days of Queen Bess had cast herself
-for love of an honest yeoman into the deep waters
-of the Sharrow. From Bill&rsquo;s favorite tree, where
-from boyhood he had spun so many dreams that had
-come to naught, could be seen the high chimneys of
-the Old Hall, the home of the ill-fated Mary, about
-whose precincts her ghost still walked and was occasionally
-seen.</p>
-
-<p>The day was perfect, a rare golden opulence of sky
-and earth with a sheen of beauty on wood and field
-and flowing water. They came to the little gnarled
-clump of alders, his old-time friends, whom the swift-flowing
-Sharrow was always threatening to devour,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>and lay side by side in the shade, on the dry grass,
-listening to the great rats plopping into the cool water.</p>
-
-<p>Both were very silent at first; it was as if nature
-spoke to them in a new way. It was as if their eyes
-were bathed in a magical light. All the things around
-them were clearer in outline, brighter, sharper, more
-visible. Their ears, too, were attuned to a higher intensity.
-The swirl of the water, the rustle of leaves,
-the cry of the birds, the little voice of the wind, were
-more intimate, more harmonious, more audibly full
-of meaning. The world itself had never seemed so
-richly amazing, so gorgeously inexhaustible as at that
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>At last the Corporal broke a very long silence.
-&ldquo;Mother, it&rsquo;s something to have lived.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Melia did not answer at once, but presently she
-sighed a little and said, &ldquo;I wonder, Bill.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He plucked a spear of grass. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a rum thing
-to say, but if it hadn&rsquo;t been for this war I don&rsquo;t suppose
-I ever should have lived, really.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She didn&rsquo;t understand him, and her large round
-eyes, a little like those of a cow, told him so.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve always been thinking too much about it, you
-see.&rdquo; His voice was curiously gentle. &ldquo;All my life,
-as you might say, I&rsquo;ve always been telling myself what
-a wonderful day it was going to be to-morrow. But
-to-morrow never comes, you see. And you keep on
-thinking, thinking, until you suddenly find that to-morrow
-was yesterday. That&rsquo;s how it was with me.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>And if I hadn&rsquo;t had the guts to join up just when I
-did, my belief is I should never have lived at all.
-Understand me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She shook a placid head at him, not understanding
-him in the least. But this was the mood in which
-he had first captured her, in which he had first impressed
-her with his intellectual quality, for which, as
-a raw girl, who knew nothing about anything, she
-had had a sort of reverence. But as she had come to
-see, it was this very power of mind, which she had told
-herself was not shared by other, more common men,
-that had been his undoing, that had brought them
-both to the verge of ruin. It was fine and all that,
-but it didn&rsquo;t mean anything. It was just a kink in
-the machine which prevented it from working properly.</p>
-
-<p>The tears sprang to her eyes as she listened to him,
-and her youth and his came back to her, but she turned
-her face to the river so that he could not see it. Still
-it was not all pain to hear him talking. It was the
-old, old way that she had loved once and had since
-despised, but now lying there in the shade of those
-old trees, with the music of the Weir and the glory of
-the earth and the sky all about her, she loved again.
-Strange that it should be so! But the sad voice at
-her elbow blended marvelously with all the things
-she could see and hear. And what it said was quite
-true. By some miracle both were living now more
-fully than ever before.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll always have one regret, Mother.&rdquo; His voice
-had grown as deep as the water itself. But it broke
-off in the middle suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>A feeling came upon her that she ought to say
-something. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let us have no regrets, Bill.&rdquo;
-Those were the words she wanted to utter. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not
-have none.&rdquo; But they were not for her to speak. At
-that moment she was not able to say anything. She
-waited tensely for him to go on talking.</p>
-
-<p>In the odd way he had, which was a part of his
-peculiar faculty, he seemed to feel what was passing
-in her mind. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not thinking of what might have
-been. That&rsquo;s no good. The time&rsquo;s gone by. I&rsquo;m
-thinking of my friend, Stanning, R.A. You see we&rsquo;d
-arranged that if we ever had the chance we&rsquo;d come
-here for a day&rsquo;s fishing. We had a bit one day when
-we were up in the Line&mdash;in that canal&mdash;the Yser, I
-think they call it. And he said, &lsquo;Auntie, I may be
-able to tell you a thing or two about drawing, but
-when it comes to this game the boot&rsquo;s on the other
-leg.&rsquo; &lsquo;Yes,&rsquo; I said, &lsquo;that&rsquo;s because I&rsquo;ve put my heart
-into it while you&rsquo;ve put your heart into something
-better.&rsquo; &lsquo;Well, I don&rsquo;t know about that,&rsquo; he said&mdash;he
-was the broadest-minded, the best read, the wisest
-chap I ever talked to&mdash;&lsquo;nothing is but thinking makes
-it so, as Hamlet, that old crackpot used to say. Whatever
-you happen to be doing, Auntie, the only thing
-that matters is whether your heart is in it.&rsquo; &lsquo;Yes,&rsquo;
-I said, &lsquo;I daresay you are right there. But it&rsquo;s one
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>thing to catch barbel. It&rsquo;s another to paint Corfield
-Weir.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>To Melia this seemed like philosophy. And she
-had no head for philosophy, although inclined to be
-a little proud that Bill should be able to swim in these
-deep waters in such distinguished company. But one
-thing aroused her curiosity. Why was this man of
-hers called Auntie?</p>
-
-<p>Bill laughed good humoredly when, a little scandalized,
-she came to put the question. &ldquo;They all call
-me that in C company.&rdquo; His frankness was remarkable.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But why?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They say I was born an old woman.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Melia thought it was like their impertinence and
-did not hesitate to say so.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, you don&rsquo;t know the Chaps,&rdquo; Bill laughed
-heartily. &ldquo;The Chaps is a rum crowd. They call you
-anything.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But to your face?&rdquo; Melia couldn&rsquo;t help resenting
-it and spoke with dignity. &ldquo;You oughtn&rsquo;t to let
-them, Bill.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a Corporal.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, Stanning was a sergeant, you see. And nobody
-means nothing by it. It&rsquo;s a way they have in
-the army of being friendly and pleasant. And I
-daresay it suits me. My fingers is all thumbs as you
-might say. Fishing and a bit o&rsquo; gardening are the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>only things I&rsquo;m good for, although Stanning told me
-that in time, if I stuck it, I might be able to draw.
-And that was a lot for him to say.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Melia thought that it must be.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I often wonder,&rdquo;&mdash;the eyes of the Corporal were
-fixed on the Sharrow&mdash;&ldquo;what made Stanning take up
-with a chap like me. There was lots of &rsquo;em in C company
-with far more education, but he told me once
-that I was the same kind of fool that he was and I
-said that I wished it was so. I suppose he meant that
-I liked to talk about this old river and the lights on
-it and the look of it at different times of the year.
-He knew every yard of the Sharrow between here
-and Dibley and so did I, but he could see things that
-I couldn&rsquo;t, and he could remember &rsquo;em and he&rsquo;d a wonderful
-eye for nature. He wasn&rsquo;t the least bit of a
-soldier, no more than myself, but he made a first-rate
-job of it&mdash;he was the kind of chap who would make
-a first-rate job of anything. Our C.O. wanted him
-to apply for a commission, but he said he couldn&rsquo;t face
-the responsibility. That was queer, wasn&rsquo;t it, in a man
-of that sort?&mdash;for he was a man, I give you my
-word.&rdquo; The Corporal plucked another spear of grass
-and began to chew it pensively. &ldquo;He had a cottage
-up at Dibley, that largish white one on the left, standing
-back from the road, you know the one I mean&mdash;the
-one with the iron gate, and that funny sort of a
-tower at the end of the garden.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Melia said she did know, although she had half fo<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>rgotten
-it, but she hadn&rsquo;t been to Dibley since they were
-first married, and that was a long time ago.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It belonged to Torrington the artist. He lived
-and died there. Stanning said he was the greatest
-painter of landscape that ever lived, but nobody knew
-it while he was alive and he died in poverty. Not that
-it mattered. Stanning said that money doesn&rsquo;t matter
-to an artist, but he said that many an artist had been
-ruined by making it too easy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>This dictum of Stanning&rsquo;s sounded odd in the ear
-of Melia. No one could be ruined by making money
-too easily, but she had not the heart to contradict his
-disciple who was still chewing grass and looking up
-at the sky.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;See what I mean, Mother?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Makes them take to drink and gambling, I suppose.&rdquo;
-After all, there was that solution.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Stanning meant that if an artist gets money too
-easy it&rsquo;ll take the edge off his work. He was always
-afraid that was what was going to happen to himself.
-In 1913 he made six thousand pounds&mdash;think on it,
-Mother, six thousand pounds in one year painting pictures!
-He said that was the writing on the wall for
-him; he said it was as much as Torrington made in
-all his life and he lived beyond eighty. &lsquo;And I&rsquo;m not
-fit to tie Torrington&rsquo;s shoelace, Auntie.&rsquo; I laughed
-at that, of course, but he was not a man to want butter.
-&lsquo;I mean it, my dear.&rsquo; If he liked you he had
-a way of calling you &lsquo;my dear,&rsquo; like one girl does to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>another. &lsquo;Torrington was the only man that ever
-lived who could handle sunlight. That&rsquo;s the test for a
-painter. If I touch sunlight I burn holes in the canvas.&rsquo;
-Of course, I laughed, but Stanning was a very
-humble chap when he talked about his own paintings.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the Corporal realized that he had let his
-tongue run away with him, as it did sometimes. Melia
-was getting drowsy. He got up, therefore, and
-stretched his legs on the soft turf and then he said,
-&ldquo;Let us go across to the Corfield Arms and see if we
-can get a cup of tea. And then if you feel up to it
-we&rsquo;ll walk through the Glade as far as Dibley and
-look at the house that Torrington lived in.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXX">XXX</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HEY went across to the Corfield Arms. It was
-an old, romantic looking inn, spoiled a little in
-these later days by contiguity to a great hive of commerce.
-But there were occasions, even now, when it
-retained something of the halo of ancient peace it
-was wont to bear; and the afternoon being Friday
-was an off day for visitors. When Bill and Melia
-passed through the bowling green at the back of the
-house to the arbor where last they had sat in the days
-of their courtship they found it empty.</p>
-
-<p>In the garden by the arbor an old man was plucking
-raspberries. He turned out to be the landlord, and to
-the secret gratification of Melia he addressed Bill as
-&ldquo;sir,&rdquo; out of deference to his uniform. Upon receiving
-the Corporal&rsquo;s commands he called loudly for
-&ldquo;Polly.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>In two shakes of a duck&rsquo;s tail Polly appeared: a
-blithe beauty in a clean lilac print dress, a little shrunk
-in the wash, which showed to advantage the lovely
-lines of her shape and the slender stem of a brown
-but classic neck in which a nest of red-gold hair hung
-loose. The Corporal ordered a royal repast for two
-persons; a pot of tea, boiled eggs, bread and butter,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>cake, and a little of the honey for which the house
-used to be famous.</p>
-
-<p>While they waited for the tea, the Corporal gave
-the old chap a hand with the raspberries. &ldquo;Happen
-you remember Torrington, the artist who lived up
-at Dibley?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Aye.&rdquo; The old man remembered him without difficulty.
-&ldquo;Knew him well when I was young. Soft
-Jack we used to call him; an old man and just a bit
-touched like as I remember him. Long beard he had
-and blue eyes&mdash;wonderful blue eyes had that old feller.
-Out painting in the open all day long, in all
-weathers. I used to stand for hours and watch him.
-He&rsquo;d paint a bit, and then he&rsquo;d paint it out, and then
-he&rsquo;d paint it in again. &rsquo;Course he was clever, you
-know, in a manner of speaking. Nobody thought much
-of him then, but in these days, if you&rsquo;ll believe me,
-I&rsquo;ve known people come specially from London to ask
-about him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal turned to Melia with an air of discreet
-triumph. But Melia was so drowsy that she said she
-would go into the arbor until the tea came. She
-was encouraged to do so while the landlord went on,
-&ldquo;I was a bit of a favorite with old Soft Jack. Many&rsquo;s
-the boy I&rsquo;ve lammoxed for throwing stones at his
-easel. Of course, at the time I speak of, the old chap
-had got a bit tottery; he lived to be tight on ninety.
-But as I say nobody thought much of him, yet if you&rsquo;ll
-believe me it&rsquo;s only last year, or the year before last&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>I&rsquo;m
-getting on myself&mdash;that a college gentleman came
-down here to write a book about him. A very nice
-civil-spoken gentleman; but fancy writing a book
-about old Soft Jack!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ever buy any of his pictures?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My father did. Gave as much as five pounds for
-one, more out of charity than anything, I&rsquo;ve heard
-him say, but if you&rsquo;ll believe me when the old boy was
-dead my father sold that picture for twenty pounds,
-and they tell me&mdash;I&rsquo;ve not seen it myself&mdash;that that
-picture is now in our Art Gallery, and the college gentleman
-I&rsquo;m speaking of&mdash;I forget his name&mdash;says folk
-come from all parts of the world to look at it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Happen there was the sun in it,&rdquo; said the Corporal.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Very like. Most of his pictures had the sun in
-&rsquo;em, what I remember. You know they do say that
-that old chap could look at the sun with the naked eye.
-And such an eye as it was&mdash;like an eagle&rsquo;s, even when
-he was old and past it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Got any of his pictures now?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t say I have. My father had one or two odd
-bits, but he sold &rsquo;em or gave &rsquo;em away. No good
-having a picture, I&rsquo;ve heard the dad say, unless you&rsquo;ve
-a frame to put it in. And frames was dear in those
-days. If you&rsquo;ll believe me, the frame often cost more
-than the picture.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pity you haven&rsquo;t one or two by you now. They
-do say all Torrington&rsquo;s pictures are worth a sight o&rsquo;
-money.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Shouldn&rsquo;t wonder. Money&rsquo;s more plentiful now
-than it used to be. My father was &rsquo;mazed when he
-got twenty pounds for the one he sold, and he heard
-afterwards it fetched as high as fifty. But I&rsquo;m speaking,
-of course, of when the old man was dead. That
-reminds me, the old chap, being very hard up, painted
-our signboard. It wants a fresh coat now, but it&rsquo;s
-wonderful how it&rsquo;s lasted.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal, in his devotion to art, ceased to pick
-raspberries, and accompanied by his host, went to
-look at the expression of Soft Jack&rsquo;s genius upon the
-ancient front of the Corfield Arms. As they crossed
-the bowling green they came upon the smiling and
-gracious Polly, who bore a tea tray heavily laden.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Lady&rsquo;s in the summerhouse.&rdquo; The gallant Corporal
-returned smile for smile. &ldquo;Tell her to pour
-out the tea and I&rsquo;ll be along in a jiffy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The signboard, after all, was not much to look at.
-The arms of the Corfields consisted in the main of a
-rampant unicorn, reft by the weather of a good deal
-of paint. But even here, by some miracle, the sunlight
-was shining on the noble horns of the fabulous
-animal, but whether the phenomenon was due to purely
-natural causes on this glorious afternoon of July,
-or whether the great artist was personally responsible
-for it was more than Corporal Hollis was able to
-say. It needed the trained eye of a Stanning, R.A.,
-or of a young Nixey, the architect, to determine the
-point, but in the right-hand corner of the signboard
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>beyond a doubt, as the landlord was able to indicate
-with an air of pride, was Soft Jack&rsquo;s monogram, J. T.</p>
-
-<p>Somehow the monogram saved the signboard itself
-from being a washout as a work of art, and the Corporal
-felt grateful for it as he returned to the arbor
-to drink tea with his wife, while the landlord, less
-of a critic, went back to the raspberries in his prolific
-garden.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXXI">XXXI</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">A</span>FTER an excellent tea William and Melia went
-up the road to Dibley. It was two miles on and
-they took a path of classic beauty, fringed by a grove
-of elms in which the rooks were cawing, along a
-carpet of green bracken through which the lovely
-river wound. Dibley stood high, at the crest of a
-great clump of woodland, with the Sharrow silver-breasted
-below surging through a glorious valley.</p>
-
-<p>It was getting on for twenty years since Bill had
-last handed Melia over the stile at the top of the
-glade, famous in song and story, and they had debouched
-arm in arm past the vicarage, along the bridle
-path, and had threaded their way through a nest of
-thatched cottages to the village green. The sun had
-now waned a little and the air had cooled on these
-shaded heights, the tea had been refreshing, and, for
-a few golden moments, inexpressibly sweet yet tragically
-fleeting, the courage of youth came back to them.
-Just beyond the parson&rsquo;s gate the Corporal stopped
-suddenly, took Melia in his arms and kissed her.</p>
-
-<p>It was a sloppy thing to do, unworthy of old married
-people, but the guilt of the act was upon them,
-though neither knew exactly why it should have come
-about. They crossed the paddock and went on through
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>the romantic village, so sweetly familiar in its changelessness.
-It seemed but yesterday since they walked
-through it last.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve wondered sometimes,&rdquo; whispered the Corporal
-at the edge of the green, &ldquo;what made you marry
-me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I believed in you, Bill; I always believed in you.&rdquo;
-It was a great answer, yet somehow it was unexpected.
-In his heart he knew he was not worthy of it and
-that seemed to make it greater still.</p>
-
-<p>Facing the duck pond, at the far end of the green,
-was the white cottage in which Torrington the artist
-had lived and died. It had changed a bit since his
-time. Things had been added by his more opulent
-successor. There were an iron gate, a considerable
-garden and a tall tower with a glass roof which nobly
-commanded the steep wooded slopes of the valley of
-the Sharrow.</p>
-
-<p>With the new eyes a great painter had given him
-Bill saw at once that this was a rare pitch for an artist.
-It was one of the most beautiful spots in the
-land. The immense city of Blackhampton with its
-thousands of chimneys and its roaring factories might
-have been a hundred miles off instead of a bare four
-miles down the valley. There was not a glimpse or a
-sound of it here in this peace-haunted woodland, in
-this enchantment of stream and hill, bathed in a pomp
-of golden cloud and magic beauty.</p>
-
-<p>The simple cottage had been modernized and am<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>plified,
-but with rare tact and cunning, so that it was
-still &ldquo;all of a piece,&rdquo; much as Torrington had left.
-But the house itself was empty, with green shutters
-across the windows. On the gate was a padlock, the
-reason for which was given in a printed bill stuck on
-a board that had been raised beside it.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>By order of the executors of the late James Stanning,
-Esqre., A.R.A., to be sold by auction the valuable and historical
-property known as Torrington Cottage Dibley, together
-with the following furniture and effects.</p></div>
-
-<p>A list followed of the furniture and effects, but
-across the face of the bill was pasted a diagonal red-lettered
-slip,</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>This property has been sold by private treaty.</p></div>
-
-<p>The Corporal tried to open the gate but found the
-padlock unyielding, and then he gazed at the notice
-wistfully.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Wonder who&rsquo;s bought it,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Melia wondered too.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hope it&rsquo;s an artist,&rdquo; said the Corporal.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So do I. But I expect it isn&rsquo;t. Artists is scarce.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re right, there.&rdquo; The Corporal sighed heavily.
-&ldquo;Artists is scarce.&rdquo; There was a strange look in
-his eyes and he turned them suddenly upon the duck
-pond so that Melia shouldn&rsquo;t notice it.</p>
-
-<p>Across the road, beside the duck pond, was a wooden
-bench, sacred to the village elders, none of whom,
-however, was in occupation at this moment. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>Corporal pointed to it. &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go an&rsquo; set there a minute,&rdquo;
-he said in a husky voice. As if she had been a
-child he took her by the hand and led her to it.</p>
-
-<p>They sat down and in a moment or two it was as if
-the spirit of the place had descended upon them. The
-magic hush of evening crept into their blood like a
-subtle wine. A strange soft rapture seemed to pervade
-the air. The Unseen spoke to them as never
-before.</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal took off his hat and wiped the dew
-from his forehead. And then with a queer tightening
-of the throat and breast he scanned earth and sky.
-They seemed marvelous indeed. He felt them speak
-to him, to the infinite, submerged senses whose presence
-he had hardly suspected. Never had he experienced
-such awe as now in the presence of this peace
-that passed all understanding.</p>
-
-<p>In a little while the silence of the Corporal began to
-trouble Melia. A cold hand crept into his. &ldquo;What
-is it, love?&rdquo; she said softly.</p>
-
-<p>Not daring to look at her, he kept his eyes fixed on
-the sky.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What is it, love&mdash;tell me?&rdquo; He hardly knew the
-voice for hers; not until that moment had he heard
-her use it; but it had the power to ease just a little the
-intolerable pressure of his thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I was wondering,&rdquo; he said slowly, at last, &ldquo;whether
-it would not have been better never to have been
-born.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>She shivered, not at his words, but at the gray look
-on his face.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Stanning said the night before he went he thought
-that taking it altogether it would have been better if
-there had never been a human race at all. I&rsquo;ll never
-forget that last talk with him, not if I live to be a
-hundred&mdash;which I shall not.&rdquo; The Corporal had begun
-to think his thoughts aloud. &ldquo;You see, he knew
-then that his number was up. I can see him settin&rsquo;
-there, Mother, just as you are now, lookin&rsquo; at that old
-sunset, his back to that old canal&mdash;the Yser, I think
-they call it&mdash;an&rsquo; stinkin&rsquo; it was, fair cruel. &lsquo;Auntie,&rsquo;
-he said suddenlike, &lsquo;tell me what brought you into
-this?&rsquo; I said, &lsquo;No, boy&rsquo;&mdash;just like a child he was as he
-set there&mdash;&lsquo;it&rsquo;s for me to ask <i>you</i> that question.
-You&rsquo;re a big gun, you know, a shining light; I&rsquo;m a
-never-was-er.&rsquo; That seemed to make him laugh; he
-was one that could always raise a laugh, even when
-he felt most solemn. &lsquo;I come of a long stock of high-nosed
-old Methodists,&rsquo; he said. &lsquo;Always made a thing
-they call Conscience their watchword and fetish.
-There was a Stanning went to the stake for it in the
-time of Bloody Mary; there was another helped Oliver
-Cromwell to cut the head off King Charles. A poisonous,
-uncomfortable crowd, and all my life they&rsquo;ve
-seemed to come back and worry me just at the times
-I should have been most pleased to do without them.
-People talk about free will&mdash;but there isn&rsquo;t such a
-thing, my dear.&rsquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I allowed that there wasn&rsquo;t in my case. Then I
-told him about Troop Sergeant Major Hollis, who
-fought at Waterloo. &lsquo;Yes,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;yours is an old
-name in the city, older than mine, I dare say.&rsquo; &lsquo;Well,&rsquo;
-I said, &lsquo;according to Bazeley&rsquo;s Annals there was a
-William Hollis who was mayor of the borough in the
-year of the Spanish Armada.&rsquo; &lsquo;Good for you, Auntie,&rsquo;
-he said, chaffing-like; he was a rare one for chaff.
-&lsquo;One up to you. Then,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;there was William
-Hollis who was &ldquo;some&rdquo; poet in the eighteenth century,
-who wrote the famous romantic poem, &ldquo;The
-Love Lorn Lady of Corfield.&rdquo; Still,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;these
-things don&rsquo;t explain you dragging your old bones to
-rot out here.&rsquo; &lsquo;They do in a way, though,&rsquo; I said.
-&lsquo;When we come up against a big thing it isn&rsquo;t us that
-really matters, it&rsquo;s what&rsquo;s at the back of us. I used
-to set in my old garden on The Rise,&rsquo; I said, &lsquo;in those
-early days when those dirty dogs opposite was just
-beginning to wipe their feet on Europe. And I said to
-myself, Bill Hollis, how would <i>you</i> like it if they
-broke through the fence into your garden, trampling
-your young seeds and goose-stepping all over your
-roses and your tulips. And I tell you, Jim&mdash;we got
-to be very familiar those last few weeks&mdash;it used to
-make me fair mad to read in the <i>Tribune</i> what they&rsquo;d
-done ... Louvain one time ... Termondy another
-... et cetera.... And I kept on settin&rsquo; there day
-after day, in my old garden on the top o&rsquo; The Rise,
-saying to myself, Hollis, it&rsquo;s no use, me lad, you&rsquo;re go<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>ing
-into this. You&rsquo;ve failed in every bloody thing so
-far, and if you take on this you&rsquo;ll not be man enough
-to stick it out. War isn&rsquo;t thinking, it&rsquo;s doing, and
-you&rsquo;ve never been a doer, you&rsquo;ve not. Then I read in
-the <i>Tribune</i> one morning that they&rsquo;d got Antwerp and
-I said to myself, I can&rsquo;t stand this no more. And I
-went right away to the Duke of Wellington and had
-a liquor up&mdash;but only a mild one, you know&mdash;and
-then round the corner to the Recruiting Office and
-gave my age as thirty-six and here I am admiring this
-bleeding sunset with the eye of an artist.&rsquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That made him laugh some more. &lsquo;Well, Auntie,&rsquo;
-he said, &lsquo;I&rsquo;m very proud to have known you and I
-hope you&rsquo;ll do me the honor of accepting this as a
-keepsake.&rsquo; He unbuttoned his greatcoat and took this
-old watch out of his tunic.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal paused an instant in his story to follow
-the example of his friend. He produced an old-fashioned
-gold hunting watch, with J. T. in monogram
-at the back, and handed it to Melia.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a rare good one, Mother,&rdquo; the Corporal&rsquo;s voice
-was very low, &ldquo;solid gold.&rdquo; He opened the lid and
-showed her the inscription:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>To John Torrington, Esquire, from a Humble Admirer
-of His Genius, 1859.</p></div>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Stanning said, &lsquo;I had the luck to buy that in a
-pawnshop in Blackhampton long after he was dead,
-and if I had had a boy of my own I should like him
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>to have kept it as an heirloom, but as I have not I
-want you to take it, Auntie, because I know you&rsquo;ll
-appreciate it.&rsquo; Somehow, I could tell from the way
-he spoke that he was done. I hadn&rsquo;t the heart to refuse
-it, although I hadn&rsquo;t a boy or a girl of my own
-neither.&rdquo; A huskiness in the Corporal&rsquo;s throat made
-it hard to go on for a moment. &ldquo;&lsquo;I&rsquo;m only thirty-nine,&rsquo;
-he said, &lsquo;and all the best is in me. I don&rsquo;t fancy
-having my light put out like this in a wet bog, but it&rsquo;s
-got to come, my dear. I hate to think that sometime
-to-morrow I shall be as if I had never been.&rsquo; &lsquo;Not
-you,&rsquo; I said. &lsquo;You&rsquo;re sickening for the fever.&lsquo; But I
-couldn&rsquo;t move him. He&rsquo;d got the hoo-doo. &lsquo;No use
-talking about it,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;but you and I&rsquo;ll never have
-that day&rsquo;s fishing in Corfield Weir. I should like you
-to have seen my cottage up at Dibley. It&rsquo;s got the
-ghost of that old boy.&rsquo; He put his hand on the watch,
-Mother, just like this. &lsquo;If there is a heaven for dead
-painters, and I doubt it, I&rsquo;d like to sit in John Torrington&rsquo;s
-corner on his right hand. You see, I&rsquo;ve
-learned all sorts of things, living in his house. I was
-getting to know the lights on the Sharrow and the
-feel of the clouds&mdash;in all the great Torringtons the
-clouds feel like velvet&mdash;and he was going to show me
-the way to handle sunlight&mdash;I&rsquo;ve already been twice
-across to New York to see &ldquo;An Afternoon in July in
-the Valley of the Sharrow,&rdquo; the most wonderful
-thing of its kind in existence. You get the view from
-my cottage&mdash;his cottage&mdash;at Dibley. I should like you
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>to have seen it, Auntie. And then I should like to
-have taken you across to New York to show you what
-old John made of it. Fancy having to go all the way
-to New York to look at it. So like us to be caught on
-the hop, in the things that really matter.&rsquo; I give you
-my word, Mother, he raised a laugh even then, but of
-a sudden his voice went all queer-like. &lsquo;However,&rsquo; he
-said, &lsquo;there&rsquo;s a Mind in this that knows more than we
-do.&rsquo; Then the lad began to shiver just as if he had
-the ague. And the next day, about the same time,
-or mayhap the perishin&rsquo; old sun had gone a bit more
-west, I had to go out across No Man&rsquo;s Land to bring
-him in ... what there was left of him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal ended his strange story as if after all
-it didn&rsquo;t much matter. He was quite impersonal, but
-Melia sat beside him shivering at the look in his eyes.
-Never before had the veil been torn aside in this way.
-She was a dull soul, fettered heavily by her limitations,
-but sitting there in the growing dusk it came
-on her almost with horror that in all those long years
-it was the first peep she had had behind the scenes of
-his mind. She hadn&rsquo;t realized the kind of man he
-was. More than once she had cast it in his face that
-he was an idle shack-about. Somehow, there had been
-nothing to give her the key to him; and now, miraculously
-as it seemed, it had come to her, it was too late.</p>
-
-<p>She had the key to him now. But the sands were
-running out in fate&rsquo;s hour glass. She couldn&rsquo;t bear to
-look at his thin gray face as the light fell on it, nor at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>his strange eyes fixed on the padlocked gate of the
-cottage opposite. Of a sudden the watch slipped
-from her shaking hands, and fell lightly in a little
-brake of thistles by the end of the bench on which they
-sat.</p>
-
-<p>Cautiously and carefully he picked it out. &ldquo;Take
-care on it, Mother,&rdquo; he said softly as he put it again
-in her hands. &ldquo;I wish we&rsquo;d a little boy as could have
-had it. However, we&rsquo;ve not. There was once a
-George Hollis who was an artist; I showed you that
-picture of his, &ldquo;The Glade above Corfield,&rdquo; the other
-day; Jim said it was a good one. John Torrington
-one time was his pupil. Don&rsquo;t suppose he was any
-relation but it&rsquo;s the same name.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Melia put the watch in the pretty leather bag he
-had insisted on buying for her. And then she said
-with a horrible clutch in her throat: &ldquo;Bill, promise!
-You&rsquo;ll come back ... won&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>His eyes didn&rsquo;t move.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be that lonely.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He sighed softly like a child who is very tired. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
-do what I can, Mother.&rdquo; The voice was gentleness itself.
-&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t do more.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She didn&rsquo;t know ... she didn&rsquo;t realize ... what
-... she ... was....</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXXII">XXXII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HEY sat hand in hand on the bench by the
-duck pond until the shadows began to lengthen
-along the valley of the Sharrow. For quite a long
-time they didn&rsquo;t speak, but at last their reverie was
-broken by the sight of a dusty figure with a sack on
-its back shambling along the road towards them. It
-was the village postman.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who&rsquo;s bought the cottage opposite?&rdquo; the Corporal
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Zur?&rdquo; said the postman.</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal repeated his question.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They do sey, zur,&rdquo; said the postman in slow, impressive
-Doric, &ldquo;the Mayor o&rsquo; Blackhampton has
-bought it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What&mdash;Alderman Munt?&rdquo; The voice of the Corporal
-was full of dismay.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The Mayor o&rsquo; Blackhampton, zur. Come here the
-other day in a motey car to look at it. Large big
-genelman in a white hat.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The heart of the Corporal sank. What the hell had
-he, of all people, to go buying it for! Somehow the
-postman had shattered the queer sad little world in
-which they sat. A feeling of desperation came suddenly
-upon the Corporal. He rose abruptly from
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>the bench. &ldquo;Come on, Mother,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;if we don&rsquo;t
-get along we&rsquo;ll be late for supper.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t want no supper, Bill.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But the Corporal was firm.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to stop here all night,&rdquo; Melia said as she
-rose limply from the bench. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to stop here
-forever.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>That was the desire uppermost in the Corporal
-also, but it would not do to admit it.</p>
-
-<p>Down the road, hand in hand, like two children
-out late, they trudged in the gathering dusk to Corfield.
-It was a perfect evening. Just a little ahead
-was one faint star; over to the left in the noble line
-of woods that overlooked the river they could hear
-the nightingale. Once they stopped and held their
-breaths to listen. They saw the rabbits dart from
-among the ferns at their feet and run before them
-along the white road. The evening pressed ever closer
-upon them as they marched slowly on, until, at a turn
-in the road, Corfield with its fruit orchards came into
-view.</p>
-
-<p>It was a long trek home but they were in no
-hurry to get there. By the time they had come to
-the old stone bridge which spanned the broad river
-and united the country with the town it was quite
-dark and the lamps of the city were shining in the
-distance.</p>
-
-<p>Midway across the bridge they stopped to take one
-last look at the Sharrow gleaming down its valley.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>Since the afternoon this mighty symbol which from
-earliest childhood had dominated their every recollection
-seemed to have gained in power, in magic and in
-mystery.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXXIII">XXXIII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE hard and difficult months wore on. Summer
-passed to autumn; Europe was locked in
-the most terrible conflict the world had ever seen, but
-there was no sign of a decision.</p>
-
-<p>Like Britain herself, Blackhampton was in the war
-to the last man and the last shilling. From the moment
-the plunge had been taken the conscience and the
-will of this brotherhood of free peoples had been in
-grim unison behind the action of its government. The
-war was no affair of sections or of classes; the issue
-was so clear that there was no ground for misunderstanding
-it.</p>
-
-<p>For years it had been freely declared that Britain
-was past her zenith, that disintegration had already begun,
-that England herself was enervated with prosperity.
-At the outset the enemy in making war had
-counted on the fact too confidently. Britain would
-not dare to enter the struggle, she who was suffering
-from fatty degeneration of the soul, or if in the end
-she was driven into the whirlpool in spite of herself
-she would prove a broken reed in this strife for human
-freedom.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>These were dangerous heresies, even for a race of
-supermen, and nowhere in the oldest of free communities
-was the task of dispelling it undertaken more
-vigorously than in Blackhampton. As its archives
-bore witness it had a long and proud record. No
-matter what great national movement had been afoot
-in the past, Blackhampton, the central city of England,
-geographically speaking, had invariably reacted to it
-with force and urgency.</p>
-
-<p>Among the many virile men who strove to meet a
-supreme occasion, none deserved better of his country,
-or of his fellow citizens than Mr. Josiah Munt. He
-was of a type suited beyond all others to deal with
-the more obvious needs of a time that called for the
-unsparing use of every energy; he had a genius of a
-plain, practical, ruthless kind; he was the incarnation
-of &ldquo;carry on&rdquo; and &ldquo;get things done.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>From the first hour he took off his coat and buckled
-to. He worked like a leviathan. No day was too long
-for him, no labor too arduous; his methods were
-rough and now and again the clatter he made was a
-little out of proportion to the amount of weight he
-pulled in the boat. His life had been one of limited
-opportunity, but he had a knack of seeing the thing
-to be done and of doing it. People soon began to realize
-that he was the right man in the right place, and
-that as a driving force he was a great asset to the city
-of Blackhampton.</p>
-
-<p>The war was about fifteen months&rsquo; old when Alder<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>man
-Munt was chosen mayor of Blackhampton. He
-took up an office that was by no means a sinecure at a
-very critical moment. But it was soon clear that a
-wise choice had been made; a certain Britishness of
-character of the right bulldog breed did much to keep
-a population of two hundred and eighty-six thousand
-souls &ldquo;up to the collar.&rdquo; Somehow, the rude force
-and the native honesty of the man appealed to the
-popular imagination; if a prophet is ever honored in
-his own country it is in time of war.</p>
-
-<p>During his mayoralty Josiah Munt came to occupy
-a place in the minds of his own people that none could
-have predicted. When the grim hour struck which
-altered the face of the world and changed the whole
-aspect of human society few could have been found
-to say a word in favor of the proprietor of the Duke
-of Wellington. He had begun low down, in a common
-part of the town; and, although there was really
-nothing against him, his name was never in specially
-good odor, perhaps for the reason that he bore obvious
-marks of his origin and because the curves of
-his mind were too broad for him to care very much
-about concealing them. In the general opinion he
-had been a very &ldquo;lucky&rdquo; man, financially successful
-beyond his merits, and for that reason arrogant. But
-in the throes of the upheaval preconceived ideas were
-soon shed if they did not happen to square with the
-facts; and it took considerably less than a year for
-Josiah to prove to his fellow townsmen that the god<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>dess
-Fortune is not always the capricious fool she has
-the name of being.</p>
-
-<p>Even in the stress of a terribly strenuous twelve
-months the Mayor of Blackhampton, like the wise
-man he was, insisted upon taking his annual fortnight&rsquo;s
-holiday at Bridlington. He had not missed his
-annual fortnight at Bridlington once in the last thirty
-years. It did him so much good, he was able to
-work so much the better for it afterwards, that, as
-he informed Mr. Aylett the Town Clerk, on the eve
-of departure in the second week of August, &ldquo;it would
-take more than the likes o&rsquo; the Kaiser to keep him
-from the seaside.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Like a giant refreshed the Mayor returned to his
-civic duties at the end of the month. His leisure at
-Bridlington had been enlivened by the company of
-the Mayoress, by Mrs. Doctor Cockburn and her two
-children, and also by Miss Gertrude Preston, who for
-quite a number of years now had helped to beguile
-the tedium of her brother-in-law&rsquo;s annual rest cure.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the Mayor returned to the scene of his
-labors he found there was one very important question
-he would have to decide. In his absence the City
-fathers had met several times to discuss the matter of
-his successor and had come, in some cases perhaps reluctantly,
-to the conclusion that none but himself could
-be his peer. According to the aldermanic roster, Mr.
-Limpenny the maltster was next in office, but that
-wise man was the first to own that he had not the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>driving power, or the breadth of appeal of the present
-mayor.</p>
-
-<p>In ordinary times that would not have mattered,
-but the times were very far from ordinary. War
-was making still sterner demands, week by week, upon
-every man and woman in the country. Blackhampton
-had done much, as every town in England had, but
-its temporal directors felt that no effort must be relaxed,
-and that it was ever increasingly their duty &ldquo;to
-keep it up to the collar.&rdquo; And Josiah Munt now filled
-the popular mind.</p>
-
-<p>The very qualities which in the gentler days, not so
-long ago, had aroused antagonism were at a premium
-now. For superfine people the Mayor was a full-blooded
-representative of a distressing type, but it
-was now the reign of King Demos: all over the island
-from Westminster itself to the parish hall of Little
-Pedlington-in-the-Pound the Josiah Munts of the
-earth had come at last by their own. On every public
-platform and in every newspaper was to be found a
-Josiah Munt haranguing the natives at the top of his
-voice, thereby guaranteeing his political vision and his
-mental capacity. King Demos is not a rose born to
-blush unseen; he knows everything about everything
-and he is not ashamed to say so. With a fraction of
-his colossal mind he can conduct the most delicate and
-far-reaching military operations, involving millions of
-men, and countless tons of machinery to which even
-a Napoleon or a Clausewitz might be expected to give
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>his undivided attention; with another he is able to insure
-that the five million dogs of the island, mainly
-untaxed, shall continue to pollute the unscavengered
-streets of its most populous cities; with another he is
-able to devise a Ministry of Health; with another he
-can pick his way through the maze of world politics,
-and recast the map of Europe and Asia on a basis to
-endure until the crack of doom; with yet another he
-can devise a new handle for the parish pump.</p>
-
-<p>King Demos is indeed a bright fellow. And in Mr.
-Josiah Munt he found an ideal representative. Happily
-for Blackhampton, although there were places
-of even greater importance who in this respect were
-not so well off, he was a man of rude honesty. He
-said what he meant and he meant what he said; he
-was no believer in graft, he did not willfully mislead;
-he was not a seeker of cheap applause; and in matters
-of the public purse he had a certain amount of public
-conscience. As Mr. Aylett the town clerk said in the
-course of a private conversation with Mr. Druce the
-chairman of the Finance Committee, &ldquo;His worship is
-not everybody&rsquo;s pretty boy, but just now we are lucky
-to have him and we ought to be thankful that he is
-the clean potato.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, within a week of his return from Bridlington,
-the Mayor was met by the request of the City
-fathers that he should take office for another year.
-Josiah was flattered by the compliment, but he felt
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>that it was not a matter he could decide offhand.
-&ldquo;He must talk to the wife.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>At dinner that evening at Strathfieldsaye, when the
-question was mooted, the hapless Maria was overcome.
-Only heaven knew, if heaven did know, how
-she had contrived to fill the part of a Mayoress for
-so many trying months. She had simply been counting
-the days when she could retire into that life of
-privacy, from which by no desire of her own had she
-emerged. It was too cruel that the present agony
-should be prolonged for another year, and although
-her tremulous lips dare not say so her eyes spoke for
-her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What do you say, Mother?&rdquo; His worship proudly
-took a helping of potatoes.</p>
-
-<p>Maria did not say anything.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A compliment, you know. Limpenny&rsquo;s next in,
-but the Council is unanimous in asking me to keep on.
-I don&rsquo;t know that I want to, it&rsquo;s terrible work, great
-responsibility and it costs money; but, between you
-and me, I don&rsquo;t see who is going to do it better.
-Comes to that, I don&rsquo;t see who is going to do it as
-well. Limpenny&rsquo;s a gentleman and all that, college
-bred and so on, but he&rsquo;s not the man somehow. Give
-Limpenny his due, he knows that. He button-holed
-me this morning after the meeting of the Council.
-&lsquo;Mr. Mayor,&rsquo; he said&mdash;Limpenny&rsquo;s one o&rsquo; those precise
-think-before-you-speak sort o&rsquo; people&mdash;&lsquo;I do hope
-you&rsquo;ll continue in office. To my mind you&rsquo;re the right
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>man in the right place.&rsquo; I thought that very decent
-of Limpenny. Couldn&rsquo;t have spoken fairer, could
-he?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The hapless Maria gave an audible sniff and discontinued
-the eating of war beef.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, Mother, what do you say? The Council
-seems to think that I&rsquo;ve got the half nelson on this
-town. So Aylett said. A bit of a wag in his way, is
-that Aylett. He said I&rsquo;d got two hundred and eighty-six
-thousand people feeding from the hand. That&rsquo;s
-an exaggeration, but I see what he means; and he&rsquo;s
-a man of considerable municipal experience. Smartest
-town clerk in England, they tell me. &lsquo;It&rsquo;s all very
-well, Mr. Aylett,&rsquo; I said, &lsquo;but I&rsquo;ll have to talk to the
-Mayoress. And I&rsquo;ll let you have an answer to-morrow.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The hapless Maria declined gooseberry fool proffered
-by the respectful Alice.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t seem to be eating, Mother,&rdquo; said his worship.
-&ldquo;Aren&rsquo;t you well? I expect it&rsquo;s the weather.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Maria thought it must be the weather; at any rate
-it could be nothing else.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Want a bit more air, I think,&rdquo; said Josiah in the
-midst of a royal helping of a favorite delicacy. &ldquo;Just
-roll back those sunblinds, Alice, and let in a bit o&rsquo;
-daylight.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The sphinx-like Alice carried out the order.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And open the doors a bit wider.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Alice impassively obeyed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Would you like a nip of brandy? The weather, I
-suppose. Very hot to-day. Temperature nearly a
-hundred this morning in the Council Chamber. We&rsquo;ll
-have some new ventilators put in there or I&rsquo;ll know
-the reason. At the best of times there&rsquo;s a great deal
-too much hot air in the Council Chamber. And when
-you get a hot summer on the top of it...! Alice,
-go and get some brandy for the Mistress.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Exit Alice.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll feel better when you&rsquo;ve had a drop of
-brandy. Antiquated things those ventilators at the
-City Hall. Aylett thinks they&rsquo;ve been there since the
-time of Queen Anne. But they&rsquo;re not the only things
-I&rsquo;m going to scrap if I hold office another year.
-There&rsquo;s too much flummery and red tape round about
-Corporation Square. Tradition is all very well but
-we want something practical.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Alice entered with a decanter.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, that&rsquo;ll put you right. A little meat for the
-Mistress, Alice. Never mind the soda. It&rsquo;ll not hurt
-you, Mother. Prime stuff is that and prime stuff
-never does harm to no one. Some I&rsquo;ve had by me
-at the Duke of Wellington for many a year.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>At first the Mayoress was very shy of the brandy,
-prime stuff though it was, but his worship was adamant,
-and after a moment or two of half-hearted resistance
-Maria seemed the better for her lord&rsquo;s inflexibility.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Talkin&rsquo; of the Duke of Wellington ... funny
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>how things work out! When we went in there in &rsquo;79,
-you and me, we little thought we should be where we
-are now, in the most important time in history. That
-reminds me. Alice, just ring up the <i>Tribune</i> Office
-and give the editor my compliments and tell him I&rsquo;ve
-arranged to speak to-morrow at the Gas Works at
-twelve o&rsquo;clock and they had better send a reporter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Very good, sir.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Alice!&ldquo;</p>
-
-<p>Alice halted sphinx-like at the door.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Wait a minute. I&rsquo;ll go myself!&rdquo; Josiah plucked
-his table napkin out of his collar. &ldquo;Nothing like doing
-a thing while it&rsquo;s fresh in your mind. And do
-it yourself if you want it done right. I must have
-a word with Parslow the editor. The jockey he sent
-to Jubilee Park to report the flower show didn&rsquo;t know
-his business. The most important part of the speech
-was left out.&rdquo; He laid down his table napkin and
-rose determinedly. &ldquo;Nice thing in a time like this
-for the Mayor of the City not to be fully reported.
-I&rsquo;ve half a mind to tell that Parslow what I think
-of him. Some people don&rsquo;t seem to know there&rsquo;s a
-war on.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes later when Josiah returned in triumph
-to his gooseberries he found Maria reclining on the
-sofa with her feet up, next the window opening on to
-the spacious lawns of Strathfieldsaye. The impassive
-but assiduous handmaid was fanning her mistress
-with a handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s right, Alice!&rdquo; Josiah sat down with an
-air of satisfaction. He was not indifferent to the
-sufferings of Maria, but of recent years she seemed
-to have developed a susceptibility to climatic conditions
-perhaps a little excessive for the wife of one who
-at heart was still a plain man. She had a proneness
-to whims and fancies now which in robuster days was
-lacking. He could only ascribe it to a kind of misplaced
-fineladyism, and he didn&rsquo;t quite approve it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I spoke pretty straight to the <i>Tribune</i> ... to the
-subeditor. I said I hoped they fully realized their
-duty to the public and also to the Empire, but that
-I sometimes doubted it. He seemed a bit huffed, I
-thought ... but you&rsquo;ll see I&rsquo;ll be reported to-morrow
-all right. I&rsquo;ll look after your mistress, Alice. Go and
-get the coffee.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>When Alice returned with the coffee she found the
-Mayor vigorously fanning the Mayoress with a table
-napkin, and she was peremptorily ordered &ldquo;to nip upstairs
-for a bottle of sal volatile.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXXIV">XXXIV</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HERE was honest satisfaction in the town when
-it was known that the Mayor had consented to
-remain another year in office. Most people agreed
-that it was a good thing for Blackhampton. But the
-Mayoress took to her bed.</p>
-
-<p>Could she have had her way she would never have
-got up again. For many years now life had been a
-nightmare of ever-growing duties, of ever-increasing
-responsibilities. Her conservative temperament resisted
-change. She had not wanted to leave the Duke
-of Wellington for the comparative luxury of Waterloo
-Villa, she had not wanted to leave Waterloo Villa
-for the defiant grandeur of Strathfieldsaye. When
-she was faced with a whole year as Mayoress she fully
-expected to die of it, and perhaps she would have died
-of it but for the oblique influence of Gertrude Preston;
-but now she was threatened with a further twelve months
-of the same embarrassing public grandeur she
-was compelled to review her attitude towards an early
-demise.</p>
-
-<p>Maria knew that if she allowed her light to be put
-out Gerty had the makings of a highly qualified successor.
-No one was better at shaking hands with a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>grandee, no one had a happier knack of saying the
-right word at the right time; and neither the Mayor
-nor the Mayoress, particularly the latter, knew what
-they would have done without her. Gerty, in fact,
-had become a kind of unofficial standard bearer and
-henchwoman of a great man. Every piece of gossip
-she heard about him was faithfully reported, every
-paragraph that appeared in the paper was brought to
-his notice, she flattered him continually and made him
-out to be no end of a fellow; and in consequence poor
-Maria was bitten with such a furious jealousy that
-she would like to have killed her designing but indispensable
-step-sister.</p>
-
-<p>When Maria took to her bed, the Mayor promptly
-requested the accomplished Gertrude to do what she
-could in the matter.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Josiah, she must show Spirit.&rdquo; As always that
-was her specific for the hapless Maria, and at the request
-of his worship she went at once to the big bedroom,
-from whose large bay windows a truly noble
-view of the whole city and the open country beyond
-was to be obtained, and as Josiah himself expressed
-it, &ldquo;proceeded to read the riot act to the Mayoress.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Mayoress was in bed, therefore she had to take
-it lying down. For that matter it was her nature to
-take all things lying down. But in her heart she had
-never so deeply resented the obtrusion of Gerty as
-at this moment. She wanted never to get up any
-more, but if she didn&rsquo;t get up any more this meddle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>some
-and dangerous rival would do as she liked with
-Josiah, and in all human probability as soon as the
-lawful Mayoress was decently and comfortably in her
-grave she would marry him.</p>
-
-<p>It was really Gerty who kept the Mayoress going;
-not by the crude method of personal admonition, however
-forcible its use, but by the subtle spur that one
-mind may exert upon another. Maria had to choose
-between showing spirit and allowing the odious Gerty
-to wear the dubious mantle of her grandeur.</p>
-
-<p>Hard was the choice, but Mother Eve prevailed in
-the weak flesh of the lawful Mayoress. She made a
-silent vow that Gerty should not marry Josiah if she
-could possibly help it. Yes, she would show spirit.
-Cruel as the alternative was, she would be Mayoress
-a second year. Even if she died of it, and in her
-present frame of mind she rather hoped she would,
-she alone should sit in the chair of honor at the Annual
-Meeting of the British Women&rsquo;s Tribute to the
-Memory of Queen Boadicea, she alone should take
-precedence of the local duchess and the county ladies
-at the annual bazaar in aid of the Society for Providing
-Black and White Dogs with Brown Biscuits.</p>
-
-<p>Maria, however, in her present low state, consented
-to Gerty deputizing for her at the review of the Girl
-Scouts in the Arboretum. She was reluctant to make
-even that minor concession&mdash;it was the thin end of
-the wedge!&mdash;but it had been intimated to Josiah that
-the Mayoress was always expected to say a few words
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>on this spirited occasion. This was altogether too
-much for Maria in the present condition of her health.</p>
-
-<p>Before the Girl Scouts, Gerty bore herself in a manner
-that even Miss Heber-Knollys, the august principal
-of the High School for Young Ladies, who was
-present, a perfect dragon of silent criticism, could
-hardly have improved upon. The Mayor at any rate
-was delighted with his sister-in-law&rsquo;s performance,
-drove her back in triumph to Strathfieldsaye and insisted
-on her staying to dinner.</p>
-
-<p>The hapless Maria, after nearly three weeks of the
-peace and sanctity of her chamber, had struggled down
-to tea for the first time. She sat forlornly in the drawing-room,
-a white woolen shawl over her ample shoulders.
-It had been a real relief to allow Gerty to deputize
-for her, but now that the hour of trial was past
-Maria was inclined to despise, for the moment at any
-rate, the human weakness that had played into the
-hands of a highly dangerous schemer. It would have
-been so easy to have done it oneself, after all; it was
-such a simple thing, now that it was safely over!</p>
-
-<p>Gerty consumed a pickelet and drank two cups of
-tea with an air of rectitude, while Josiah recited the
-story of the afternoon for the delectation of Maria.
-He was so well satisfied with the performance of the
-deputy that the lawful Mayoress began to scent danger.
-&ldquo;Gert says,&rdquo; the Mayor informed her, &ldquo;that if
-you don&rsquo;t feel up to it she&rsquo;ll distribute the prizes on
-the Fifth, at the Floral Hall.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Mayoress drew in her lips, a sign that she was
-thinking. She <i>might</i> be able to manage the Fifth, as
-&ldquo;a few words&rdquo; were not expected, although, of course,
-they were always welcome.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah, however, was not inclined to press the matter.
-Maria seemed rather worried by her duties as
-Mayoress and Gerty having had greater experience in
-that kind of thing and having already done extremely
-well in the Arboretum, it now occurred to the Mayor
-that it might be possible to arrange with the Town
-Clerk for her to take over the duties permanently in
-his second year of office. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t say the Council will
-consent,&rdquo; said Josiah. &ldquo;It may be a bit irregular.
-But they know you&rsquo;re not strong, Mother. I was
-careful to tell them that when I consented to keep the
-job on. So the way is paved for you, as you might
-say, if you really don&rsquo;t feel up to it. Anyhow, I&rsquo;ll
-hear what Aylett has to say about it. No man in
-England, they tell me, is a safer guide in matters of
-municipal practice. If Aylett thinks it will be all right,
-I&rsquo;m sure Gerty won&rsquo;t mind acting as Mayoress.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Delighted, Josiah!&rdquo; Gerty&rsquo;s bow and smile were
-positively regal; they were modeled, in point of fact,
-upon those of Princess Mawdwin of Connemara, the
-most celebrated bazaar-opener of the period.</p>
-
-<p>The Mayoress drew in her lips still further. She
-began to think very seriously. No human Mayoress
-could have been in lower spirits or have felt less equal
-to her duties than did Maria at that moment, but if
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>Gerty was allowed to usurp the honors and the dignities
-so indubitably hers it would be very hard to bear.
-The whole thing was so like Gerty. Always a
-schemer; in spite of her soft manners and her pussy-cat
-ways, always at heart a grabber. The Mayoress
-felt that if the weak state of her health called for a
-deputy, and really it seemed to do so, she would have
-preferred the Queen of Sheba herself to the designing
-Gertrude. For years she had been able to twist
-Josiah round her little finger. So like a man to be
-taken in by her! So like a man not to be able to
-see what a Fox of a woman she really was.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately Maria had reason to fear that she
-was very ill, indeed. She was afraid of her heart.
-It is true that three times within the past fortnight
-Horace, Doctor Cockburn, had solemnly assured his
-mother-in-law that there was nothing the matter with
-it. But thinking the matter over, as day after day
-she lay in her miserable bed, she had come to the
-conclusion that Horace was a modern doctor and that
-a modern doctor could hardly be expected to understand
-that old-fashioned organ, the heart.</p>
-
-<p>She had made up her mind, therefore, to have a
-second opinion. She would go to a heart specialist,
-a man who really knew about hearts. As a fact she
-had already made up her mind to have the opinion of
-Dr. Tremlett who humored her, who understood her
-system and its ways. Horace, who was so modern,
-rather smiled at Dr. Tremlett&mdash;he was careful not to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>go beyond a smile at Doctor Tremlett, although his
-demeanor almost suggested that he might have done
-so had not etiquette intervened.</p>
-
-<p>The Mayoress, therefore, was now placed in a difficult
-position by the success of a base intriguer. She
-didn&rsquo;t know what to do. Three days ago her mind
-had been made up that she would put herself in the
-hands of Doctor Tremlett, but if she did that she was
-quite sure that Doctor Tremlett, a physician of the old
-school who knew how important the heart was in
-every human anatomy and therefore treated it with
-the utmost respect, would not allow her to go overdoing
-it. Her time would be divided between her bed
-and the drawing-room sofa; he would most probably
-insist on a trained nurse&mdash;Doctor Tremlett really respected
-the heart&mdash;and the trained nurse would mean,
-of course, that the Mayoress had abdicated and that
-the way was open for the treacherous Gertrude with
-her pussy-cat ways to take over the duties permanently.</p>
-
-<p>It was a dilemma. And it was made needlessly
-painful for the Mayoress by the blindness and folly of
-the Mayor; in some ways so very able, in others he
-was such a shortsighted man! Really, he ought to
-have seen what Gerty was up to. So like a man to
-be completely taken in by her. One of her own sex
-would have seen at a glance that Gertrude was a
-Deep one.</p>
-
-<p>It was a most difficult moment for the Mayoress.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>Either she must be false to Doctor Tremlett and give
-up her heart or she would have to submit tamely to
-the rape of her grandeur and have it flaunted in her
-face by a Designing creature. Heaven knew that she
-had no taste herself for grandeur, but Gerty had a
-very decided taste for it and there was the rub!</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Have a piece of this excellent pickelet, Josiah!&rdquo;
-That smile and that manner were very winning to
-some eyes no doubt, but those of Maria were not of
-the number. That coat and skirt, how well they hung
-upon her! Gerty had always had a slim figure. Some
-people thought her figure very genteel, but again Maria
-was not of the number. Some people also thought
-her voice was very ladylike&mdash;Josiah did for one. La-di-da
-the Mayoress called it. Simpering creature!
-Even if the pickelet was excellent it didn&rsquo;t need her
-to say so. What had she to do with the pickelet? And
-there was Josiah submitting to her like a lamb and
-talking to her about the Town Clerk and the City
-Council and wondering whether she would mind giving
-him a hand on the Fifth at the Floral Hall.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be delighted, Josiah&mdash;simply delighted. Anything
-to help. If I can be the slightest use to you&mdash;and
-to Maria.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>That precious, &ldquo;And to Maria,&rdquo; brought a curl to
-the lip of the lawful Mayoress. Designing hussy!
-So like a man not to see through her. Maria felt herself
-slowly turning green. The heart has been known
-to take people that way.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gert is staying to dinner, Mother. Hope Billing
-sent up that salmon.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Billing had sent up the salmon, the Mayor was
-meekly informed by the Mayoress.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Chose it myself. Looked a good fish.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is wonderful to me, Josiah&rdquo;&mdash;affected mouncing
-minx!&mdash;&ldquo;how you manage to get through your day.
-You seem to have time for everything. Why, your
-work as mayor alone would keep most people fully
-occupied. Yet you always seem able to attend personally
-to this and that and the other.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t know, Gert.&rdquo; Some of the great man&rsquo;s
-critics were inclined to think that since he had made
-so good in his high office his amazing self-confidence
-had abated a feather or two. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve always tried to
-be what I call a prattical man. If you want a thing
-done right do it yourself&mdash;that&rsquo;s my motto.&ldquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But you get through so much, Josiah.&ldquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Just a habit. But there&rsquo;s a very busy year ahead.
-Being Mayor o&rsquo; this city is not child&rsquo;s play in times
-like these. We&rsquo;re up against the food shortage now.
-Last year it was munitions. Next year it&rsquo;ll be coal.
-And the Army&rsquo;s always crying out for men. And
-any labor that isn&rsquo;t in khaki is that durned independent
-and very inefficient into the bargain. The papers
-are always writing up what they call democracy. Well,
-you can have all my share of democracy. Between
-you and me, Gert, it&rsquo;s mainly a name for a lot of
-jumped-up ignoramuses who have no idea of how lit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>tle
-they do know. Yesterday I was over at Cleveley
-arranging with the Duke about a certain matter. Now
-he&rsquo;s prattical fellow, is that. He said, &lsquo;Mr. Munt, to
-be candid, I don&rsquo;t know anything about the subject,
-but I&rsquo;m very willing to learn.&rsquo; I tell you, Gert, you&rsquo;d
-have to wait till the cows come home to hear one of
-our jumped-up Jacks-in-Office talking that way.
-There&rsquo;s nothing they don&rsquo;t know and they&rsquo;re not afraid
-to say so. Why, it even takes <i>me</i> all my time to tell
-them anything.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXXV">XXXV</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">A</span>T this critical moment Ethel came in. Mrs. Doctor Cockburn
-was raging secretly. She had
-turned up at the Arboretum, dutifully prepared to
-help her mother through a situation a little trying
-perhaps to the nerve of inexperience and behold! there
-was Gertrude, smiling and pat, going through it all
-without turning a hair and palpably not in need of
-the least assistance from any one. The mortified
-Ethel, having missed a Sunday at Strathfieldsaye, had
-not been in a position to realize that her mother was
-going to be so weak as to allow Gerty, who as usual
-had masked her intentions very cleverly, to take her
-place. It was such a pity! Miss Heber-Knollys who
-was there, had said it was such a pity!</p>
-
-<p>Ethel, an old and successful pupil of that distinguished
-lady, had been carried off to tea by her at
-the end of the proceedings. And Miss Heber-Knollys
-had expressed herself as a little disappointed. She
-was sure the Girl Scouts had been so looking forward
-to having the Mayoress with them that afternoon;
-at any rate, Miss Heber-Knollys had, although of
-course she had no pretensions to speak for the Girl
-Scouts; but speaking as a public, a semi-public woman
-of Blackhampton, although born in Kent and edu<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>cated
-at Girham, speaking therefore, as a quasi-public
-and naturalized woman of Blackhampton with an
-M.A. degree, she looked to the Mayoress to take a
-strong lead in all matters relating to the many-sided
-activities of the City&rsquo;s feminine life.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel quite saw that. And she now proceeded fully
-and pointedly to report Miss Heber-Knollys for the
-future guidance of her father, the admonition of her
-mother and for the confusion and general undoing of
-the designing Gertrude. Mrs. Doctor Cockburn was
-far from realizing the critical nature of the moment
-at which she had chanced to arrive, but the general
-effect of her presence was just as stimulating as if
-she had. The lawful Mayoress was in sore need of
-mental and moral support if she was to prevail against
-the Schemer.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel was in the nick of time, but yet it was by no
-means certain that she was not too late to keep Gerty
-from the Floral Hall. The Floral Hall would depend
-on Doctor Tremlett, bluntly remarked Josiah.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Doctor Tremlett!&rdquo; said Mrs. Doctor Cockburn
-sternly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your man has got the sack.&rdquo; The Mayor indulged
-in an obvious wink at Gerty who was looking as if
-butter would not melt in her mouth.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said the horrified Ethel, &ldquo;there&rsquo;s no comparison
-between Horace and Doctor Tremlett. Horace
-belongs to the modern school; Doctor Tremlett&rsquo;s
-an old fossil.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your Ma seems to think Doctor Tremlett understands
-her,&rdquo; said Josiah bluntly. &ldquo;And Doctor Tremlett
-says she&rsquo;s got to be very careful of her heart or
-she&rsquo;ll have to lie up and have a trained nurse.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But Horace declares there is nothing the matter
-with it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s where Horace don&rsquo;t know his business as
-well as Doctor Tremlett. Your Ma has got to be very
-careful, indeed, and I&rsquo;m going to arrange with Aylett
-for her to have a deputy for the whole of the coming
-year. You see if anything happened to her she&rsquo;d <i>have</i>
-to have a deputy, so it may be wise to take steps beforehand.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nonsense, Father! Horace says there&rsquo;s nothing
-the matter with her. He says it&rsquo;s stage fright. You
-ought not to encourage her. Certainly it isn&rsquo;t right
-that Gerty should be taking her place. Miss Heber-Knollys
-says it may make a bad impression.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t know, I&rsquo;m sure, what business it is of hers.&rdquo;
-His worship spoke with considerable asperity.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Besides, if any one must deputize, surely it should
-be me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was a little pause and then said Gerty in her
-meek and dovelike voice, &ldquo;We all thought, dear, that
-just now you would not care to take part in a public
-display. Perhaps after Christmas ... when the new
-little one has safely arrived.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The other ladies realized that the Fox of a Gertrude
-had scored a bull&rsquo;s-eye. At Christmas it was fond<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>ly
-hoped in the family that the Mayor would at last
-have a grandson. Certainly, Mrs. Doctor could not be
-expected to take an active part at the Floral Hall.</p>
-
-<p>There were occasions, however, when Mrs. Doctor
-was visited by some of her father&rsquo;s driving force and
-power of will. And this was one of them. If a calamity
-of the first magnitude was to be averted&mdash;Gerty
-as Deputy-Mayoress was unthinkable!&mdash;there
-must be no half measure. &ldquo;Horace says it will do
-Mother good to distribute the prizes at the Floral Hall,
-and if she doesn&rsquo;t I am sure that quite a lot of people
-will be disappointed.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Even for Ethel this was rather cynical. She was
-well aware that she had greatly overrated the public&rsquo;s
-power of disappointment; at the same time it was
-clearly a case for strong action. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll go to the
-Floral Hall, Mother. And I&rsquo;ll come with you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;<i>You</i>, dear?&rdquo; Gerty spoke in a melodramatic
-whisper.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shall sit just behind her ... in the second row.
-We can&rsquo;t have people talking. And I shall put on my
-fur coat.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was a blow on the sconce for the specious Gertrude,
-but she took it with disarming meekness, smiling,
-as Ethel mentally described her, &ldquo;like a prize Angora&rdquo;
-down her long, straight, rather adventurous
-nose.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s your duty, Mother.&rdquo; Mrs. Doctor proceeded
-to administer a mental and moral shaking. &ldquo;The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>women of the city look up to you, they expect you to
-set an example. Miss Heber-Knollys feels that very
-strongly. And Horace, who is a far cleverer man than
-Doctor Tremlett, says all you have to do is to keep
-yourself up.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In other words, Maria,&rdquo; cooed Gerty in the voice
-of the dove, &ldquo;you must show Spirit. And that is what
-I always tell you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There were times when Gerty was amazing. Her
-audacity took away the breath even of Ethel. As for
-Maria she felt a little giddy. She was fascinated.</p>
-
-<p>The She serpent.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXXVI">XXXVI</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">M</span>ARIA went to the Floral Hall. And she was
-seen there to great advantage. She wore a
-new hat chosen for her by Ethel at the most fashionable
-shop in the city; she distributed the prizes to
-the Orphans&rsquo; Guild in a manner which extorted praise
-from even the diminished Gertrude; she didn&rsquo;t actually
-&ldquo;say a few words,&rdquo; but her good heart&mdash;speaking
-figuratively of course&mdash;and her motherly presence
-spoke for her; and as Miss Heber-Knollys said, in felicitously
-proposing a vote of thanks to the Mayoress
-on whose behalf the Mayor responded, she had brought
-a ray of sunshine into the lives of those who saw
-the sun too seldom.</p>
-
-<p>This achievement was a facer for the designing
-Gertrude, also for the antiquated Doctor Tremlett.
-On the other hand, it was a triumph for Ethel and
-for the modern school of medicine. Horace, Doctor
-Cockburn, was reinstated. Maria would still have
-felt safer with some one who really understood the
-heart and its ways, but, as Ethel pointed out to her,
-she would earn the admiration of everybody if she
-could manage to postpone her really serious illness
-until the following year.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Maria, at any rate, was open to reason. For the
-sake of the general life of the community she would
-do her best. But it was very hard upon her; far
-harder than people realized. As she had once pathetically
-told Josiah, &ldquo;she hadn&rsquo;t been brought up to that
-kind of thing,&rdquo; to which the Mayor promptly rejoined,
-&ldquo;that he hadn&rsquo;t either, but he was as good as some
-who had.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Education was what the Mayor called a flam. In
-the main it wasn&rsquo;t prattical. He allowed that it was
-useful in certain ways and in carefully regulated
-doses, but of late years it had been ridiculously overdone
-and was in a fair way to ruin the country. Education
-didn&rsquo;t agree with everybody. He knew a case
-in point.</p>
-
-<p>A classical instance of schooling misapplied would
-always remain in his mind. There were times when
-he brooded over this particular matter in secret, for
-he never spoke of it openly. His youngest girl, upon
-whose upbringing a fabulous sum had been lavished,
-had cast such a blot on the family escutcheon that
-it was almost impossible to forgive her. It was all
-very well for Ethel to talk of Sally&rsquo;s doings in Serbia.
-That seemed the best place for people like her. Yet,
-as a matter of strict equity, and Josiah was a just man,
-although a harsh one, he supposed that presently he
-would have to do something in the matter.</p>
-
-<p>Under the surface he was a good deal troubled by
-Sally. She was out of his will and he had fully made
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>up his mind to have nothing more to do with her;
-she had had carte blanche in the matter of learning,
-and the only use she had made of it was to disgrace
-him in the eyes of the world.</p>
-
-<p>All that, however, was before the war. And there
-was no doubt that the war had altered things. Before
-the war he lived for money and worldly reputation;
-but now that he was in the thick of the fight
-some of his ideas had changed. Money, for instance,
-seemed to matter far less than formerly; and he had
-come to see that the only kind of worldly reputation
-worth having didn&rsquo;t depend upon externals. His
-success as a public man had taught him that. It
-wasn&rsquo;t his fine house on The Rise, or the fact that
-he had become one of the richest men in the city, that
-had caused him to be unanimously invited to carry on
-for another year. Other qualities had commended
-him. He didn&rsquo;t pretend to be what he was not, and
-the people of the soundest judgment seemed to like
-him all the better on that account.</p>
-
-<p>He was beginning to see now that the case of Sally
-would have to be reconsidered. In spite of the damnable
-independence which had always been hers from
-the time she was as high as the dining-room table,
-there was no doubt that she was now fighting hard
-for a cause worth fighting for. He had not reached
-the point of telling Mossop to put her back in his
-will, but the conviction was growing upon him that
-he would have to do so.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At the same time it was going to hurt. He could
-have wished now that he hadn&rsquo;t been quite so hasty
-in the matter. It was not his way to indulge in vain
-regrets or to pay much attention to unsolicited advice,
-but it seemed a pity that he had not listened to
-Mossop in the first instance. This business of Sally,
-in a manner of speaking, would be in the nature of
-a public climb down. And there had been one already.</p>
-
-<p>As far as Melia and her husband were concerned
-his conscience pricked him more than a little. At first
-it had gone sorely against the grain to revoke the ban
-upon his contemptuously defiant eldest daughter and
-his former barman. But once having done so, it had
-come suddenly upon him that he had gone wrong in
-that affair from the outset. The provocation had been
-great, but he had let his feelings master him. Melia
-and Hollis were not exonerated. She ought to have
-shown more respect for his wishes, and a man in the
-position of Hollis ought to prove himself before he
-ventures to ask for his employer&rsquo;s daughter; but, if he
-had to deal with the episode again, he felt, in the
-light of later experience, that he would have acted
-differently.</p>
-
-<p>However, by the end of November, Josiah had made
-up his mind to restore Melia and Sally to his will.
-It was only a question of when he should do so. But
-this was a matter in which his usual power of volition
-seemed to desert him. In other affairs of life
-to decide on a thing was at once to do it; but now
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>he hesitated, putting off from day to day. It was a
-dose of particularly disagreeable medicine that there
-seemed no immediate need to swallow.</p>
-
-<p>A day soon came, however, when he was rather bitterly
-to rue his vacillation. One morning Josiah arrived
-at the City Hall at a quarter to ten. A meeting
-of the Ways and Means Committee was called
-for a quarter past and he had to take the chair in the
-Mayor&rsquo;s parlor. When he entered the room he found
-the Town Clerk standing in front of a fire of the Best
-Blackhampton Bright, a twinkle in his eye and a formidable
-sheaf of documents in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good morning, Mr. Mayor." Perhaps a faintly
-quizzical greeting, respectful though it was. But this
-shrewd dog Aylett, with a pair of humorous eyes
-looking through gold-rimmed glasses which hung by a
-cord from his neck, had a slightly quizzical manner
-with everybody. He knew his value to the city of
-Blackhampton; he was the ablest Town Clerk it had
-ever had.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mornin&rsquo;, Aylett,&rdquo; said his worship in that official
-voice which seemed to get deeper and deeper at every
-meeting over which he presided.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose you&rsquo;ve read your <i>Tribune</i> this morning?&rdquo;
-Aylett had an easy chatty way with everybody
-from the Mayor down. He was so well used to high
-affairs that he could be slightly jocular without impairing
-the dignity of a grandee and without loss of
-his own.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As a matter of fact I haven&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said the Mayor.
-&ldquo;The girl forgot to deliver it this morning at Strathfieldsaye.
-Don&rsquo;t know, Aylett, what things are coming
-to in this city, I don&rsquo;t really. We&rsquo;ll have to have
-an alteration if we are not going to lose the war altogether.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Town Clerk smiled at this, and then he took
-the municipal copy of the <i>Tribune</i> from among other
-works of reference on a side table, folded back the
-page and handed the paper to the Mayor. &ldquo;That
-youngest girl of yours has been going it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was an unfortunate piece of phrasing on the part
-of one so accomplished as Aylett. Josiah started a
-little and then with an air of rather grim anxiety proceeded
-to read the <i>Tribune</i>.</p>
-
-<p>There was three quarters of a column devoted to
-the doings of Miss Sarah Ann Munt; a sight which,
-with certain sinister recollections in his mind, went
-some way to assure Josiah that his worst fears were
-realized. But he had but to read a line or so to be convinced
-that there was no ground for pessimism. Miss
-Sarah Ann Munt, it seemed, had rendered such signal
-service to the Allied Cause that she had brought
-great honor upon herself, upon a name highly and
-justly esteemed in the city of Blackhampton, and even
-upon the country of her origin.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Tribune</i> told the thrilling story of her deeds
-with pardonable gusto. On the outbreak of war she
-had volunteered for service with the Serbian Army.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>Owing to her great skill as a motor driver, for which
-in pre-war days she had been noted, she had been
-attached in that capacity to the Headquarters Staff.
-She had endured the perils and the hardships of the
-long retreat; and her coolness, her daring and her
-mother wit had enabled her to bring her car, containing
-the Serbian Commander and his Chief of Staff,
-in safety through the enemy lines at a moment when
-they had actually been cut off. &ldquo;It is not too much to
-say,&rdquo; declared the <i>Tribune</i> whose language was official,
-&ldquo;that the story of Miss Munt&rsquo;s deeds in Serbia
-is one of the epics of the war. By her own personal
-initiative she did much to avert a disaster of the first
-magnitude. No single individual since the war began
-has rendered a more outstanding service to the
-Allied Cause. She has already been the recipient of
-more than one high decoration, and on page five will
-be found an official photograph of her receiving yet
-another last week in Paris from the hands of the
-Chief of the Republic.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah felt a little dizzy as with carefully assumed
-coolness he turned to page five. There, sure enough,
-was Sally, looking rather fine drawn in her close-fitting
-khaki, but with that half-wicked down-looking
-smile upon her that he knew so well. With her
-leggings, and her square chin and her &ldquo;bobbed&rdquo; hair
-which hung upon her cheeks in side pieces and gave
-her a resemblance to Joan of Arc she was like an
-exceedingly handsome, but as they say in Blackhamp<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>ton,
-a rather &ldquo;gallus&rdquo; boy. The hussy! He couldn&rsquo;t
-help laughing at the picture of her, it was so exactly
-how he best remembered her. The amused
-slightly defiant You-Be-Damned air was so extraordinarily
-like her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Blame my cats!&rdquo; said the Mayor.</p>
-
-<p>For several minutes it was his only remark.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXXVII">XXXVII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE meeting of the Ways and Means Committee
-which had been called for a quarter past ten
-was of more than local importance. It was of national
-importance as the Mayor was careful to inform
-its members, among whom were the picked brains
-of the community, when he informally opened the
-business. But it was not until twenty minutes to
-eleven that he was able to do so. It was not that the
-Committee itself was unpunctual; it was simply that
-one and all had seen that morning&rsquo;s <i>Tribune</i> and that
-the common task had perforce to yield for the nonce
-to their hearty congratulations.</p>
-
-<p>For one thing, the Mayor had become decidedly
-popular; for another, one more glorious page had been
-written in history by the Blackhampton born. It was
-really surprising the number of absolutely eminent
-people who at one time or another had contrived to
-be born at Blackhampton. In no city in England did
-local patriotism run higher, in no city in England was
-there better warrant for it. The Ways and Means
-Committee was quite excited. It was almost childishly
-delighted at having, as their Chairman, the
-rather embarrassed parent of one who, as Sir Reuben
-Jope, senior alderman and thrice ex-mayor, said in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>a well turned phrase, &ldquo;bade fair to become the most
-famous woman in the Empire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps a certain piquancy was lent to an event
-that was already historical, by the knowledge in possession
-of those in the inner circle of municipal life
-that the Mayor had been hard hit by a former episode
-in the dashing career of Miss Sally. That episode
-belonged to the pre-war period when the stock of Mr.
-Josiah Munt did not stand nearly so high in the market
-as it did that morning. More than one of these
-seated round the council board with their eyes on the
-Chairman had relished the public chastening of the
-lord of Strathfieldsaye. He had been smitten in a
-tender place and they were not so sorry for him as
-they might have been. But other times other modes
-of thought. Since July, 1914, water had flowed under
-Sharrow Bridge. Nothing could have been more eloquent
-of the fact than the rather excited cordiality
-of the present gathering.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I really think, gentlemen,&rdquo; said Sir Reuben Jope,
-&ldquo;that the City should recognize Miss Munt&rsquo;s extremely
-gallant behavior. I presume, Mr. Town Clerk, it is
-competent to do so.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, quite, sir&mdash;oh, quite.&rdquo; In the expressive words
-in which the Mayor reconstructed the scene that evening
-for the benefit of the Mayoress, &ldquo;that Aylett
-was grinning all over his lantern-jawed mug like a
-Barbary ape.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then I shall propose at the next meeting of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>Council that a public presentation be made to Miss
-Munt.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shall be glad to second that, Sir Reuben,&rdquo; said
-Mr. Alderman Limpenny, &ldquo;when the time comes to
-do so.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But the Mayor interposed with asperity: &ldquo;No,
-no, no, gentlemen. We can&rsquo;t have anything of the
-kind. Very good of you, I&rsquo;m sure, but we must get
-on with the business.&rdquo; His worship rapped smartly
-upon the municipal mahogany. &ldquo;This is war time,
-remember. We&rsquo;ve got to discuss that contract of Perkins
-and Baylis. Seems to me, as I said at the last
-meeting, that those jockeys are over-charging the city
-forty per cent. You know, gentlemen, we&rsquo;ve got to
-stop this leakage of public money. Whatever they
-may do in Whitehall, we are not going to stand for
-it here. Signing blank checks and dropping them in
-Corporation Square is not our form. As long as I
-sit in this chair there is going to be strict control of
-the public purse. And there is not going to be graft
-in this city neither. This is not Westminster. We
-don&rsquo;t propose to allow a public department to make a
-little mistake in its accounts of a few odd millions sterling
-and then jog quietly on as if nothing had occurred.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hear! hear!&rdquo; from the City Treasurer.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;This war is costing the British people more than
-seven millions a day at the present time and to my
-mind it&rsquo;s wonderful that they are able to do it at the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>price. However, gentlemen, that is by the way. Let
-us return to the contract of Perkins and Baylis.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Truth to tell the contract of Perkins and Baylis had
-less attraction for the Committee at that particular
-moment than the picture in the <i>Tribune</i>. Somehow,
-the picture had captured its imagination. Whether it
-was the leggings, the &ldquo;bobbed&rdquo; hair, the Joan of Arc
-profile, or the &ldquo;gallus&rdquo; smile of the undefeated Miss
-Sally, it was quite certain that the last had not been
-heard of her historic actions.</p>
-
-<p>The Committee of Ways and Means was not alone
-in its response to the picture in the <i>Tribune</i> and the
-great deeds it commemorated. It was the talk of
-the whole city. Josiah moved that day and for many
-days in a kind of reflected glory. Wherever he went
-congratulations were showered upon him. Three
-cheers were given him at the Club when he came in
-to lunch. There was a decided tendency to identify
-him personally with Sally&rsquo;s fame, which, if exceedingly
-gratifying, was in the peculiar circumstances
-not a little disconcerting.</p>
-
-<p>For one thing, he was rather at a loss to know what
-line he should take in the matter. On the unhappy
-occasion of Sally&rsquo;s going to prison he had written her
-what he called &ldquo;a very stiff letter.&rdquo; In pretty blunt
-language he had told her that as she had disgraced
-him in the sight of the world he should have no more
-to do with her and that he intended to disinherit her.</p>
-
-<p>To this letter no reply had been received. It was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>the kind of letter which did not call for one. Since
-that time nothing had passed between Sally and himself
-on that subject or on any other. But for some
-months now Josiah had rather keenly regretted that
-his attitude had been so definite. The war seemed to
-soften the past and to sharpen the present. In some
-respects he was a changed man; one less overbearing
-in temper, one less harsh in judgment.</p>
-
-<p>The times had altered. Life itself had altered. He
-was not a man to cry over spilt milk, or to deplore
-the bygone, but at this moment he had one sharp regret.
-Some weeks before Sally had burst into fame
-he had made up his mind to restore her to his will
-and meant to write and tell her so. But for a man
-of his sort the task was hard and he had weakly put
-it off from day to day. And now, alas, it was too
-late to do it with the grace of the original intention.
-It would seem like compulsion now. Josiah was
-keenly vexed with himself. Nothing could have been
-more eloquent of the rule which hitherto had controlled
-his life, &ldquo;Do not put off until to-morrow, etc.&rdquo;
-In times like those a cardinal maxim.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXXVIII">XXXVIII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE Mayor was in a false position in regard to
-his youngest daughter and he had only himself
-to blame. But much of his strength lay in the fact
-that he was the kind of man whom experience teaches.
-Delays, it seemed, were highly dangerous. He must
-make up his mind to put his pride in his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>It was not an easy or pleasant operation, but it had
-to be performed. Nevertheless, the town had been
-ringing a full ten days with the name of Sally before
-he could bring himself to turn out after dinner of a
-December evening and walk along the road as far as
-The Gables.</p>
-
-<p>He was received in the library, as usual, by Lawyer
-Mossop. The city&rsquo;s leading solicitor had recently aged
-considerably. He looked thinner and grayer, his
-cheeks were hollow, there were more lines in his face.
-His only son, George, who in the natural course of
-events would have carried on a very old established
-business, had been killed in France, and news had
-lately come that his sister Edith&rsquo;s boy, whom he had
-helped to educate and who had already begun to
-make his way at the Bar, had been permanently disabled
-by the explosion of a hand grenade.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Long training in self-conquest, backed by generations
-of emotional restraint, enabled Lawyer Mossop
-still to play the man of the world. He rose with a
-charming smile and an air of ready courtesy to receive
-his distinguished client and neighbor. At a first
-glance there was nothing to tell that for the solicitor,
-life had lost its savor.</p>
-
-<p>The two men had a long and intimate talk. Oddly
-unlike as they were in temperament, education, mental
-outlook, their minds had never marched so well
-together as this evening in all their years of intercourse.
-Somehow the rude vigor, the robust sense of
-the client appeared to stimulate the more civilized, the
-more finely developed lawyer. Moreover, he could not
-fail to perceive that it was a humaner, more liberal-minded
-Josiah Munt than he had ever known who had
-come to talk with him this evening. Success, popularity,
-response to the overwhelming public need had
-ripened a remarkable man, rubbed off some of the corners,
-softened and harmonized the curious dissonances
-that had jarred in what, after all, was a fine character.
-Rough diamond as Josiah Munt still was and
-must always remain in the eyes of the critical, he
-stood out this evening as a right-thinking, straight-seeing
-citizen, a real asset to the community.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mossop,&rdquo; he said a little shamefacedly, after their
-conversation had gone on some time, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t like having
-to own up to it, but I&rsquo;m bound to say that I wish
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>I&rsquo;d had the sense to take that advice you gave me in
-the matter of Sally.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer could not help a furtive smile at the
-humility of the tone.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got to put that gel back in my will.&rdquo; It
-was a pretty stiff dose now that it had to be swallowed
-and a fierce frown did not conceal its nature. &ldquo;And
-I want you to believe, Mossop,&rdquo;&mdash;there was an odd
-earnestness in the deep voice&mdash;&ldquo;that I had made up
-my mind to do it long before this&mdash;this damnable Serbian
-business happened.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer assured Mr. Munt that he was convinced
-of that.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Serves me right, though, for delaying. Mossop,
-I&rsquo;m annoyed with myself. It has the look of a force-put
-now, but I as I say&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer nodded a nice appreciation of the circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And while I&rsquo;m about it, I&rsquo;ve made up my mind to
-put Melia, my eldest girl, back as well.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer gave a little sigh of satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My three gels are now going to share alike. But
-you must provide six thousand pounds for Gertrude
-Preston.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer penciled a brief note on his blotting
-pad.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As you know, Mossop, I&rsquo;ve made a goodish bit,
-one way and another, since this war began. Those
-girls ought to be very well off. And you know, of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>course, that we are takin&rsquo; in the next house for my
-hospital along The Rise. It&rsquo;ll give us another twenty
-beds&mdash;making forty in all.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer said in his level voice that he understood
-that to be the Mayor&rsquo;s intention when he had
-negotiated the purchase with Mr. Harvey Mortimore.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We bought that property very well, eh? Not going
-to get less in value.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer agreed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m now considering the question of making it
-over permanently to the Corporation. Wouldn&rsquo;t make
-a bad nest egg for the city, eh?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A very generous gift, Mr. Munt.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Anyhow, I&rsquo;m arranging with the Duke to come
-over on the twenty-sixth of January to open the new
-annex. And in the meantime we&rsquo;ll think about giving
-it to the city as an orphanage or a cottage hospital.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXXIX">XXXIX</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE next morning Josiah paid a visit to Love
-Lane. The business of Sally had taught him
-a lesson. Events moved so quickly in these crowded
-days that it might not be wise to postpone a reconciliation
-with Melia.</p>
-
-<p>So busy had the Mayor been since his return from
-Bridlington at the end of August that he had not
-found time to visit his eldest daughter, nor had she
-been to Strathfieldsaye since her first somewhat uncomfortable
-appearance there. She was still inclined
-to be much on her dignity. Women who lead lonely
-lives in oppressive surroundings are not easily able
-to forget the past. The olive branch had been offered
-already; but it was by no means certain that Melia
-intended to accept her father&rsquo;s overtures.</p>
-
-<p>This December morning, however, as the great
-man, proceeding majestically on foot from the Duke
-of Wellington, turned up the narrow street with its
-worn cobblestones and its double row of mean little
-houses, he fully intended as far as might be humanly
-possible &ldquo;to right things with Melia once for all.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Mayor entered the shop and found his eldest
-daughter serving a woman in a white apron and a
-black and white checked shawl over her head with two
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>pennyworth of carrots and a stick of celery. The
-honest dame was so taken aback by the arrival of the
-Mayor of the city, who was personally known to every
-man, woman and child throughout the district as one
-of a great triumvirate, of whom the King and the
-Prime Minister were the other two, that she fled in
-hot haste without paying for the spoils she bore away
-in her apron.</p>
-
-<p>Melia, however, true to the stock whence she sprang,
-had no false delicacy in the matter. Without taking
-the slightest notice of the august visitor, she was the
-other side the counter in a jiffy, out of the shop and
-calling after the fleeing customer, &ldquo;You haven&rsquo;t paid
-your fivepence, Mrs. Odell.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Mayor stood at the shop door, watching with
-a kind of grim enjoyment the process of the fivepence
-being extracted. He plainly approved it. Melia, with
-all her limitations, had the root of the matter in her.
-Upon her return, a little flushed and rather breathless,
-he refrained from paying her the compliment he
-felt she deserved but was content to ask if trade was
-brisk.</p>
-
-<p>Trade was brisker, said Melia, than she had ever
-known it.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah was glad of that. He then looked round to
-assure himself that they were alone in the shop and
-being convinced that such was the case, he stood a
-moment awkwardly silent, balancing himself like a
-stork first on one leg and then on the other.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gel,&rdquo; he took her hand suddenly, &ldquo;you are back in
-my will. Sally&rsquo;s back too. You are both going to
-have an equal share with Ethel.&rdquo; He felt the roughened,
-toil-stained hand begin to quiver a little in his
-strong grasp. &ldquo;Bygones have got to be bygones. Understand
-me.&rdquo; He drew her towards him and kissed
-her stoutly and firmly in the middle of the forehead.</p>
-
-<p>He retained his hold while her hot tears dripped
-on to his hand. She stood tense and rigid, unable to
-speak or move. But she knew as she stood there that
-it was no use fighting him or fighting herself. His
-masterfulness, his simplicity, his courage had reawakened
-her earliest and deepest instinct, the love and
-admiration she had once had for him. Of a sudden
-she began to sob pitifully. With a queer look on his
-face he took out a large red handkerchief and put
-his arms round her and wiped her eyes slowly and
-with a gentleness hard to credit in him, just as he had
-done when as a very little girl she had fallen and hurt
-herself on the tiled yard of the Duke of Wellington.</p>
-
-<p>Speech was not possible to father or daughter for
-several minutes as time is reckoned in Love Lane,
-although to both it seemed infinitely longer, and then
-said the Mayor, &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll expect you up at Strathfieldsaye
-on Christmas Day. Lunch one-thirty sharp.&rdquo;
-Then he added in a tone that was almost peremptory,
-&ldquo;If that man o&rsquo; yours happens to get home on leave
-your mother would like him to come, too.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Her tear-dimmed eyes looked at him rather queerly.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t you know, Dad?&rdquo; The voice had something
-in it of the child he remembered but it was so faint
-that it was barely audible.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Know what?&rdquo; His own voice had more asperity
-than it was meant to have. But she was able to make
-allowances for it, as she always had done in the days
-when she really understood him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Bill&rsquo;s in hospital.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He drew in his breath quickly. The thought ran
-through his mind that it was well he had had the sense
-to learn by experience. &ldquo;Where? What hospital?&rdquo;
-He was just a trifle nervous, just a shade flurried.
-As near as a toucher he had put it off too long, as in
-the case of Sally.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In France. At the Base.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Wound?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Bad one?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He says it&rsquo;s only a cushy ... but ... but somehow
-I don&rsquo;t trust him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How do you mean you don&rsquo;t trust him?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I mean this, Dad.&rdquo; She was quite composed now;
-the tears and the shakings were under control; she
-spoke slowly and calmly. &ldquo;No matter how bad he
-was, he&rsquo;s not one as would ever let on.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why shouldn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;d be afraid it might upset you. He&rsquo;s got like
-that lately.&rdquo; Suddenly the hard eyes filled again. &ldquo;He
-grins and bears things now.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Josiah nodded rather grimly, but made no comment.
-He turned on his heel. &ldquo;See you this day fortnight
-up at the house.&rdquo; Abruptly, in deep thought, he went
-away.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XL">XL</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">B</span>ILL&rsquo;S wound, as it turned out, was a painful one,
-and it had an element of danger. His right leg
-was shattered, also poisoned badly; it would take a
-long time to heal and there was a fear that amputation
-might be necessary. Such a case demanded special
-treatment, and to Melia&rsquo;s joy at the beginning of
-Christmas week she received word from her father
-that her husband had been transferred from France
-to the Mayor of Blackhampton&rsquo;s hospital.</p>
-
-<p>There is no saying how this providential arrangement
-came about. It may have been coincidence; on
-the other hand it may not. Josiah in his second year
-of office was certainly becoming a power, if not an
-actual puller of strings. Influence may or may not
-have been at work; anyhow the Corporal bore the
-long journey so well that Melia, as a special concession,
-was allowed to see him for a short time on
-Christmas Eve.</p>
-
-<p>She found him wonderfully cheerful in spite of the
-fact that he had endured much pain; more cheerful
-perhaps than she had ever known him. A subtle
-change had taken place since she had seen him last.
-The look of utter weariness had yielded to something
-else. It was as if he had been spiritualized by suffering;
-indeed as he smiled at her gently from his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>bed she felt that he was not the kind of man she used
-to know.</p>
-
-<p>The memory of those few exquisite days in the summer
-was still in their minds. It was from that point
-they now took up their lives. For both the world
-had changed. They saw each other with new eyes.
-This man of hers had been as good as his word, he
-had done his best to come back to her; and there, full
-of pain, he lay helpless as a baby, yet now inexpressibly
-dear as the only thing in life that had any meaning
-for her. As for himself, as he smiled up at her,
-the grace of his dreams was again upon her. This
-was she about whom the romance of his youth had
-been woven. He didn&rsquo;t see her as she was, a commonplace,
-worn, gray-haired woman, or if he did he
-remembered the sacrifices she had made for his sake;
-he remembered that she had once believed in him, and
-after long days she had come to believe in him again.</p>
-
-<p>There was rare conflict in the clean and quiet room.
-The walls were hung with holly; everything about
-the place seemed to minister to a wonderful sense of
-home. He sighed a deep content as she took a chair
-by his bed and held a feverish hand in hers.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your father&rsquo;s hospital!&rdquo; A deep sigh spoke of
-gratitude. &ldquo;When you happen to see him tell him
-from me I&rsquo;m glad to be in it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She promised to do so.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a good place.&rdquo; His eyes and his voice grew
-softer than their wont in speaking of his father-in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>-law.
-&ldquo;A bit of luck to be here.&rdquo; He sighed luxuriously.</p>
-
-<p>Said Melia, &ldquo;You must take your time getting well,
-Bill.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Eyes of suffering looked into hers. &ldquo;I expect I
-won&rsquo;t be right just yet.&rdquo; They were still together,
-passing the time with delightful fragments of talk
-and with fragments of silence equally delightful when
-a nurse came importantly into the room to say that
-the Mayor had arrived unexpectedly to look round
-the hospital and to wish a happy Christmas to his
-guests.</p>
-
-<p>Melia rose rather nervously. &ldquo;I think I&rsquo;ll be going,
-Bill.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not yet, my dear.&rdquo; The voice from the bed was
-calm and quiet. &ldquo;We must let bygones be bygones.
-The times has changed.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She was glad to hear him say that. And she had
-not told him yet of her father&rsquo;s recent act of reparation.
-Should she tell him now? Was the moment
-favorable? Or had she better wait until&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>The question, however, was already decided. Too
-late to tell him now. The door at the other end of
-the room was open and the Commandant had entered
-followed by his worship the Mayor.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Only one bed in this room, sir,&rdquo; said the Commandant.
-&ldquo;A special case. Corporal Hollis.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Mayor looked calmly round. He didn&rsquo;t see
-Melia who was hidden by a screen between the bed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>stead
-and the door. &ldquo;I notice, ma&rsquo;am, you&rsquo;ve got another
-door yonder.&rdquo; He pointed to the other end of
-the room. &ldquo;Hope these new casements fit well.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The new casements fitted very well indeed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;All the same,&rdquo;&mdash;the deep voice was very much
-that of the man of affairs&mdash;&ldquo;I expect you get a bit
-of draught here when the wind blows from the northeast.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The draught was nothing to speak of, he was assured.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Any complaints? Heating apparatus all right?
-Ventilators working properly?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There were no complaints to make of any kind.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thank you, ma&rsquo;am,&rdquo; said the Mayor. &ldquo;You can
-leave me here alone a few minutes with Corporal
-Hollis&mdash;if he&rsquo;s well enough to talk to me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Commandant retired, closing the door after
-her, and the Mayor slowly approached the bed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How are you, Bill?&rdquo; It was a tone of simple,
-hearty kindness.</p>
-
-<p>Before the occupant of the bed could answer the
-question, Josiah, coming round the corner of the
-screen, was taken aback by the sight of his eldest
-daughter. He was not prepared for her, yet he was
-quite equal to the situation. &ldquo;Hulloa, Melia&rdquo;&mdash;it
-was a father&rsquo;s cordiality. &ldquo;How are you, gel? Happy
-Christmas to you. Happy Christmas to you both.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>For a little while he stood talking to them, easily
-and without constraint, while the Corporal lay in his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>bed saying nothing, but with his worn face softened
-by pain and service and the thought of others. From
-time to time he smiled grayly at the Mayor&rsquo;s pungent
-humor. Even in the old days &ldquo;the Mester&rdquo; had always
-had a liberal share of that quality in which his
-fellow townsmen excelled. Josiah&rsquo;s sense of humor
-was very keen, particularly when it came to assessing
-the shortcomings of other people; it had a breadth,
-a gusto, a penetration which high office seemed to amplify.
-His stories, comments, criticisms of those prominently
-before the world kept the Corporal quietly
-amused for some time. Finally, the Mayor looked at
-his watch. &ldquo;I must be getting on,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got
-to address the War Workers&rsquo; Association at six
-o&rsquo;clock. And at seven I&rsquo;ve promised to look in at
-the Hearts of Oak annual soiree and concert.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Very simply and with the manliness that was part
-of him he held out his hand. Without hesitation the
-Corporal took it. They looked in the eyes of one
-another. &ldquo;I hope you&rsquo;re quite comfortable,&rdquo; said Josiah.
-&ldquo;If there&rsquo;s anything you need you have only
-to let me know. So long, my boy, and don&rsquo;t be in
-a hurry to get well. See you to-morrow, Melia. Wish
-you could have brought Bill along with you. Happy
-Christmas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>With a wave of the hand for them both the Mayor
-went away, exuding an atmosphere of kindness and
-goodwill towards all men except Germans. In the
-Mayor&rsquo;s opinion Germans were not men at all.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XLI">XLI</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">I</span>T would have been ungracious of Melia not to
-spend Christmas Day at Strathfieldsaye. Indeed,
-she felt that she could hardly do otherwise. That
-stubborn thing, pride, might still be lurking in the
-corners of her heart, yet it durst not show itself openly;
-besides, whatever its secret machinations, she could
-not overlook the fact that her father was striving
-to wipe out the past. Perhaps the past is the only
-thing easier to create than to destroy, but certainly
-Josiah was now trying his best to undo it. And this
-Melia knew.</p>
-
-<p>In view of the important function on Christmas
-Day, Melia had been taken in hand by Aunt Gerty.
-It would have been natural to resent the interference
-of that lady, but it was clear that her actions were
-inspired &ldquo;from above.&rdquo; At the same time no emissary
-could have been more tactful, more discreet. In situations
-that called for finesse she was hard to beat;
-and she was able to have Melia &ldquo;fitted&rdquo; for a <i>really</i>
-good coat and skirt by her own accomplished dressmaker,
-Miss Pratt, and helped her also to choose a
-hat at Messrs. Rostron and Merton&rsquo;s, the best shop in
-the city, without arousing antagonism in that sensitive
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>soul. Also she whispered in Melia&rsquo;s ear that there
-was reason to believe that her father had a little surprise
-in store for her on Christmas Day.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to &ldquo;the surprise&rdquo; Gerty&rsquo;s information was
-correct. And as Melia, looking and feeling far more
-fashionable than she had ever done in her life, turned
-up at Strathfieldsaye at a quarter past one, &ldquo;the surprise&rdquo;
-duly materialized even before the Christmas
-luncheon at one-thirty. Her father gave her a check
-for fifty pounds.</p>
-
-<p>On Melia&rsquo;s last visit to Strathfieldsaye she had felt
-quite &ldquo;out of it,&rdquo; but not so now. Partly it may have
-been the new clothes. Formerly, she had felt self-conscious,
-awkward, hopelessly shabby in the midst
-of a grandeur to which she was unused, whereby she
-was thrown back upon her embittered self, but now
-her changing circumstances, the considered kindness
-of her mother and Gerty, and especially her father&rsquo;s
-new attitude towards her gave her a sense of happiness
-almost.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the fact that Ethel, Mrs. Doctor Cockburn,
-was unable to be present may also have ministered a
-little to this feeling. Ethel&rsquo;s absence was much deplored.
-Somehow a void was created which seemed
-to rob the modest function of any claim to distinction
-it might have had; yet in her heart Melia felt that
-the absence of Mrs. Doctor made it easier for her
-personally, and even for her mother, whatever it may
-have done for people so accomplished in the world as
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>her father now was, and for Aunt Gerty who somehow
-had learned to be genteel without being stuck-up.
-With Ethel, on the other hand, she had never
-felt quite at her ease. Nor did anybody, if it came
-to that. Putting people at their ease was not among
-Mrs. Doctor Cockburn&rsquo;s many gifts. She was so
-much a lady that simple folk were apt to be overwhelmed
-by her sense of her happy condition. It was
-difficult for ordinary people to be their plain selves
-in her presence; ordinary they might be, but in social
-intercourse Mrs. Doctor seemed almost to resent their
-plainness as being in the nature of a slight upon herself.</p>
-
-<p>However, Ethel was not there. And in Melia&rsquo;s
-opinion her absence gave a finer flavor to the turkey,
-a gentler quality to the plum pudding and a more
-subtle aroma to the blazing fumes that crowned it.
-Nevertheless, it was a theme for much comment. An
-Event of the first magnitude was almost due to take
-place in the family; and the head of it, presiding over
-the modest feast with a kind of genial majesty which
-ever-growing public recognition of his unusual qualities
-seemed to enhance and to humanize, made no secret
-of the fact that he very much wanted to have a
-little grandson.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, Josiah,&rdquo; said the gallant Gerty, adding a little
-water to some excellent claret and smiling at him
-with two level rows of white teeth, &ldquo;I am sure we
-all hope your wish will be gratified. No man, I&rsquo;m
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>sure, if I may be allowed to say so, more thoroughly
-deserves a little grandson than yourself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>To some minds, perhaps, it was not quite in the
-Gertrude tradition. It was Christmas Day and in
-crowning the Christmas pudding Josiah had been a
-thought on the free side, no doubt, with some of the
-finest old brandy even the Duke of Wellington could
-boast; but in any case she meant well. All the same,
-the Mayoress could not repress a slight frown of annoyance.
-The demonstration did not amount to more
-than that. It did not really convict Gerty of bad
-taste, but Maria felt somehow that she had to watch
-her continually. Gerty was such a Schemer. Besides,
-what business was it of Gerty&rsquo;s anyway?</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thank you, Gert.&rdquo; The Mayor raised his glass
-to the Serpent with the homely charm that was never
-seen to greater advantage than on Christmas Day in
-the family circle. &ldquo;Good health and good luck all
-round. I must have that little grandson, somehow.
-Melia, my gel, that&rsquo;s something for you and your good
-man to bear in mind.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Melia flushed. She looked so confused and so unhappy
-that the watchful Gerty, who with all her ways
-really spent a good deal of time thinking for others,
-suddenly perceived that it might be kind to change
-the subject.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Josiah,&rdquo; said Gerty, &ldquo;what is this one hears about
-a public presentation to Sally?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You may well ask that.&rdquo; The Mayor held up a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>glass of &rsquo;68 port to the light. &ldquo;Some of those jockeys
-on the City Council have been making themselves very
-officious.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Glad to hear it, Josiah.&rdquo; Gerty was just as pat
-as your hat. &ldquo;Think of the honor she&rsquo;s brought to
-the city. Surely right and surely proper that what
-Sally has done should be publicly recognized. Even
-the <i>Times</i> says she&rsquo;s a credit to the Empire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;All very well,&rdquo; said his worship. &ldquo;But it&rsquo;s nothing
-like ten years since I used to lay her across my
-knee and spank her. There was one slipper I kept
-for the purpose.&rdquo; With a humorous sigh he converged
-upon the brim of his wine glass. &ldquo;But I could
-never make nothing of that gel. There was always
-the devil in her. Public presentation&rsquo;s all very well,
-but some of those jockeys on the Council have persuaded
-the Duke to make it, and he&rsquo;s fair set on my
-takin&rsquo; the chair as I&rsquo;m Mayor o&rsquo; the city and so on.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The Duke is such a sensible man!&rdquo; An arch preen
-of Gerty&rsquo;s plumage. &ldquo;Only right and proper, Josiah,
-that you should take the chair. The other day,
-according to the <i>Tribune</i>, the French Government gave
-her a very high decoration. She&rsquo;s quite a heroine in
-Paris.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not surprised at anything.&rdquo; In the Mayor&rsquo;s
-grim eye was quite as much vexation as there was
-humor. &ldquo;Stubborn as a mule. And that independent.
-Must always go her own gait. Nice thing my
-having to preside over three thousand people while
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>she&rsquo;s being handed an illuminated address. Of course,
-that Aylett&rsquo;s at the back of it. Mischievous dog! I
-said if there must be a public presentation, as I was
-the father o&rsquo; the hussy, it was up to somebody else
-to preside. But, seemingly, they don&rsquo;t take to the
-idea.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Of course not, Josiah.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Groaned the Mayor, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have to make the best of
-it, I suppose. Still, a scurvy trick on the part of
-that Aylett.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XLII">XLII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">I</span>N spite of the Mayor&rsquo;s attitude, which was unsympathetic
-to the verge of discouragement, the Town
-Clerk was able to inform him on New Year&rsquo;s morning
-that Miss Sarah Ann Munt had graciously consented
-to accept an illuminated address in commemoration
-of her deeds on January twenty-fifth at the
-Floral Hall. The news was not received graciously.
-Josiah had comforted himself with the not unreasonable
-hope that the Hussy would decline the presentation;
-it would be so like her to upset their plans.
-But no, after all, Sally preferred to behave with still
-deeper cussedness. She wrote a charmingly polite
-letter from the Depôt of the Northern Command at
-Screwton, where she was at present attached, to inform
-the members of the Blackhampton City Council
-that it would give her great pleasure to attend the
-function on January twenty-fifth and that she was
-very sensible of the honor about to be conferred upon
-her. And that, after all, was even more like her than
-a refusal of the proposal would have been.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah was more disconcerted than he cared to own.
-It was necessary to hide his feelings as far as he could,
-but he was not a finished dissembler, and, in addition
-to &ldquo;that Aylett,&rdquo; there were several members of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>Council who seemed to enjoy the situation. Several
-of these received a piece of the Mayor&rsquo;s mind in the
-course of the morning. &ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t know what they
-could be thinking of to be wastin&rsquo; the Town&rsquo;s money
-in that way.&rdquo; In other words, Josiah had decided to
-carry things off with a high hand.</p>
-
-<p>That evening, after dinner, he sat down and wrote
-a letter.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&ldquo;Dear Sarah Ann, I understand that you are to be presented
-with an Address on the twenty-fifth at the Floral
-Hall. Your mother and I hope that you will be able to come
-and stay here over the week end. Your affectionate Father,
-Josiah Munt. P.S. No need to tell you that this Affair is
-none of my doing.&rdquo;</p></div>
-
-<p>It was not an easy letter to write nor was the Mayor
-altogether satisfied when it was written. But in the
-circumstances it wouldn&rsquo;t do to say too much.</p>
-
-<p>By return of post came a dry, rather curt note from
-Sally. She thanked her father for the invitation,
-but she had already promised Ethel that when next
-in Blackhampton she would stay at Park Crescent.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah felt annoyed. Once more it was so like her.
-Somehow the reply left him less easy in his mind
-than ever. He would be glad when the ordeal of the
-twenty-fifth was over. He didn&rsquo;t trust the minx. As
-likely as not she would play some trick or other; she
-was quite capable of affronting him publicly. However,
-the eyes of the world were upon him, he must
-keep a stiff upper lip, he must see that she didn&rsquo;t
-down him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, from another quarter, bitter disappointment
-came. The high hopes of a little grandson
-did not materialize. Instead of a lusty Horace Josiah
-Cockburn bursting upon a flattered world, the inferior
-tribe of Gwenneths and Gwladyses had a Gwendolen
-added to their number. It was quite a blow. The
-Mayor and all his family had set their hearts on a boy.
-For once the successful Ethel had been less than
-herself. She had failed conspicuously. It was impossible
-to conceal the fact that people were a little
-disappointed with her.</p>
-
-<p>Happily, Gwendolen had enough sense of proportion
-and right feeling to arrive according to schedule.
-It would have been unpardonable in her to have prevented
-Mrs. Doctor from attending the important
-function on the twenty-fifth at the Floral Hall and
-the even more important ceremony on the twenty-sixth
-when the Duke was to open the new annex to
-the Mayor of Blackhampton&rsquo;s hospital, which at one
-acute moment she had threatened to do. Fortunately
-Gwendolen remembered herself in time. She contrived
-to make her appearance on January second in
-this vale of tears, and, although from the outset not
-a popular member of society, after all she was less
-unpopular than she might have been had she deferred
-her arrival until a week later.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XLIII">XLIII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE scene at the Floral Hall was worthy of the
-occasion. All that was best in the public life
-of Blackhampton and of the county of Middleshire
-was gathered in force in the ornate building in New
-Square.</p>
-
-<p>There was more than one reason for the representative
-character of the audience. In the first place it
-was felt to be a royal opportunity to exalt the horn
-of patriotism. This public recognition of the heroic
-Miss Munt was a compliment paid to the women of
-Britain, to those many thousands of magnificent women
-whose deeds had proved them worthy of their
-brothers, their husbands and their sons. Again, the
-figure of Sally herself had fired the public imagination.
-A Joan of Arc profile overlaid by a general air of
-you-be-damnedness made an ideal picture postcard
-as her father had already found to his cost. All sorts
-of people seemed to take a fantastic pleasure in addressing
-them to Josiah Munt, Esquire, J.P., Strathfieldsaye,
-The Rise, Blackhampton. &ldquo;How proud you
-must be of her,&rdquo; et cetera. Ad nauseam.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, this function was intended as a tribute
-to the Mayor himself. His worth was now recognized
-by all classes. He was the right man in the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>right place; his boundless energy and his practical
-sense were of the utmost value to the community;
-and the wise men of that thickly populated district
-seized the chance of paying homage to Josiah and at
-the same time of exploiting a powerful personality in
-the interests of the state.</p>
-
-<p>At three o&rsquo;clock, when the Mayor came on to the
-platform, the large hall was very full. He was followed
-by the Duke of Dumbarton, a genial, young-middle-aged
-nobleman, who was to make the presentation,
-and by other magnates. Behind the Chairman
-many notables were seated already; and to lend point
-to the somewhat intimate nature of the proceedings,
-which may or may not have been part of the design
-of these &ldquo;in the know,&rdquo; the members of Josiah&rsquo;s family
-with the national heroine in their midst had been
-grouped prominently upon his right hand.</p>
-
-<p>The Town Clerk, a little wickedly perhaps, had
-intimated beforehand to the Mayor that the proceedings
-would really be in the nature of &ldquo;a family party.&rdquo;
-At all events, his worship took the hint &ldquo;of that Aylett&rdquo;
-literally. Before sitting down at the table and
-taking formal charge of the meeting his eyes chanced
-to light on a group of men in hospital blue for whom
-places had been reserved in the front row of the balcony.
-Among these he recognized Corporal Hollis,
-whose leg as a result of five weeks&rsquo; special treatment
-had improved quite remarkably.</p>
-
-<p>The Mayor went to the end of the platform and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>called loudly, &ldquo;Bill, you are wanted down here. Come
-on to the platform, my boy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal did not covet notoriety, but it would
-have been as wise to thwart the waters of Niagara as
-to resist the will of the City&rsquo;s chief magistrate at a
-public meeting. Until his instructions had been carried
-out there was not a chance of a start being made.
-Reluctantly realizing this the Corporal in the course
-of three minutes had made his way down from the
-gallery and on to the platform, a crutch in each hand,
-where his august father-in-law received him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Come on, Bill.&rdquo; He was shepherded along the
-front row of chairs as if the presence of three thousand
-people was a very ordinary matter. &ldquo;You come
-and sit with the wife. Colonel Hickman, kindly move
-up a bit. Thank you. Like a chair for your leg?
-If you do, I&rsquo;ll get one.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal declined a chair for his leg, just as
-the meeting incited by certain officious members of
-the Town Council broke into cheers. Melia and the
-Corporal, seated side by side, were covered in momentary
-confusion. Then the chairman took his seat
-at the table, reduced the meeting to silence by rapping
-the board sternly with his mallet and stood up
-again briefly to open the proceedings. These consisted
-in patriotic speeches from Lieutenant-General Sir
-William Hardcastle, K.C.B., and the Duke of Dumbarton,
-and the presentation of an illuminated scroll
-in a gold casket to Miss Sarah Ann Munt.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>First, a speech excellent in its kind, which paid
-tribute to the deeds of the sons and daughters of the
-Empire in all parts of the world; also it emphasized
-the sternness of the hour and the need for &ldquo;keeping
-on, keeping on.&rdquo; Then, amid a flutter of excitement,
-came the presentation to Miss Munt. It was made by
-the Duke, a figure deservedly popular all over the
-district from which, to be sure, he derived immense
-revenues. A master of courtly phrase and well turned
-compliment, he gave the heroine of the occasion the
-full benefit of his powers. And when at last, in the
-purview of three thousand people, the dauntless Sally
-came forth to the table to receive the casket and scroll
-she was a sight to behold.</p>
-
-<p>Rather tall, very slender, brown of cheek and with
-the eye of a falcon, in her simple, faded, but much beribboned
-khaki she looked at that moment a child of
-the gods. At the sight of her a thrill ran through
-the hall. Cinema, newspaper, picture postcard had
-led that assembly to set its hopes high, but the reality,
-in its calm strength, with a faintly ironical smile
-fusing a noble fixity of purpose, more than fulfilled
-them. In the youngest daughter of the Mayor of the
-city was symbolized the glorious spirit of the youth of
-the Empire.</p>
-
-<p>A hush came over the great audience. The Duke
-opened the casket and took out the scroll. Everybody
-seemed fascinated by her, including the members of
-her own family in a group at the right-hand of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>Chair. But there was just one person there who did
-not seem willing to submit without a struggle to her
-dynamic influence; and that person was her rather
-rueful, slightly scandalized male parent.</p>
-
-<p>Even now, in this, of all moments, his worship
-seemed to detect in that amazing personality the spirit
-of Damnable Independence. How many times in the
-past, in the stress of combat, when it had been his will
-against hers, had he seen that dogged, oh-go-to-the-devil
-look which would surely have driven him mad
-had not he been weak enough to admire it secretly.
-There was no getting topside of a look of that kind.
-As she stood in the presence of the ducal necktie,
-with a faint trace of humorous scorn at the corners
-of her lips, the outraged Chairman suddenly caught
-and fixed her eye. And as he did so his own eye, as
-of old, seemed to say to her, &ldquo;One word from You,
-our Sally, and I&rsquo;ll give You such a Lammoxing!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The casket and scroll were handed to Miss Munt,
-who acknowledged them with a graceful inclination
-of an imperial head, and then cheers broke out in a
-hurricane. In part, no doubt, they were inspired by
-family associations, for her father had grown vastly
-popular; but in large measure they were due beyond
-a doubt to sheer power of personality. The secret
-force which distinguishes one human being from another,
-over and beyond their works and their walk
-in life, belonged to Sally in sovereign degree. Her
-portraits and her fame had kindled hopes which the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>dauntless reality had more than fulfilled. In the sight
-of all she stood a true daughter of her race, foursquare,
-unconquerable.</p>
-
-<p>At last the cheers subsided and then arose demands
-for a speech from the Mayor. As the result of assiduous
-practice in war oratory Josiah had won remarkable
-success. He did not pretend to polish or
-to flights of intellect or fancy, but he had a knack
-of speechmaking that was immensely to the taste of
-his fellow citizens. In response to the insistent demand
-of the meeting he rose ponderously.</p>
-
-<p>On the crowded platform, as in the body of the
-hall itself, was many a shrewd judge of men. The
-average Briton of all classes has an instinct in such
-matters that is almost uncanny. He knows a man
-when he sees one. And when the Mayor stood up
-to address them, a little yet not too much, embarrassed
-by the nature of his reception, all present knew
-that they saw one now. Charmed and delighted by
-the heroine of the piece, so shrewd a body of persons
-may also have been rather amazed that she had come
-to happen. But, somehow, her father seemed to explain
-her. A rough diamond, no doubt, but at that
-moment, in his self-possession, in his self-belief, in
-his titanic grappling power when faced with difficulty,
-he was an expression of the genius of the race.</p>
-
-<p>All the same it was not easy for the Mayor of
-Blackhampton to find words at that moment. As a
-rule, when on his legs he did not suffer a lack of them.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>He had a natural gift of speech and a faculty of humor
-which found expression in many a racy idiom.
-But his powers threatened to desert him now.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ladies and gentlemen,&rdquo; he began. There was a
-pause and then he began again. &ldquo;Ladies and gentlemen.&rdquo;
-There was a second pause while three thousand
-sympathetic fellow citizens hung upon the
-phrase. And then at last slowly and grimly the great
-voice boomed out, &ldquo;Ladies and gentlemen, there are
-those who think they can down the Anglo-Saxon race,
-but&rdquo;&mdash;slight pause&mdash;&ldquo;they don&rsquo;t know what they are
-un-der-ta-kin&rsquo;&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was one pause more. It lasted but an instant
-for the meeting broke out in a roar. Only too
-well had the Mayor interpreted the thought that was
-dominating the minds of his fellow citizens.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XLIV">XLIV</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">O</span>N the Sunday after the famous meeting at the
-Floral Hall, Bill paid a first visit to Strathfieldsaye.
-He was loth to yield to the will of his
-father-in-law, but Josiah would take no denial. Corporal
-Hollis was a stubborn man, but no one under
-the rank of a field marshal could hope to resist effectively
-the Mayor of Blackhampton in his second
-year of office.</p>
-
-<p>Due notice was given by Josiah that he was going
-personally to fetch Melia on Sunday afternoon. He intended
-to drive in his car to Love Lane for that purpose.
-On the way back he would call at the hospital
-for the Corporal &ldquo;who must come along up home and
-drink a dish of tea with Maria.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The program was not exactly to the taste of Bill,
-who had little use for tea and perhaps even less use
-for his &ldquo;in-laws.&rdquo; But what could he do in face of
-the Mayor&rsquo;s ukase?</p>
-
-<p>Thus it was that in the twilight of a memorable
-Sunday the Corporal made his first appearance in
-Strathfieldsaye&rsquo;s spacious drawing-room. In the past
-month his leg had surprisingly improved, but final recovery
-would be long and slow, and he still required
-two crutches. On entering the room he was a little
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>disconcerted to find so distinguished a company, for
-in addition to the Mayoress, mutely superb at the tea
-table, was Mrs. Doctor Cockburn, more vocal in black
-velvet, Miss Preston, as usual, touched with fashion,
-and, standing on the hearthrug, near the fire, in her
-faded khaki was the slight but martial form of Sally.</p>
-
-<p>The presence of Sally was a surprise to the Mayor.
-He had not expected to see her there, and as soon as
-his eye lit on her he gave a start. First of all, however,
-he shepherded the Corporal into a comfortable
-chair with a tenderness hard to credit in him, fixing
-up the injured leg on a second chair and laying the
-crutches on the carpet by the Corporal&rsquo;s side.</p>
-
-<p>Having done all this, the Mayor moved up to the
-hearthrug, his hand outstretched. &ldquo;Very glad to see
-you here, my gel.&rdquo; Without hesitation and in the
-frankest way he kissed Sally loudly upon the cheek.
-It was manly and it was also bold, for such an act
-seemed perilously like kissing in public a decidedly soldierlike
-young man.</p>
-
-<p>Sally didn&rsquo;t seem to mind, however. She was just
-as frank and unaffected as her father. Moreover,
-she had acquired a rich laugh and an authority of
-manner almost the equal of his own. She complimented
-him upon his speech and quizzically added
-that he ought to stand for Parliament. Josiah
-promptly rejoined that if he did he&rsquo;d be as much use
-as some of those jackasses, no doubt.</p>
-
-<p>The Mayor then carried a cup of tea to the Corporal
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>and Aunt Gerty provided him with bread and butter
-and a plate to put it on; and then Sally moved across
-from the chimneypiece, sat down very simply on a
-hassock by his side and began at once to talk to him.
-Plain, direct talk it was, full of technical turns and
-queer out-of-the-way information which could have
-only come from the most intimate first-hand knowledge.
-But it was palpably unstudied, without the least
-wish to pose or impress, and presently with almost
-the same air of blunt modesty the Corporal began
-talking to her.</p>
-
-<p>To Mrs. Doctor and even to Miss Preston it seemed
-rather odd that a real live graduate of Heaven-knew-where
-should sit tête-à-tête with poor Melia&rsquo;s husband
-and be completely absorbed by him and the crude halting
-syllables he emitted from time to time. Still to
-the Mayor himself, standing with his broad back to
-the fire and toying like a large but domesticated wolf
-with a buttered scone, it didn&rsquo;t seem so remarkable.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah, at any rate, was able to perceive that his
-youngest daughter and his son-in-law were occupied
-with realities. They had been through the fire. Battle,
-murder, death in every unspeakable form had been
-their companions months on end. These two were full-fledged
-Initiates in an exclusive Order.</p>
-
-<p>The Mayor, foursquare on the hearthrug, had
-never seemed more at home in the family circle, but,
-even his noble self-assurance abated a feather or two
-out of deference to Sally and the Corporal. They
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>had been there. They knew. If Josiah had respect
-for anything it was for actual first-hand experience.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Doctor, however, was not fettered by the vanities
-of hero worship. In spite of Sally and in spite
-of the Corporal she was able as usual to bring her
-light tea table artillery into play. At strategic intervals
-her high-pitched, authoritative voice took spasmodic
-charge of the proceedings. Now it was the
-Egg Fund and the incompetence of Lady Jope, now
-the latest dicta of Miss Heber-Knollys, now the widespread
-complaints of the Duke&rsquo;s inaudibility at the
-Floral Hall.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Preston fully agreed. &ldquo;So different from you,
-Josiah.&rdquo; She was well on the target as usual. &ldquo;But
-he made up for it, didn&rsquo;t he, by the nice things he
-said of you when he opened the Annex?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Very flattering, wasn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo; Mrs. Doctor took up
-the ball. &ldquo;And wasn&rsquo;t it charming of him to come
-here to lunch. Such an unaffected man!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah broke his scone in half and held a piece in
-each hand. &ldquo;Why shouldn&rsquo;t he come here?&rdquo; The
-voice had the old huffiness, yet mitigated now by an
-undeniable twinkle of humor. &ldquo;He got quite as good
-food here as he&rsquo;d get at home, even if we don&rsquo;t run
-to gold plate and flunkeys.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Quite, Josiah, quite,&rdquo; piped the undefeated Gerty.
-&ldquo;And only too glad, I&rsquo;m sure, to come and see the
-Mayor of Blackhampton.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The laugh of his worship verged upon the whim<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>sical.
-&ldquo;Gert, if you want my private opinion, he
-didn&rsquo;t come to see me at all.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pray, then, Father, who did he come to see?&rdquo;
-fluted Mrs. Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah jerked a humorous thumb in the direction
-of Sally, who was still tête-à-tête with the Corporal.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nonsense, Father.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s my opinion.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was hard for Mrs. Doctor to believe that her
-youngest sister could be the attraction. But her father
-was clear upon the point. And that being the case
-it made the pity all the greater that Sally had declined
-the invitation to be present. She had been urged to
-come to luncheon and meet the Duke who was anxious
-to meet her, but she had preferred to stay at
-Park Crescent and play with the children.</p>
-
-<p>So like her!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XLV">XLV</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">&ldquo;D</span>&rsquo;YOU mind if I smoke, Mother?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lady at the tea table looked mutely at
-her lord.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah nodded graciously. &ldquo;Do as you like, gel.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Sally produced a wisp of paper and a very masculine
-tobacco pouch and began rolling a cigarette in an
-extremely competent manner. Josiah proffered a box
-of Egyptian but Sally preferred her own and struck
-a match on the sole of her shoe in a fashion at once
-so accomplished and so boylike as to take away the
-breath of her mother and Aunt Gerty.</p>
-
-<p>As she sat talking easily and yet gravely to the
-Corporal with her long straight legs and trim ankles
-freely displayed by a surprisingly short khaki skirt
-she looked more like a boy than ever. And such was
-the thought in the minds of the other three ladies, who
-agreed tacitly that the skirt and the cigarette and the
-astonishing freedom of pose were not quite maidenly.
-Still with those ribbons, and that clear deep voice and
-that wonderful eye she was fascinating. Even her
-father, who on principle declined to admire her
-Damnable Independence, was unable to resist the impact
-of a personality that was now world famous.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Gazing at her in stern astonishment he pointed to
-her abbreviated lower garment. &ldquo;Excuse me, gel,&rdquo; he
-said, &ldquo;but do you mind telling us what you&rsquo;ve got
-underneath?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Sally deigned no reply in words, but stuck the cigarette
-in the corner of her mouth with unconscious grace
-and dexterously lifted her skirt. A decidedly workmanlike
-pair of knickerbockers was disclosed.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah gasped.</p>
-
-<p>The unconcerned Sally continued to talk with the
-Corporal, while the Mayor, half scandalized, struggled
-against a guffaw. &ldquo;Things seem to be changing
-a bit, as you might say. Don&rsquo;t you think so,
-Mother?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Gerty took upon herself to answer, as she
-often did, for poor bewildered Maria. &ldquo;I fully agree,
-Josiah.&rdquo; She lowered her discreet voice. &ldquo;But almost
-a pity ... almost a pity ... don&rsquo;t you think?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Mayor pursed his lips. &ldquo;Durned if I know
-what to think, Gert.&rdquo; He scratched a dubious head.
-&ldquo;Seems to me the Empire is not going to be short o&rsquo;
-man power for some little time to come, eh?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Still ... not ... quite ... maidenly ... Josiah.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Daresay you&rsquo;re right.&rdquo; The Mayor fought down
-his feelings. &ldquo;Next chicken on the roost&rsquo;ll be the
-hussy puttin&rsquo; up for parliament.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Bound to get in if she does,&rdquo; Gerty sounded rather
-rueful. &ldquo;There isn&rsquo;t a constituency in England that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>wouldn&rsquo;t jump at the chance of electing her just now.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah breathed hard while this obvious truth sank
-into his bones, but Mrs. Doctor assured Gerty that
-she was talking nonsense. Her father being frankly
-opposed to this pious opinion, Ethel appealed to her
-mother. Maria, alas, was in the position of a modest
-wether who has given birth to a superb young
-panther. She simply didn&rsquo;t know what to think, and
-by forlornly folding her hands on her lap gave mute
-expression to her feelings.</p>
-
-<p>At the best, however, it was a futile discussion as
-Gerty was quick to realize. She turned the talk
-adroitly into other channels. &ldquo;This morning,&rdquo; she
-said, &ldquo;as I was walking along Queen&rsquo;s Road I had
-quite a shock. I met a blind man being led by an old
-woman. And who do you think it was?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Doctor had no idea who it could be.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It was Harold Nixey the architect. Such a pitiful
-object! Did you know, Josiah, that he is now
-quite blind?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah was aware of the fact.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How sad, how very sad!&rdquo; said Ethel. &ldquo;And he
-has done so well, so wonderfully well, in France.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gerty considered it nothing less than a calamity&mdash;for
-an architect of all people. And for one who
-promised such great things.</p>
-
-<p>Sally was apparently absorbed in talk with the
-Corporal, but she lifted her eyes quickly. &ldquo;Blind,
-did you say? Harold Nixey?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Gerty. &ldquo;Such a grievous thing.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Aye, it is that!&rdquo; The voice of Josiah was heavy
-and somber.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel hoped for his recovery.</p>
-
-<p>Her father shook his head. &ldquo;From what they tell
-me the sight is completely destroyed. I was with the
-lad yesterday.&rdquo; It was clear from Josiah&rsquo;s manner
-that he was moved by real feeling. &ldquo;Wonderful pluck
-and cheerfulness. He knows he&rsquo;ll never draw another
-elevation, but he pretends to that old mother
-of his that he&rsquo;s going to get better&mdash;just to keep her
-going.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And you say, Father&rdquo;&mdash;it was the slow precise
-voice of Sally&mdash;&ldquo;that he can&rsquo;t get better?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not a dog&rsquo;s chance from what Minyard the eye
-doctor tells me. It&rsquo;s a gas those devils have been using.&rdquo;
-The Mayor sighed. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s a good lad, is that.
-And he&rsquo;d have gone far. Rose from nothing, as you
-might say, but in a year or two he&rsquo;d have been at the
-top of the tree.&rdquo; Josiah, whose gospel was &ldquo;getting
-on,&rdquo; again sighed heavily.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I think I&rsquo;ll go and see him, Father, if you&rsquo;ll give
-me his address.&rdquo; Again the slow, precise voice of
-Sally.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Do. It&rsquo;ll be a kindness. Number Fourteen, Torrington
-Avenue. The second turn on the right past
-the Brewery along Corfield Road. Pleased to have
-a visit from you, I&rsquo;m sure. He talked about you a
-lot. His mother had read him the <i>Tribune&rsquo;s</i> account
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>of Thursday. He says he used to know you in London
-when he was studying at South Kensington.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Under Sally&rsquo;s deep tan the blood imperceptibly
-mounted. &ldquo;Yes, I used to know him quite well.&rdquo;
-She didn&rsquo;t add that she had refused rather peremptorily
-to marry him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, go and see him, gel. A very good soldier
-they tell me&mdash;D.S.O. and M.C. with two bars.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;<i>Two</i> bars, Josiah!&rdquo; Gerty put up her glasses
-impressively.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And earned &rsquo;em&mdash;they tell me. Come to think of
-it, it&rsquo;s wonderful what some of these young chaps
-have done.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And some of the older ones, too, Josiah.&rdquo; Gerty
-looked across at the Corporal who was toying pensively
-with a cigarette that had been pressed upon
-him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Aye, and some of the old uns, too!&rdquo; The Mayor
-followed the glance of his sister-in-law with the eye
-of perfect candor. &ldquo;And not been brought up to it,
-mark you. They tell me our B.B. is second to none
-in the British Army.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal looked as if he would like to have
-confirmed the Mayor&rsquo;s statement had he not remembered
-that professional etiquette required so delicate
-a topic to be left exclusively to civilians.</p>
-
-<p>Sally and Ethel went after awhile, and Josiah led
-the Corporal across the hall to what he called &ldquo;his
-snuggery,&rdquo; wherein he considered his business affairs
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>and the affairs of the City, and, although by no means
-a reading man, occasionally referred to the Encyclopedia
-Britannica and kindred works. He was at pains
-to dispose the Corporal in comfort near the fire and
-then gave him an excellent cigar and insisted on his
-smoking it.</p>
-
-<p>At first little passed between them in the way of
-words. They smoked in silence, but the Corporal
-could not help thinking, as he delicately savored the
-best cigar he had ever held between his fingers, how
-much prosperity had improved &ldquo;the Mester.&rdquo; He was
-so much mellower, so much more generous than of
-yore. His outlook on the world was bigger altogether;
-the Corporal&rsquo;s own outlook was larger also;
-somehow, he had not the heart to resist the peace overtures
-of his father-in-law.</p>
-
-<p>Said Josiah at last, pointing to the Corporal&rsquo;s leg:
-&ldquo;A longish job, I expect.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The doctors seemed to think it might be. Still it
-had got the turn now. It was beginning to mend.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been wondering,&rdquo; said the Mayor, &ldquo;whether
-it mightn&rsquo;t be possible to get you transferred to munitions.
-Johnson and Hartley are short o&rsquo; foremen.
-Pound a day to begin with. What do you say, my
-boy?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal gazed into the fire without saying
-anything.</p>
-
-<p>Said the Mayor, half apologetically, &ldquo;You&rsquo;re not
-so young as you were, you see. Forty-three, they tell
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>me, is a bit long in the tooth for the trenches. And
-you&rsquo;ve done your bit. Why not give some o&rsquo; the
-younger ones a chance?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>In silence the Corporal went on gazing into the fire.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Anyhow it might be worth thinking over.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal removed the cigar from his mouth
-and appeared laconically to agree that it might be
-worth thinking over. But the suggestion didn&rsquo;t seem
-to fire him.</p>
-
-<p>A deeper silence followed and then said the Mayor
-with a certain gruff abruptness which was a partial
-return to the old manner, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m thinking it&rsquo;ll be a good
-thing for Melia to quit Love Lane. She&rsquo;s not done so
-bad with the business lately, but it might be wise to
-sell it now. And she&rsquo;ll be none the worse for a rest
-in country air. Happen I told you that back in the
-spring I bought that cottage up at Dibley that that
-artist chap&mdash;I forget his name for the moment&mdash;used
-to come and paint in. Rare situation&mdash;sandstone foundation&mdash;highest
-point in the county&mdash;see for miles
-from his studio at the end o&rsquo; the garden. Don&rsquo;t quite
-know why I bought it except that it was going cheap.
-An old property&mdash;nobody seemed to fancy it&mdash;but the
-freehold is not going to get less in value if I&rsquo;m a
-judge o&rsquo; such matters and the place is in pretty good
-condition. Suppose, my boy, you and Melia moved
-in there? Save me a caretaker, and some o&rsquo; the finest
-air in Europe comes down the valley of the Sharrow.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The heart of the Corporal leaped at these amazing
-words, but his eyes were still fixed upon the fire.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What was the name o&rsquo; that artist chap? A local
-man, but quite well up, they tell me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Stanning, R.A.&rdquo; Something hard and queer rose
-in the Corporal&rsquo;s throat.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the jockey&mdash;Stanning, R.A. Now I remember
-... a rare dust there was in the Council some
-years ago when the Art Committee bought one of his
-pictures for....&rdquo; The Mayor drew heavily at his
-cigar ... &ldquo;for ... dram it! I&rsquo;m losing my memory....&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A thousand guineas,&rdquo; the Corporal whispered.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Something like that. Something extortionate. I
-remember there was a proper dust when the Council
-got to know of it. All very well to encourage local
-talent, I remember saying, but a thousand guineas was
-money. Maxon the curator resigned.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal kept his eyes on the fire.</p>
-
-<p>With a rich chuckle the Mayor turned over the cigar
-in his mouth at the memory of old battles in the Council
-Chamber. &ldquo;The fur flew for a bit, I can tell you.
-He wasn&rsquo;t an R.A. at that time and the poor chap&rsquo;s
-gone now so happen he&rsquo;ll begin to rank as an old
-master. They tell me fabulous sums are paid for
-these old masters, so one o&rsquo; these days Stanning,
-R.A., may grow into money and the City&rsquo;ll have a
-bargain after all. But I don&rsquo;t pretend to understand
-such things myself. A brave man, anyway. Joined
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>up with the B.B. at the beginning and was killed out
-yonder.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal nodded but said nothing. The Mayor
-went on with his cigar. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m trying to remember the
-name of another artist chap who used to live in that
-cottage when I was a boy. We used to jang from
-school on fine afternoons in the summer and go bathing
-in Corfield Weir. And painting by the river
-was an old chap with a long beard like Tennyson&mdash;you&rsquo;ve
-seen the picture of Tennyson&rdquo;&mdash;Josiah pointed
-to a lithograph of the bard on the wall behind the
-Corporal&mdash;&ldquo;but not quite so fierce looking. Wonderful
-blue eyes had that old feller ... lord love me,
-what <i>did</i> they call him!... I remember we used to
-throw stones at his easel. We got one right through
-it once, when he had nearly finished his picture and
-he had to begin all over again. What <i>was</i> the name
-of the old feller?&rdquo; The Mayor fingered his cigar
-lovingly and looked into the fire. &ldquo;Soft Billy ...
-that was it.... Soft Billy.&rdquo; Josiah sighed gently.
-&ldquo;Poor, harmless old boy. I can see those blue eyes
-now.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Mayor drew gently at his cigar while the Corporal
-kept his eyes on the fire. &ldquo;That reminds me....
-I&rsquo;ve got one of the old chap&rsquo;s pictures, somewhere.&rdquo;
-The Mayor laughed softly to himself. &ldquo;Took
-it for a bad debt ... quite a small thing ... wonder
-what&rsquo;s become of it?&rdquo; He grew pensive. &ldquo;Must
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>be up in the box room.&rdquo; Suddenly he rose from his
-chair. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go and see if I can find it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man of action went out of the room, leaving
-the Corporal in silent enjoyment of warmth, the tobacco
-and many reflections.</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes Josiah returned in triumph with
-a small piece of unframed canvas in his hand. He
-rang the bell for a duster, of which it was much in
-need, and when the duster had been duly applied he
-held the picture up to the light. &ldquo;It wants a frame.&rdquo;
-The tone was indulgent but casual. &ldquo;Looks like Dibley
-Chase to me.&rdquo; He handed the landscape to the
-Corporal who gazed at it with wistful eagerness.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Dibley Chase was always a favorite pitch for these
-artist chaps. See the Sharrow gleaming between the
-trees?&rdquo; Josiah traced with his finger the line of the
-river. &ldquo;I like that bit o&rsquo; sun creeping down the valley.
-Good work in it, I daresay ... but I don&rsquo;t
-pretend to be up in such matters. Very small but it
-may be worth a frame. Been up in the attic at Waterloo
-Villa for years ... aye, long before Waterloo
-Villa....&rdquo; Josiah took a loving puff of his cigar.
-&ldquo;I must have had that picture when I first went to the
-Duke o&rsquo; Wellington in March, &rsquo;79. How time gets
-on! Had it of that lame chap who used to keep the
-Corfield Arms who went up the spout finally. Used to
-supply him with beer. Gave me this for a barrel he
-couldn&rsquo;t pay for.&rdquo; The Mayor laughed richly and
-put on his spectacles. &ldquo;Can you see the name o&rsquo; the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>artist? What was the name o&rsquo; that old Soft Billy
-... ha, there it is.&rdquo; The Mayor brought his thumb
-to bear on the right-hand corner. &ldquo;&lsquo;J. Torrington,
-1854&rsquo; ... a long time ago. John Torrington, that
-was his name ... some of his work grew in value,
-I&rsquo;ve heard say. A harmless old man!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Mayor sighed a little and gave himself up to
-old memories while the Corporal held the picture in
-his hand. &ldquo;Soft Jack ... aye, that was his name....
-I can see him now with his white beard and long
-hair ... I&rsquo;m speakin&rsquo; of fifty years ago. Soft Jack,
-yes ... had been a good painter so they said ...
-but an old man, then. Used to sit by the Weir painting
-the sun on the water. I&rsquo;ve pitched many a stone
-at his easel ... in the summertime after bathing.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal was too absorbed in the picture to
-heed the Mayor&rsquo;s reminiscences. Josiah laughed softly
-at his thoughts and chose a second cigar. &ldquo;Too
-small to be worth much,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But Melia might
-like it. She was always a one for pictures. We&rsquo;ll pop
-a bit o&rsquo; the <i>Tribune</i> round it and she can stick it in
-the front parlor up at Dibley where the old boy lived
-and died.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XLVI">XLVI</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE next morning, Monday, towards eleven
-o&rsquo;clock, Sally dropped expertly off the municipal
-tram, without waiting for it to stop, at the second turn
-on the right past the Brewery, along the suburban end
-of the Corfield Road, and entered a street that she
-had never seen before.</p>
-
-<p>Torrington Avenue was one of those thoroughfares
-on the edge of large cities that seem to spring into
-being in a day and a night. In spite of the obvious
-haste with which its small houses had been flung together
-it was not unpleasing. But when Sally was
-last in her native city, a year before the war, this area
-had been a market garden.</p>
-
-<p>Number Fourteen was a well kept little dwelling in
-the middle of a neat row. Just as Sally reached it,
-an old woman with a wicker shopping basket came
-out of the iron gate.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Nixey?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The visitor had recognized the old lady but the
-converse did not hold true.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t remember me, Mrs. Nixey. I&rsquo;m Sally
-Munt.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The old lady gave vent to surprise, pleasure, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>credulity.
-But even then she was not able to identify
-one who but a few years ago had been almost as
-familiar to her as her own son until Sally had lifted
-her cap and rolled back the fur collar of her immense
-khaki overcoat.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I never!&rdquo; The old woman&rsquo;s voice was shrill
-and excited. &ldquo;It <i>is</i> Miss Munt. I <i>am</i> pleased to see
-you, my dear.&rdquo; The distinguished visitor suddenly
-received a peck on a firm brown cheek. &ldquo;He knows
-all about you. I read him the account of the doings
-at the Floral Hall. He wanted to be there, but the
-Doctor thought it wouldn&rsquo;t be good for him. It <i>is</i>
-kind of you to come and see him.... It&rsquo;ll please him
-so.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Sally cut the old lady short with a brief, pointed
-question or two. He was very well in health except
-that he couldn&rsquo;t see, but he was always telling his
-mother that he was quite sure he would be able to
-see presently, although Dr. Minyard had told her privately
-that he couldn&rsquo;t promise anything.</p>
-
-<p>The old lady led the way along the short path and
-applied a latchkey to the front door. As it opened,
-Sally caught the delicately played notes of a piano
-floating softly across the tiny hall.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He plays for hours and hours and hours,&rdquo; said
-the old lady. &ldquo;Your dear father has just given him
-a beautiful new piano. He&rsquo;s been such a friend to
-Harold. Wonderful the interest he&rsquo;s taken in him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She opened the door of a small sitting room, whence
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>the music came, but the player wholly absorbed did
-not hear them enter.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Harold, who do you think has come to see you!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>As the piano stopped and the musician swung round
-slowly on his stool, Sally shivered at the pallor of
-the face and the closed eyes. She saw that tears were
-trickling from them.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Miss Munt has come to see you.&rdquo; There was excitement
-in the voice of the old lady. &ldquo;You remember
-Miss Sally of Waterloo Villa. And to think what
-we&rsquo;ve been reading about her in the <i>Tribune</i>!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The musician sprang up with a boy&rsquo;s impulsiveness.
-&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t say, Mother&mdash;you don&rsquo;t say!&rdquo; The
-eager voice had a music of its own. &ldquo;Where are you,
-Miss Sally?&rdquo; He held out his hand. &ldquo;Put your hand
-there and then I shall believe it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Sally did as she was asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, well, it&rsquo;s really the great and famous you.&rdquo;
-He seemed to caress that strong and competent paw
-with his delicate fingers.</p>
-
-<p>She couldn&rsquo;t find the courage to say anything.</p>
-
-<p>But he did not allow the silence to become awkward.
-&ldquo;Better go and look after your coupons,
-Mother, while Miss Sally and I talk shop.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Upon that plain hint the old lady went away, closing
-the front door after her, and then the blind man
-helped the visitor to take off her heavy coat and put
-her into a chair. He found his way back to the music
-stool without difficulty, but in sitting down he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span>brushed the keys of the piano with his coat sleeve.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your dear, good father gave me this. A wonderful
-improvement on the one we&rsquo;ve scrapped. Did you
-hear me murdering Beethoven as you came in? One&rsquo;s
-only chance now to score off the poor blighters!&rdquo; His
-cheerfulness, his whimsical courage, were amazing to
-Sally. &ldquo;Since last we met things have happened,
-haven&rsquo;t they? South Kensington Tube Station, December,
-1913. Æons ago.&rdquo; He sighed like a child.
-&ldquo;By the way, tell me, did you get a letter I sent to you
-when you did your &lsquo;go&rsquo; of time?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Sally had received the letter. Soft the admission
-and also blushing, although he could not see that.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Wasn&rsquo;t meant as an impertinence, though perhaps
-it was one. Always doing the wrong things at that
-time, wasn&rsquo;t I? And I&rsquo;m saying &rsquo;em now. Born under
-bad stars.&rdquo; He laughed a little and paused. &ldquo;Jove!
-what wonderful things you&rsquo;ve done, though.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve had luck.&rdquo; Her voice was firm at last.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not more than you deserve. Hell of a time in Serbia
-... must have had. Don&rsquo;t know how you managed
-to come through it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Just the stars.&rdquo; Sally laughed a little now. But
-never in her life had she felt so little like laughing.
-She remembered that she used to think him a bounder;
-she remembered how much his proposal had annoyed
-her. Yet he was just the same now&mdash;the same Harold
-Nixey&mdash;only raised to a higher power. Once
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>she had despised his habit of thinking aloud, yet now
-it almost enchanted her....</p>
-
-<p>But she was not very forthcoming. He seemed to
-have to do the talking for both. &ldquo;Fritz beginning to
-get cold feet, do you think?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She didn&rsquo;t think so.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What are you doing now?&rdquo; It was the dry tone
-of the professional soldier.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m detailed for special duty in France.&rdquo; The tone
-of Sally was professional also.</p>
-
-<p>He sighed a gentle, &ldquo;When?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Off to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He sighed again.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It was not until last evening,&rdquo;&mdash;her voice changed
-oddly&mdash;&ldquo;that I heard you were at home.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nice of you to come and see me,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You
-must excuse the room being in a litter.&rdquo; There was
-a table in the center on which was a drawing board,
-geometrical instruments, many sheets of paper. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
-been trying to work. I&rsquo;m always trying ... but
-... you need eyes to be an architect ... you need
-eyes.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Sally was suddenly pierced by the thought of his
-ambition and his passion for work. He was going to
-do so much, he had begun so well.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have an idea for a new cathedral for Louvain.
-Been studying ecclesiastical architecture for years in
-my spare time.&rdquo; As he paused his face looked ghastly.
-&ldquo;It&rsquo;s all in my head ... but....&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Is it possible&rdquo;&mdash;she could hardly speak&mdash;&ldquo;for any
-one to help you&mdash;in the details, I mean?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They would have to get right inside my mind ...
-some one practical ... yet very sympathetic ... and
-then the chances are that it wouldn&rsquo;t work out.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It might, though.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Somehow, I don&rsquo;t think so.&rdquo; He was curiously
-frank. &ldquo;I tell myself it might, just to keep going.
-There&rsquo;s always the bare chance if I get the right person
-to help me ... some one with great intelligence,
-great insight, great sympathy, yet without ideas of
-their own.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You mean they wouldn&rsquo;t have to know too much?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it ... not know too much. They would
-have to sink their individuality in ... in one who
-couldn&rsquo;t.... Your father suggested a partnership.
-But it wouldn&rsquo;t be fair, would it? Besides I should
-be terribly trying to work with ... terribly trying
-... perhaps impossible.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Do you think you would be?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In a partnership, yes. It couldn&rsquo;t answer. I&rsquo;m so
-creative.... I have always to stamp myself on my
-work ... if you know what I mean. Then ... as
-I say ... I don&rsquo;t know yet ... that ... I can
-pick up all the threads that have been....&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You need,&rdquo; said Sally slowly and softly, &ldquo;some intelligent
-amateur, capable of drawing a ground plan,
-who would give himself up to you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He threw up his head eagerly. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s it ...
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span>somebody quite intelligent ... but without ambition
-... who would&rdquo;&mdash;the voice began to tail off queerly&mdash;&ldquo;have
-the courage ... not to mind ... the ferocious
-egotism ... of the ... baffled.&rdquo; Suddenly he
-covered his face with his hands.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It wouldn&rsquo;t take me very long to learn the rudiments,
-I think,&rdquo; said Sally. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m rather quick at picking
-up the things that interest me. It would be enormously
-interesting to see what could be done with this&mdash;this&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But you are off to France to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The war won&rsquo;t last forever.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The tone of her voice startled him. His heart leapt
-queerly. There was a time, not so long ago, when he
-would have given his soul to have surprised just that
-note in it. He began to shake violently.</p>
-
-<p>With all the will his calamity had left him he strove
-to hold himself in. Her voice was music, her nearness
-magical; what she offered him now was beyond
-his wildest hopes. Once he had jumped at her too
-soon, in a moment of delirium; but he had always
-known, by force of the strong temperament, that was
-such a torment to him now, that she was the only
-woman in the world he would ever really care for.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I see just the kind of helper you need.&rdquo; Divinely
-practical, yet divinely modern! &ldquo;I could mug up my
-drawing in a week or two and I should never know
-enough to want to interfere with anything that mattered.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He held himself tensely like one who sees a precipice
-yawning under his feet. &ldquo;America coming in,
-do you think?&rdquo; It was a heroic change of voice.
-&ldquo;I wish she would. I&rsquo;m afraid it may be a draw
-without her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Sally, with all her ribbons and her uniform, could
-rise to no immediate interest in America.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Our poor lads have had an awful grueling on the
-Somme. Seven hundred thousand casualties and nothing
-to show for it so far.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know.&rdquo; The sightless eyes were lacerating her.
-&ldquo;They ought to help us. It&rsquo;s their war as much as
-it&rsquo;s ours.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We can&rsquo;t blame them for staying out. Can&rsquo;t blame
-anybody for staying out. But we&rsquo;ll never get the
-right peace unless they help us.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Some people think they&rsquo;d not make much difference.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My God!&rdquo; It was the vehemence she used not to
-like. &ldquo;They&rsquo;d simply tip the scale. Have you ever
-been there?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have. Some country, America. They&rsquo;ve pinched
-our best Torrington, curse them ... not that that took
-me there. One afternoon, though, I happened to be
-looking for it in a moldy, one-horse museum just off
-Washington Square&mdash;I forget the name of it&mdash;when
-I walked straight into the arms of dear old Jim Stan<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span>ning
-who had actually come all the way from Europe
-on purpose to gaze at it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Sally emitted becoming surprise.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If you read that in a novel you&rsquo;d say it was the
-sort of thing that doesn&rsquo;t happen. But it did happen.
-Fancy old Jim coming all those miles by flood and
-field to look at a strip of canvas not as big as that
-drawing board. &lsquo;The Valley of the Sharrow on an afternoon
-in July.&rsquo; By the way, did you ever happen to
-meet him?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Sally had never met Stanning the painter.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;One of the whitest men that ever lived. Lies out
-there. A great chap, Jim Stanning. Another Torrington
-almost for a certainty ... although he doubted
-himself, whether he was big enough to fight his own
-success. See what he meant?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It thrilled him a little when he realized that she
-did.</p>
-
-<p>For an instant the extinguished eyes seemed to well
-with light. &ldquo;That picture of his, &lsquo;As the Leaves of the
-Tree,&rsquo; carries technique to a point that makes one
-dizzy. Some say technique doesn&rsquo;t matter, but there&rsquo;s
-nothing permanent without it.&rdquo; He sighed heavily.
-&ldquo;Of course the undaunted soul of man has to shine
-through it. And that&rsquo;s just what Jim Stanning was&mdash;an
-undaunted soul. Dead at thirty-nine. We shan&rsquo;t
-realize ... if we ever realize ... however....&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Overcome by his thoughts for a moment, he could
-not go on. Sally sat breathing hard.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If I were a rich man, as rich as Ford or Carnegie,
-I&rsquo;d buy that picture of old Jim&rsquo;s and send it to them in
-Berlin. Some day it might help them to ask themselves
-just what it was that brought the man who
-painted it, a man who simply lived for beauty, to die
-like a dog, half mad, in a poisoned muckyard in Flanders.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly he stopped and the light seemed to die in
-his face. Then he turned round on the piano stool and
-broke delicately into the opening bars of the haunted,
-wild and terrible Fifth Symphony. For the moment
-he had forgotten that Sally was there.</p>
-
-<p>She got up from her chair and came to him as a
-child to a wounded and suffering animal. Putting an
-arm round his clean but frayed collar she kissed his
-forehead.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shall come and see you again ... if I may.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>His sightless flesh seemed to contract as he lifted his
-thin hands from the keyboard. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t!&rdquo; he gasped.
-&ldquo;Better not ... better not ... for both of us.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She knew he was right and something in her voice
-told him so. &ldquo;... If I may,&rdquo; she repeated weakly.</p>
-
-<p>He didn&rsquo;t answer. She pressed her lips again upon
-his forehead, then took up her coat and went hastily
-from the room.</p>
-
-<p>The old woman was in the act of turning the latchkey
-in the front door. She had got her coupons and
-was returning in triumph with a full basket.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not going, Miss Sally, are you? I should like
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span>you to have seen his decorations&mdash;D.S.O. with two
-Bars and such a wonderful letter from the General.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid I simply must go, Mrs. Nixey. Off to
-France to-morrow, and I&rsquo;ve got to pack.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, my dear, I suppose so. Very good of you
-to come and see him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>At the sight of Sally&rsquo;s eyes the voice of the old
-woman changed suddenly. &ldquo;He thinks, my dear, he&rsquo;ll
-get better ... he quite thinks he&rsquo;ll get better ... but
-... but, Dr. Minyard....&rdquo; Again the voice of the
-old woman changed. &ldquo;Ah, there he is playing again.
-How beautifully he does play, doesn&rsquo;t he? Hours
-... and hours ... and hours. So soft and gentle
-... the bit he&rsquo;s playing now reminds him of the wind
-in Dibley Chase. Yes, and that bit too ... he says
-it makes him see the sun dancing along the Sharrow
-on an afternoon in July. Beautiful piano! So kind
-and thoughtful of your dear father! He quite thinks
-... he&rsquo;ll....&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XLVII">XLVII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE Corporal&rsquo;s leg was a long time getting well.</p>
-
-<p>First it came on a bit, then it went back a bit;
-but the process of recovery was a painful and a tardy
-business. Still it was much softened by the judicious
-help of others. By the interest of the Mayor of the
-city, whose model hospital on The Rise and its last
-word in equipment meant access to more than one
-influential ear, Corporal Hollis in the later stages of
-a long convalescence had the privileges of an out
-patient.</p>
-
-<p>These privileges, moreover, were enjoyed in ideal
-conditions. Early in April, Melia was installed at
-Torrington Cottage, Dibley. To the secret gratification
-of her family, the business in Love Lane was
-given up, and Melia&rsquo;s checkered life entered upon a
-new phase amid surroundings wholly different from
-any it had known before.</p>
-
-<p>At first the change seemed almost too great to be
-enjoyed. After the gloom, the semi-squalor, the hard
-toil of Love Lane, it was like an entrance into paradise.
-And when, at the end of that enchanted month
-of April, the Corporal joined her in the new abode,
-Melia&rsquo;s cup of happiness seemed quite perilously full.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>That was a summer of magic days. For weeks
-on end they lived in a dream that had come true. To
-Melia the well appointed house, the beautiful surroundings,
-the bounty of her father were sources of perpetual
-amazement; to the Corporal the extensive garden,
-so gloriously stocked with flowers, fruit and vegetables,
-was a thing of delight; above all, the tower
-at the end of it, commanding on every hand his lovely
-native county, was a sacred thing, a temple of august
-memories.</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal sunning himself and smoking his pipe
-by the south wall, where the peaches grew, could never
-have believed it to be possible. Melia, tending the
-flowerbeds and the grass, at the end of a not-too-strenuous
-summer&rsquo;s day, felt somehow that this was fairyland.
-Yes, their dreams of the long ago had more
-than come true. And, crowning consummation, in the
-eyes of each other, they were honored husband and
-cherished wife.</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal was a long time getting well, but in
-that he was obeying instructions. Those most competent
-to speak of his case had told him not to be
-in a hurry; otherwise he might be permanently lame.
-And he was entitled to take his time. He had done
-his bit. Moreover, as his father-in-law assured him,
-it was the turn of younger men to &ldquo;carry on.&rdquo; He had
-been through more than a year and a half in the
-trenches amid some of the cruelest fighting of the
-war; he was entitled to wear two stripes of gold braid
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>on his sleeve. If any man could nurse a painful injury
-with a good conscience that man was Corporal
-Hollis.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of searing memories, in spite of the whole
-nation&rsquo;s anxieties, in a measure made less, yet not
-wholly dispelled by the entrance into the war of a
-great Ally, the Corporal was allowed a taste of those
-half-forbidden fruits, Poetry and Romance. At such
-a time, perhaps, with the issue still undecided and the
-trials of the people growing more severe every week,
-the gilt on life&rsquo;s gingerbread should have been denied
-him altogether. And yet by dogged pluck he had
-earned that guerdon, and Melia by her simple faith
-was worthy to share it with him.</p>
-
-<p>The famous erection at the end of the garden, a
-weathercock at its apex, a course of bricks and twelve
-stone steps at its base, was haunted continually by
-an unseen presence. And it was a presence with whom
-the Corporal long communed. Many an odd hour between
-sunrise and sunset, a humble disciple of the
-Highest, pencil or brush in hand, strove with hardly
-more than infantile art to surprise some of the secrets
-of woodland, stream and hill.</p>
-
-<p>No wonder that at that particular corner, where
-mile upon lovely mile of England rolled back to the
-frontiers of three counties, two of her greatest painters
-had gloried in Beauty and drunk deep. The lights
-tossed from the sky to the silver-breasted river gleaming
-a thousand feet below and then cast back again
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span>were so many heralds and sconce-bearers for those
-who had eyes to see.</p>
-
-<p>When the Corporal was not being wheeled round
-his enchanted garden, or was not smoking his pipe in
-the sun, he was sitting with his back to the weather,
-drawing and painting and dwelling in spirit with the
-genius of place and, through it, with one immortal
-friend.</p>
-
-<p>Autumn came and the Corporal still needed a
-crutch. But he could get about the garden now and
-even pluck the weeds, although not yet able to dig.
-And he was so happy that he didn&rsquo;t chafe against
-the slow recovery. He needed rest and he had earned
-it; of that there could be no question.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the months passed and events moved
-quickly. The war, to which no glimpse of an end
-was yet in sight, continued to press ever more severely
-upon all sections of the population. There
-was a shortage of everything now except the spirit
-of grim determination. It was a people&rsquo;s war, as no
-war had ever been, and the people, come what might,
-were set on winning it.</p>
-
-<p>In November the signal compliment was paid Josiah
-of electing him to office a third consecutive year.
-If anything, his second term had enhanced his prestige;
-his authority in the city of Blackhampton was
-greater than ever. More and more did he seem to
-be the man such abnormal times required. And the
-Mayoress, although under the constant threat of dis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>solution
-throughout a strenuous year, was still in the
-land of the living. Looking back on what she had
-suffered, the fact appeared miraculous; and yet as the
-end of the second term drew near, had she been quite
-honest with herself, she might have been tempted to
-own that she was none the worse for her experience.
-In some ways, although the admission would have
-called for wild horses, she might almost be said to be
-the better for it. Gertrude Preston, at any rate, openly
-said so.</p>
-
-<p>Such being the case, Josiah did not hesitate to accept
-office for a third term. By now he realized that
-he was the best man in the city, at all events for that
-particular job. Everybody said so, from the Town
-Clerk down; and it was no mere figure of speech. Indeed,
-Josiah felt that Blackhampton could hardly
-&ldquo;carry on&rdquo; without him.</p>
-
-<p>He was an autocrat, it was true, his temper was
-despotic, but that was the kind of man the times called
-for. It was no use having a divided mind, it was
-no use having a mealy-mouth. With the political instinct
-of a hardheaded race he had contrived to find
-a formula of government. He could talk to Labor
-in the language it understood; and the employers of
-Labor allowed him to talk to them, perhaps mainly
-for the reason that he was not himself an employer,
-but a disinterested and, if anything, slightly too honest,
-private citizen.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, no great surprise was caused at the be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>ginning
-of the New Year when it was announced that
-the dignity of a Knight of the British Empire had
-been conferred upon the Mayor of Blackhampton.
-Sir Josiah Munt, K.B.E., took it as &ldquo;all in the day&rsquo;s
-work.&rdquo; A democrat pur sang, yet he didn&rsquo;t doubt
-&ldquo;that he&rsquo;d make as good a knight as some of &rsquo;em.&rdquo;
-But the hapless Maria showed less stoicism. According
-to credible witnesses, when the news came to her
-that Lady Munt was her future style and degree,
-she fainted right off, and when at last the assiduous
-Alice had brought her to, she put herself to bed for
-three days.</p>
-
-<p>Be that as it may, old issues were revived in that tormented
-breast. Horace, Doctor Cockburn, had immensely
-strengthened his position in the triumphant
-course of the preceding year, but the new situation
-cried aloud for Doctor Tremlett. However, the
-Mayor telephoned to his sister-in-law &ldquo;to come at
-once and set her ladyship to rights,&rdquo; the call was
-promptly obeyed by the dauntless Gerty, and the
-crisis passed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XLVIII">XLVIII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE early months of the year 1918 saw the entire
-Allied Cause in the gravest jeopardy. Even
-a superficial study of facts only partially revealed
-has made it clear that disaster was invited by an almost
-criminal taking of chances. The time is not
-yet for the whole truth to be known. Meanwhile the
-muse of history continues to weave her Dædalian
-spells....</p>
-
-<p>On the last Sunday morning of that momentous
-and terrible March the Mayor sent his car to Torrington
-Cottage. Melia and her husband had been
-invited to spend the day at Strathfieldsaye. For several
-months the Corporal had been working at a new
-aerodrome along the valley, which happened to be
-within easy reach of his tricycle. His last Medical
-Board had proved that his leg was still weak and in
-its opinion not unlikely to remain so. But he had
-not been invalided out of the Army, as there was still
-a chance that presently he might be able to pass the
-doctor; at the same time, having regard to his age
-and the nature of his injury, he had a reasonable hope
-of getting his discharge whenever he cared to apply
-for it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>More than once had Melia urged him to do so. Her
-arguments were strong. He was not a young man
-and he had already &ldquo;done his bit&rdquo;; they were very
-happy together in their charming house; and her
-father had said that it would continue to be theirs as
-long as they cared to live in it. The Corporal, however,
-could not quite bring himself to quit the Army,
-even had such a course been possible. Something still
-held him. He didn&rsquo;t know exactly what it was, but
-even now that the chance had been given him he was
-loathe &ldquo;to cut the painter.&rdquo; Pride seemed to lie at
-the root of his reluctance. Melia felt it must be that.
-But the Corporal knew that alchemies more potent
-were at work.</p>
-
-<p>On this fateful Sunday in March, after the midday
-meal, as he sat smoking one of his father-in-law&rsquo;s cigars
-in the little room across the hall he realized that
-pressure was being brought to bear upon him to make
-a decision. Moreover, in Josiah&rsquo;s arguments, he
-heard the voice of his wife. Melia had lately astonished
-the world with the news that she was expecting
-a baby. The fact was very hard to credit that
-she was now preparing clothes for her first-born.
-A nine days&rsquo; wonder had ensued. Such a thing was
-almost beyond precedent, yet, after all, Dame Nature
-had been known to indulge in these caprices! The
-startled, fluttered, rather piqued Mrs. Doctor, after
-consultation with her lord, was able to furnish instances.
-Still, it was remarkable! And it lent much
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span>cogency to Melia&rsquo;s desire that the Corporal should now
-apply for his discharge from the Army.</p>
-
-<p>This afternoon it was clear that Josiah was pleading
-Melia&rsquo;s case. There was an excellent billet waiting
-for the Corporal at Jackson and Holcroft&rsquo;s if he
-cared to take it. They offered short hours and good
-pay. Why not? He was still going a trifle lame;
-the Medical Board was not likely to raise any objection;
-and it would be a relief to Melia who ought to
-be considered now.</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal, however, shifted uneasily in his chair.
-All through luncheon he had seemed terribly gloomy;
-and, if anything, his father-in-law&rsquo;s arguments had
-deepened the clouds. One reason was, perhaps, that
-Josiah himself was terribly gloomy. The whole country
-was terribly gloomy. It had suddenly swung back
-to the phase of August, 1914.</p>
-
-<p>The simple truth was that disaster was in the air.
-A crushing blow had fallen, a blow doubly cruel because
-so long foreseen and, therefore, to be parried
-if not actually prevented.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Over a wide front the British Army is beaten!&rdquo;
-Such was the enemy message to the Sunday papers.
-&ldquo;Ninety thousand prisoners and an enormous booty
-have been taken!&rdquo; And the greatest disaster in the
-long history of British arms was confirmed by the
-artless official meiosis. &ldquo;Our Fourth and Fifth Armies
-have retired to a previously prepared position.&rdquo; It
-omitted to state that the position was some thirty
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span>miles nearer Paris, but that fact received confirmation
-from the French communiqué in the next column,
-&ldquo;The capital is being bombarded by long-range guns.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>No day could have been less propitious for Melia.
-And after the Mayor had sat smoking a few minutes
-with his gloomy son-in-law he appeared to realize the
-state of the case. As the Corporal drew at his cigar
-in a silence that was almost morose, Josiah&rsquo;s own
-thoughts and feelings began to take color from their
-surroundings. He lapsed into silence also. It seemed
-to come home to him all at once and for the first time
-in his life that he had been guilty of impertinence.
-This little man with his bloodshot eyes and few struggling
-wisps of gray hair, with his twitching hands and
-his air of smoldering rage, had been through it. Even
-to have been Mayor of Blackhampton three years
-running was very little by comparison. Josiah was
-man enough to feel keenly annoyed for having allowed
-his tongue so free a rein.</p>
-
-<p>There came at last a deep growl from the Corporal.
-It was the note of an old dog, whose life of many
-battles has not improved his temper. &ldquo;If the bloody
-politicians will interfere!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The words found an echo in the heart of the Mayor.
-Sinister tales were rife on every hand. And of his
-own knowledge he was aware that there were hundreds
-of thousands of trained men in the country at
-that moment whose presence was most imperatively
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span>called for on the perilously weakened and extended
-British line to France.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Goin&rsquo; to call up the grandads, I see,&rdquo; said the Corporal,
-grimly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Aye!&rdquo; The Mayor laughed bitterly. &ldquo;Fat lot o&rsquo;
-use they&rsquo;ll be when they&rsquo;ve got &rsquo;em. Muddle, muddle,
-muddle.&rdquo; Like the Corporal, he was in a very black
-humor. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a mercy the Yankees are with us now&mdash;if
-they are not in too late.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Fancy muckin&rsquo; it,&rdquo; said the Corporal, &ldquo;with the
-game in our hands. A year ago we&rsquo;d got &rsquo;em beat.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Press government,&rdquo; said Josiah savagely.</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal proceeded to chew a good cigar.
-&ldquo;Dad,&rdquo; he said at last, and it was the first time in his
-life he had addressed his former employer so familiarly,
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;m thinking I&rsquo;ll have to go before the Medical
-Board again.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah combed an incipient goatee with a dubious
-forefinger. &ldquo;But, my boy, from what you told me,
-you thought you could get your discharge any time
-you liked to ask for it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That was back in January.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re no fitter now than you were then, are you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal slowly stretched his right leg to its
-full length, and then, gathering it under him leant
-his whole weight upon it. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m much firmer on my
-pins than I was then.&rdquo; His rough voice suddenly
-regained its usual gentleness. &ldquo;Work seems to suit
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span>me.&rdquo; He laughed rather wryly. &ldquo;I expect the
-Board&rsquo;ll pass me now&mdash;if I ask &rsquo;em to.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was the turn of Josiah to maltreat his cigar. &ldquo;Not
-thinking of going back into the Line, are you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If they&rsquo;ll take me.&rdquo; The Corporal spoke slowly
-and softly. &ldquo;And I daresay they will&mdash;if I ask &rsquo;em
-polite.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah&rsquo;s keen face was full of queer emotion. &ldquo;Not
-for me to say anything.&rdquo; But he had been charged
-with a mission by the urgent Melia. No matter what
-his private feelings let him not betray it! &ldquo;Seems
-to me, my boy, although it&rsquo;s not for me to say anything,
-that no one&rsquo;ll blame you, after what you&rsquo;ve
-been through, if you stand aside and make room for
-others.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal extended both legs towards the fire.
-He gazed into it solemnly without speaking.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, think it over, Bill.&rdquo; The voice of the
-tempter. &ldquo;No one can blame you, if you stick to
-your present billet, which suits you so well&mdash;or even
-if you go into munitions at a good salary. You&rsquo;ll
-have earned anything they give you. And in a manner
-o&rsquo; speaking you&rsquo;ll still be doing your bit. But
-as I say ... it&rsquo;s not for me....&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Strangling a groan, the Corporal rose suddenly
-from his chair, &ldquo;I must think it over.&rdquo; He threw the
-stump of his cigar into the fire. &ldquo;You see, I don&rsquo;t like
-leaving the Chaps.&rdquo; The voice of the Corporal sank
-almost to a whisper.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Mayor gave his guest a second cigar and chose
-another for himself. But he didn&rsquo;t say anything.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You see&mdash;as you might say&mdash;I&rsquo;ve had Experience.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The Mayor looked a little queerly at the Corporal.
-Then he took a penknife out of the pocket of a rather
-ornate knitted waistcoat and dexterously removed
-the tip from his cigar.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve had Experience.&rdquo; The Corporal sighed and
-sat down heavily in his cushioned chair. He fixed
-his eyes again on the fire.</p>
-
-<p>The Mayor applied a lighted spill to his cigar and
-then in silence offered it to the Corporal. But the
-Corporal&rsquo;s cigar was not yet ready for smoking.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If I do go&rdquo;&mdash;the voice of the Corporal was soft
-and thick and rather husky&mdash;&ldquo;you&rsquo;ll ... you&rsquo;ll....&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>His father-in-law nodded. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you worry about
-that. I&rsquo;ll see <i>her</i> all right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Josiah took out his handkerchief and blew his nose
-violently.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XLIX">XLIX</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HAT evening, about nine o&rsquo;clock, when Melia
-and the Corporal returned to Torrington Cottage,
-they found a cosy fire awaiting them in the
-charming sitting room, an act of grace on the part
-of Fanny, a handmaiden from the village, for the
-evenings were chilly. They sat a few minutes together
-and then Melia retired for the night after having
-drawn a promise from the Corporal that he would
-not be long in following her example.</p>
-
-<p>Alas, the Corporal did not feel in the least like going
-to bed. There was a decision to be made. In fact
-he had half made it already. But the good wife upstairs
-and the very chair in which he sat had cast
-their spells upon him. Gazing into the heart of the
-fire he realized that he was deliciously and solidly comfortable.
-All his days he had been a catlike lover of
-the comfortable. In the first instance it had been
-that as much as anything that had so nearly undone
-him. Conflicting voices were urging him, as somehow
-they always did, at critical moments in his life.</p>
-
-<p>This beautiful room with its old furniture, its
-china, its bric-a-brac, its soft carpet, its one rare landscape
-upon the wall was an enchanted palace. Even
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span>now, after all these months of occupation, it seemed
-like sacrilege to be sitting in it. But it was a symptom
-of a changed condition. This lovely place with
-its poetry and its elegance was a dream come true.
-And the honor and the affection with which a world
-formerly so hard and so supercilious surrounded him
-now made life so much sweeter than ever before.</p>
-
-<p>Sitting there in front of a delicious fire he felt
-that the peace and the beauty all about him had entered
-his soul. He had a right to these languors; he
-had purchased them with many unspeakable months
-of torture and pain. No one would blame him, no
-one could blame him if he left the dance to younger
-men. Suddenly he heard a little wind steal along the
-valley and he shivered at the image that was born
-upon its whisper. Just beyond these cosy, lamplit
-walls was Night, Chaos, Panic. Outside the tiny
-harbor he had won at such a price was all hell let
-loose.</p>
-
-<p>He heard the awful Crumps, he could taste the icy
-mud they flung over him, he was plunged again in
-endless, hideous hours, he could see and feel the
-muck, the senseless muck, the boredom, the excruciating
-misery. The wind in the valley grew a little
-louder and he shuddered in the depths of his spirit.</p>
-
-<p>The crocuses were out in the fields by the river.
-Next week would be April, the time of cloud, of glowing
-brake and flowering thorn, of daffodils and miraculous
-lights along the Sharrow. The little picture
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span>over the chimneypiece, which he had copied three
-times in his long convalescence, showed what April
-meant along the Sharrow. Friendship had taught him
-something, had given him eyes. He had been initiated
-into the higher mysteries. Beauty for the sake of
-Beauty&mdash;the world religion of the future&mdash;had been
-revealed to him. The sense of it seemed to fill him
-with passion as he gazed into the fire.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Auntie!&rdquo; Surely there was a voice in the room.
-Or was it the little wind outside softly trying the
-shutters? &ldquo;Auntie!&rdquo; It was there again. He got
-up unsteadily, but in a kind of ecstasy, half entrancement,
-half pain, and crossed to the French window.
-Very gently he slipped back the bolts and flung open
-the door. The darkness hit him, but there was nothing
-there. He knew there was nothing there, yet in
-his old carpet slippers he stepped out gingerly on to
-the wet lawn. The air was moist and mild and
-friendly, and as his eyes grew used to the mirk the
-rosebushes and the fruit trees took shape on either
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>The shafts of light from the room he had left guided
-him across the grass as far as the path which led
-to the tower at the end of the garden. As soon as
-his feet were on the gravel he thought he heard the
-voice again. Of course it couldn&rsquo;t be so. It was only
-the wind along the valley. And yet ... no ... if
-the wind wasn&rsquo;t calling....</p>
-
-<p>The gaunt line of the many-windowed tower loomed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span>ahead. Less by calculation than by instinct he suddenly
-found the lowest of the twelve stone steps which
-led to its high door&mdash;in that darkness he couldn&rsquo;t
-see it, and if he had seen it there was not the slightest
-reason for ascending, but just now he was possessed.
-Step after step shaped itself with a kind of intelligence
-to his old waterlogged slippers, the damp knob
-of the door came into his hand.</p>
-
-<p>The door was locked. Silly fool he was! Must
-be cracked anyway! But the starched cuff of his best
-Sunday shirt had got entangled with something. The
-key, of course. It had been left in the lock. Careless
-to leave it like that.</p>
-
-<p>Of a sudden the door came open. The ghostly
-abyss within smelt very damp and cheerless. Ought
-to have had an occasional fire there during the winter
-months. He felt his way cautiously in and his eyes
-adjusted themselves to the grimmer texture of the
-darkness. The chill made his teeth chatter. He felt
-in his pockets for a match, but he hadn&rsquo;t got one;
-he moved gingerly forward, past a wooden table and
-a wicker chair; the spectral outline of an unshuttered
-window confronted him.</p>
-
-<p>Outside was nothing but the wind in the valley.
-He couldn&rsquo;t see a yard beyond the glass. The chill
-of the musty place was settling into his bones. What
-a fool not to be in his comfortable bed! But ... a
-voice was still whispering. There <i>was</i> something
-... somewhere....</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The wind was just like the little wind along that
-damned Canal. No wonder his teeth chattered. And
-then right out in the void he saw a star. It was so
-faint, so far beyond the valley and the wind&rsquo;s voice
-that he was not sure it was a star. But as he stood
-looking at it the voice seemed to come quite close.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Auntie ... Auntie....&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That you, Jim ... here I am, boy....&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>... Only a fool would stand with chattering teeth,
-in carpet slippers, at a goodish bit past midnight,
-talking to something that wasn&rsquo;t there....</p>
-
-<p>Somewhere in the darkness there was a presence.
-Perhaps it was outside the window. He felt his way
-back to the open door, as far as the veiled peril of the
-twelve stone steps. It was so dark that he couldn&rsquo;t
-even see the topmost; there was not even a railing for
-such an emergency; a single false step and he would
-break his neck.</p>
-
-<p>Queerly excited he stood poised on the threshold,
-feeling into space with one foot. The wind was in
-the garden below him. And then oddly, at a fresh
-angle, over by his left hand, he caught a glimpse of
-the star. He swayed forward into the void but the
-lamp of faith had been lit in his eyes. His taut nerves
-awoke to the fact that he was really descending the
-unseen steps one by one and that he was counting
-them. If he didn&rsquo;t take extraordinary care he was
-very likely to kill himself, but the care he was taking
-seemed by no means extraordinary.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>His old carpet slippers were shuffling along the
-gravel at last. He could make out a line of currant
-bushes by which ran the path to the house. As he
-moved forward the wind died away in the valley and
-he lost sight of the star. But he knew his way now.
-Pent up forces flowed from him through the wall of
-living darkness. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m coming, Jim!&rdquo; he muttered.
-The wind seemed to answer him. And then he came
-to the end of the row of bushes and there beyond a
-patch of wet grass was the door of the cosy room
-still open with a subdued glow of lamp and fire shining
-beyond.</p>
-
-<p>When he came in he took off his soaked slippers that
-they might not soil the beautiful carpet of which Melia
-was so proud. As he barred the door and drew
-the curtains across the window, the pretty old-fashioned
-clock on the chimneypiece chided him by melodiously
-striking one o&rsquo;clock. He must be a fool&mdash;he
-had to be up at seven; but the enchanted room that
-was like a dream embodied cast one last spell upon
-him.</p>
-
-<p>He had no need ... the Chaps wouldn&rsquo;t expect it
-... he was forty-five....</p>
-
-<p>The voice was in the valley. It was a quarter past
-one. He raked out the last faint embers of the fire,
-then he put out the lamp and carried his wet slippers
-into the hall. After his recent adventure it was but
-a simple matter to find his way up the richly car<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span>peted
-stairs without a light and creep into the room
-where his wife slept.</p>
-
-<p>She was sleeping now. So cunningly he crept into
-the room that she did not stir. He listened to the
-gentle rise and fall of her soft breath. Good woman!
-brave woman! He tiptoed past the bed to where the
-window was and managed to draw up the clever new-fangled
-blinds without making a sound. Yes, there
-was the star. That was all he wanted to see. Faint
-it was, so faint that faith was needed to believe that
-it was a star. But there was nothing else it could be.</p>
-
-<p>The little sobbing voice, now no more than a whisper,
-that, too, was out there. Jim&rsquo;s voice ... cracked
-he must be ... such sloppy notions ... the wind
-along that damned canal....</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly he turned from the star. At the beck of
-a queer impulse he knelt by the bed, burying his eyes
-in the soft counterpane. He prayed for the Chaps.
-He prayed for Melia. He prayed for the life that lay
-with her, the life coming to them so miraculously they
-knew not whence, after all those years.</p>
-
-<p>Could it be that Jim was coming back to complete
-his great beginnings? Coming back to witch the
-world with beauty? Just a fancy. But everything was
-just a fancy. Jim had said so once, looking at the
-sunset on the bank of that canal.</p>
-
-<p>And he was one who....</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="L">L</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE months went by. In the meantime, upon the
-fields of France, was being decided the fate of
-the world for generations to come. Day followed day
-whose story will echo down the ages, but in the cottage
-with the green shutters at the head of the valley
-there was little to indicate that it was a time of destiny.</p>
-
-<p>The Corporal was allowed to return to his old regiment.
-Experience had made him doubly valuable and
-its ranks had been grievously thinned. After three
-months at the Depôt he was sent to France.</p>
-
-<p>When at the end of July he came home on draft
-leave to bid Melia good-by, her time was drawing near.
-And in spite of the burdens life had laid upon them,
-the feeling now uppermost was a subtle sense of triumph.
-In the final bitterness of conflict the dark Fates
-had given them courage to bear their heads high.</p>
-
-<p>A strange reward was coming to them, bringing
-with it new obligations, new responsibilities. But they
-were not afraid. Somewhere, a Friend was helping
-them. It must be so, or else the dire perils to which
-they had been exposed would not have allowed their
-happiness to bear so late a flower. Besides, they had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span>been given a specific token that in the sum of things
-they mattered.</p>
-
-<p>As the Corporal held his wife in a last embrace it
-came to him all at once that he was never to see the
-young life that was to bear his name. &ldquo;If we can put
-the job through to a finish,&rdquo; he whispered huskily, &ldquo;I&rsquo;d
-like it to be a boy. If we can&rsquo;t, a girl&rsquo;d be better.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She asked why a girl would be better. As usual
-she was not very quick in the uptake.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The world&rsquo;ll not be a place for boys&mdash;unless we
-can do the job clean.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But you will do it, Bill.&rdquo; The almost cowlike eyes
-expressed a divine instinct. &ldquo;God won&rsquo;t let the Germans
-win.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Somehow the words shamed him, yet not for the
-reason that turned her own heart to fire. It was treason
-to the Chaps to talk of girls.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;O&rsquo; course we&rsquo;ll make a clean job on it.&rdquo; He pressed
-a final caress upon her. &ldquo;You can set there, my dear,
-in that nice chair all covered with wild flowers, and
-the door open just as it is, so that you can get a
-glimpse o&rsquo; that old river with the sun on it and when
-your eyes get tired-like, my dear, you can fix &rsquo;em on
-that little picture over the chimneypiece opposite. See
-what I mean, like? There&rsquo;s the sun in that, too. John
-Torrington painted it. Look at it sometimes. We
-are going to win&mdash;it isn&rsquo;t right to think otherwise.
-That means a boy. And if a boy it is, I&rsquo;d like him
-to be called Jim.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="LI">LI</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">C</span>IVILIZATION was ringing with great news at
-the very hour that a son was born to the Corporal.
-But at that time he was a Corporal no longer.
-A letter had already reached Melia to say that &ldquo;he was
-promoted Color Sergeant.&rdquo; The fighting was awful,
-but the Chaps had got their tails up, and the time was
-coming &ldquo;when Fritz would be bound to throw in his
-hand.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was very well, therefore, that the half comic,
-rather pathetic, somewhat crumpled but perfectly
-healthy creature snuggling up against its mother in
-a lovely chintz-clad bedroom looking southwest,
-proved to be a small but perfectly formed specimen of
-the human male. The delighted grandmother herself
-took the incredible news to Strathfieldsaye.</p>
-
-<p>Josiah, who for several days past had been hard
-set to conceal a growing excitement, rubbed his hands
-with glee. &ldquo;One in the eye for Park Crescent&mdash;what?
-Fancy ... Melia!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lady Munt agreed that wonders are never likely to
-cease in this world.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; she never remembered to have seen Josiah
-so excited, &ldquo;this means a bottle o&rsquo; champagne.&rdquo;
-He pressed the bell and gave comprehensive orders
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span>to Alice. &ldquo;Seems to me that Victory&rsquo;s in the air.&rdquo;
-Secretly he had always had a grudge against Fate,
-that, with all his worldly success, his family could not
-muster one solitary male among them. &ldquo;Funny
-thing, y&rsquo; know, how you can be deceived in people.
-I always said that chap Hollis was a good-for-nothing.
-Well, I was wrong.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Her ladyship sniffed a little and wiped tearful eyes.
-She was in perversely low spirits, but good soup, in
-spite of the food crisis and good wine, which she was
-simply forced to drink, did something to restore her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, you can be deceived in people.&rdquo; The cool
-trickle down Josiah&rsquo;s throat generated a desire for conversation.
-&ldquo;Take the Germans. Everybody thought
-they were a white race. Well, they aren&rsquo;t. Then take
-the Americans. Everybody said they were too proud
-to fight. And, when finally they came in, people said
-they&rsquo;d not be much use anyway. But it shows how
-easy it is to be wrong.&rdquo; Again the Mayor took up his
-glass. &ldquo;For I tell you, Mother, those Yankees have
-made a difference. Since that mix-up back in March
-they&rsquo;ve done wonders. The Yankees have turned the
-scale.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Maria had a head for domestic affairs only; she
-did not pretend to be wise in international matters.
-She sighed gently and thought of a certain chintz-clad
-room up at Dibley.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Get on with it!&rdquo; Her lord pointed at her glass
-peremptorily. &ldquo;Pol Roger &rsquo;04&rsquo;ll hurt nobody.&rdquo; Strong
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span>in that faith, he lifted his own glass and bowed and
-beamed over the top of it. &ldquo;Grandma, here&rsquo;s now!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>At the toast Maria hoisted a blush which brought
-Josiah to the verge of catastrophe. Tears, her one
-form of emotional luxury, came into her honest eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In a year or two, Grandma, we&rsquo;ll have to be thinking
-of your golden wedding&mdash;touching wood!&rdquo; He
-laid a ritualistic finger upon the mahogany. &ldquo;You
-little thought, did you now, when we started out together
-in that funny little box up Parker&rsquo;s Entry that
-one day you&rsquo;d be My Lady? Funny world&mdash;what?
-I remember going to fetch the Doctor the night that
-gel was born. Bitter cold it was.&rdquo; Suddenly Josiah
-stopped and again took up his glass. &ldquo;Wind had an
-edge like a knife round the corner by Waterloo
-Square.&rdquo; Then came an odd change of voice. &ldquo;Did I
-understand you to say the gel would like me to be
-godfather?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Maria understood that Melia understood that Bill
-would like it.</p>
-
-<p>A sigh escaped Josiah. He laid down his knife and
-fork. &ldquo;Well, well, I never made such a mistake in my
-life as over that chap.&rdquo; His voice grew humbler than
-Maria had ever heard it. &ldquo;Shows how you can be
-deceived. Something big about that feller. Never
-made a greater mistake in my life. We&rsquo;ll hope he&rsquo;ll
-come through. Better write him a line, Mother.
-Don&rsquo;t suppose it&rsquo;s any use tryin&rsquo; to send a wire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="LII">LII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">S</span>OME weeks later, on a cold Sunday morning in
-November, Sir Josiah and Lady Munt drove over
-to Torrington Cottage. They were accompanied by
-Sally, on short leave from France, and by Gertrude
-Preston. Before the party walked across the village
-green to the little parish church, where a service of
-National Thanksgiving was to be held, it found that a
-matter of great importance claimed attention.</p>
-
-<p>The matter was Jim. The rector of the parish
-had arranged to christen him that afternoon at three
-o&rsquo;clock. Near a good log fire in the sunny embrasure
-of the charming little drawing-room his grand cradle
-had been set; and here the wonderful infant was duly
-inspected by his godparents.</p>
-
-<p>Jim was a picture. His grandfather said he was.
-There was no other word. Yet even in the presence
-of this phenomenal youth there was but a chastened
-joy. He was sleeping for one thing, calmly, sweetly
-and superbly; and his pale, fine-drawn, yet strangely
-proud-looking mother was clad in the livery of widowhood.</p>
-
-<p>Said Josiah in a low voice, so as not to wake the
-baby, &ldquo;What&rsquo;s happened to the picture that used to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span>be there?&rdquo; He pointed to the wall above the chimneypiece.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It fell down, Dad.&rdquo; The voice of Melia was calm.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;When?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;One night last week&mdash;the night before the news
-came.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t say!&rdquo; Josiah was not superstitious, still
-it was queer.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No one was in the room when it happened. No
-one heard it fall. Didn&rsquo;t break the frame or the glass
-or anything. Just the snapping of the cord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;War cord, I expect.&rdquo; Josiah&rsquo;s voice was grim.
-&ldquo;Need a cord of a better quality to hang a certain
-party. Better have it put up again. Young Nixey
-tells me that picture may be worth a sight o&rsquo; money.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Melia promised that it should be put up again.
-<i>He</i> always set such great store by it.</p>
-
-<p>Of a sudden, Sally, who had been wholly absorbed
-in the contemplation of James, said, &ldquo;Tell me, Father,
-when did you last see young Nixey?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thursday&mdash;Friday. Happened to look in Friday
-morning as I was passing.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How was he?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Wonderfully cheerful considerin&rsquo;. Tries to gammon
-his old mother, but I guess the old lady
-knows....&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;... he&rsquo;ll never....&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, poor fellow. Wonderful pluck. Tells me he&rsquo;s
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span>plannin&rsquo; a cathedral ... a cathedral, mark you ...
-and stone blind.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Sally sighed a little and turned again to look at
-Jim. Aunt Gerty laid a white-gloved hand gently on
-the Mayor&rsquo;s sleeve. &ldquo;Ten minutes to eleven, Josiah.
-Won&rsquo;t do to be late&mdash;<i>you</i> of all people. Will it
-Maria?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="LIII">LIII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="dropcap">M</span>ARIA and Aunt Gerty, carrying respectability
-to the verge of fashion, led the way by the path
-across the green to the village church. Josiah, walking
-with his daughters, followed ten paces behind.
-Wearing the tall hat of public life he looked imposing,
-but four and a quarter years of war had chastened
-him. The roll and the swagger were not what they
-were; four and a quarter years of incessant but fruitful
-labor for the common weal had molded his mind,
-had modified an aggressive personality.</p>
-
-<p>The church, although in excess of the local requirements
-as a rule, was very full this morning in November.
-It was an hour of Thanksgiving. The goal
-had been reached. Victory, complete and final, had
-come almost like a thief in the night. And its coming
-had revealed, in a manner transcending even the
-awful dramas of old, the omnipotence of the moral
-law. Yet again the God of Righteousness had declared
-Himself in Sovereign power.</p>
-
-<p>Grim perils had been surmounted by the devotion
-of the sons and daughters of the race, but very much
-remained to do. Behind the humble gratitude to the
-Giver of Victory, behind the sense of exultation so
-rightly uppermost this Sabbath morning, was in every
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span>heart a desolating sense of the cost in human lives and
-a deep anxiety for the future.</p>
-
-<p>The Vicar of the parish, by name the Reverend Corfield
-Stanning, was a white-haired man who had given
-soul and kin freely to the Cause. He was a son of
-the soil, a type of the almost extinct squarson who
-survives here and there in England, half landowner,
-half patriarch, less a scholar than a sportsman and a
-man of the world. For that reason, perhaps, he had
-the practical wisdom that books do not give. He had
-the instinct for affairs which men of his type seldom
-lack.</p>
-
-<p>Victory was with the arms of Right. The people
-did well to rejoice. But also it was a time for prayer,
-for steadfast dedication to the gigantic tasks ahead.
-The man-eating tiger was in the net. It now remained
-to repair the havoc he had wrought, and to provide
-security for generations unborn against his kind.</p>
-
-<p>Having humbly thanked the Giver, the old man
-prayed for his country and for those noble races of
-which it was the foster-mother. He prayed for all
-her wide-flung peoples to whom the Keys had been
-given; he prayed that the Pioneers of sacred liberties
-so long in peril, those one in name and in blood over
-all the wide seas, who hold Milton&rsquo;s faith, who speak
-Shakespeare&rsquo;s tongue may ever stand as now, shoulder
-to shoulder in the gate.</p>
-
-<p>He prayed for all those children of men grown old
-and weak in bondage, whose chains had at last been
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</a></span>cast off. He besought the Divine grace to guide
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, he prayed for the Co-trustees of the future
-and that the Divine wisdom encompass them in their
-reckoning with a cruel and unworthy foe. He asked
-that mercy be extended to those who had denied it
-to others, not that it was in his heart to pity them in
-their eclipse or to spare them aught of their desert,
-but that the name of the Master be served, in whom
-lay the ultimate hope of the world, might be honored
-in mankind&rsquo;s supreme yet most terrible hour.</p>
-
-<p>When the old man came to his brief and simple
-sermon the words of his text pierced every heart.
-&ldquo;Greater love hath no man than this, that he lay down
-his life for his friends.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It began with commemoration of a humble hero,
-known to many in that church, who had given all he
-had to give without stint or question. And he read a
-letter written from the sacred and recovered soil of
-France by the officer commanding that Band of Brothers
-raised in their midst to the wife of one Sergeant
-William Hollis, who had died a soldier and a gentleman
-that his faith and his friends might live.</p>
-
-<p class="center no-indent">THE END</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-
-<p class="no-indent center">Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes:</p>
-
-<p>Minor changes have been made to correct obvious typesetters&rsquo; errors
-and to regularize hyphenation; variant spellings have been retained.
-</p>
-
-<p>In chapter XXIV, page 146, the sentence that was typeset as &ldquo;By the time William and Melia
-turned down Saint James his street,&rdquo; has been changed to &ldquo;By the time William and Melia
-turned down Saint James&rsquo;s street,&rdquo; to make sense grammatically.</p>
-
-<p>In several places, Josiah Munt refers to himself or others as &ldquo;prattical&rdquo; in conversation. In chapter
-XXXVI, page 241, he is musing about education for women as not being &ldquo;prattical&rdquo;; the Transcriber has chosen to
-retain this spelling as fitting the author's style and intent.</p>
-
-<p>In four instances in the book, the author refers to a &ldquo;pickelet&rdquo;, and
-in one place to a &ldquo;pikelet&rdquo;. Because of the frequency of pickelet, the
-Transcriber has chosen to retain the variant spelling.</p></div></div>
-
-</pre>
-<pre style='margin-top:6em'>
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