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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 #68520 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68520)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Van Roon, by J. C. 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 Van Roon
-
-Author: J. C. Snaith
-
-Release Date: July 13, 2022 [eBook #68520]
-
-Language: English
-
-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 University of California
- libraries)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VAN ROON ***
-
-
-
-
-
-THE VAN ROON
-
-
-
-
- By
-
- J. C. SNAITH
-
-
- THE VAN ROON
- THE COUNCIL OF SEVEN
- THE ADVENTUROUS LADY
- THE UNDEFEATED
- THE SAILOR
- THE TIME SPIRIT
- THE COMING
- ANNE FEVERSHAM
-
-
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
- Publishers New York
-
-
-
-
- THE VAN ROON
-
- BY
-
- J. C. SNAITH
-
- AUTHOR OF “THE SAILOR,” “THE UNDEFEATED,”
- “THE COUNCIL OF SEVEN,” ETC.
-
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
- NEW YORK :: LONDON :: MCMXXII
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
-
-
- Copyright, 1922, by the Curtis Publishing Co.
- PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
-
-
-
-THE VAN ROON
-
-
-I
-
-
-NORTH of the Strand, east of the National Gallery, a narrow
-street winds a devious course towards Long Acre. To the casual eye
-it is no more than a mean and dingy thoroughfare without charm or
-interest, but for the connoisseur it has its legend. Here Swinburne
-came upon his famous copy of “The Faerie Queene”; here more than one
-collection has been enriched by a Crome, a Morland, a choice miniature,
-a first proof or some rare unsuspected article of bigotry and virtue.
-
-On the right, going from Charing Cross, halfway up the street, a shop,
-outwardly inconspicuous, bears on its front in plain gilt letters the
-name S. Gedge, Antiques.
-
-A regard for the _mot juste_ could omit the final letter. S.
-Gedge Antique was nearer the fact. To look at, the proprietor of the
-business was an antique of the most genuine kind, whose age, before he
-was dressed for the day, might have been anything. When, however, he
-had “tidied himself up” to sit at the receipt of a custom, a process
-involving a shave, the putting on of collar and dickey, prehistoric
-frock coat, new perhaps for the Prince Consort’s funeral, and a
-pair of jemimas that also were “of the period,” his years, in spite
-of a yellow parchment countenance of an incredible cunning, could at
-conservative estimate be reckoned as seventy.
-
-On a certain morning of September, the years of the proprietor of S.
-Gedge Antiques, whatever they might be, sat heavily upon him. Tall,
-sombre, gaunt, a cross between a hop-pole and a moulting vulture, his
-tattered dressing gown and chessboard slippers lent a touch of fantasy
-to his look of eld, while the collar and dickey of commerce still
-adorned the back kitchen dresser.
-
-Philosophers say that to find a reason for everything is only a
-question of looking. The reason for the undress of S. Gedge Antiques so
-late as eleven o’clock in the morning was not far to seek. His right
-hand man and sole assistant, who answered to the name of William, and
-who was never known or called by any other, had been away for an annual
-holiday of one week, which this year he had spent in Suffolk. He was
-due back in the course of that day and his master would raise a pæan
-on his return. In the absence of William the indispensable S. Gedge
-Antiques was like a windjammer on a lee shore.
-
-There was a further reason for his lost air. He was “at outs” with
-Mrs. Runciman, his charwoman, a state of affairs which had long
-threatened to become chronic. An old, and in her own opinion, an
-undervalued retainer, the suspension of diplomatic relations between
-Mrs. Runciman and her employer could always be traced to one cause. S.
-Gedge attributed it to the phases of the moon and their effect on the
-human female, but the real root of the mischief was Mrs. Runciman’s
-demand for “a raise in her celery.” For many years past the lady had
-held that her services were worth more than “half a crown a day and her
-grub.” The invariable reply of her master was that he had never paid
-more to a char all the time he had been in trade and that if she wanted
-more she could keep away. This Thursday morning, according to precedent
-when matters came to a head, Mrs. Runciman had taken him at his word.
-The old man knew, however, that her absence would only be temporary. A
-single day off would vindicate the rights of woman. As sure as the sun
-rose on the morrow Mrs. R. would return impenitent but in better fettle
-for charring. But as he made a point of telling her, she would play the
-trick once too often.
-
-Char-less for the time being, assistant-less also, this morning S.
-Gedge was not only looking his age, he was feeling it; but he had
-already begun to examine the contents of a large packing case from
-Ipswich which Messrs. Carter Paterson had delivered half an hour ago
-at the back of the premises by the side entry. Handicapped as S. Gedge
-Antiques at the moment was, he could well have deferred these labours
-until later in the day. Human curiosity, however, had claimed him as a
-victim.
-
-By a side wind he had heard of a sale at a small and rather
-inaccessible house in the country where a few things might be going
-cheap. As this was to take place in the course of William’s holiday,
-the young man had been given a few pounds to invest, provided that
-in his opinion “the goods were full value.” By trusting William to
-carry out an operation of such delicacy, his master whose name in
-trade circles was that of “a very keen buyer” was really paying him
-the highest compliment in his power. For the god of S. Gedge Antiques
-was money. In the art of “picking things up,” however, William had a
-lucky touch. His master could depend as a rule on turning over a few
-shillings on each of the young man’s purchases; indeed there were
-occasions when the few shillings had been many. The truth was that
-William’s flair for a good thing was almost uncanny.
-
-Adroit use of a screwdriver prised the lid off the packing case. A top
-layer of shavings was removed. With the air of a _dévot_ the old
-man dug out William’s first purchase and held it up to the light of New
-Cross Street, or to as much of that dubious commodity as could filter
-down the side entry.
-
-Purchase the first proved to be a copy of an engraving by P.
-Bartolozzi: the _Mrs. Lumley and Her Children_ of Sir Joshua
-Reynolds. An expert eye priced it at once a safe thirty shillings in
-the window of the front shop, although William had been told not to
-exceed a third of that sum at Loseby Grange, Saxmundham. So far so
-good. With a feeling of satisfaction S. Gedge laid the engraving upon
-a chair of ornate appearance but doubtful authenticity, and proceeded
-to remove more straw from the packing case. Before, however, he could
-deal with William’s second purchase, whatever it might be, he was
-interrupted.
-
-A voice came from the front shop.
-
-“Uncle Si! Uncle Si! Where are you?”
-
-The voice was feminine. S. Gedge Antiques, crusted bachelor and
-confirmed hater of women, felt a sudden pang of dismay.
-
-“Where are you, Uncle Si?”
-
-“Com-ming!” A low roar boomed from the interior of the packing case.
-It failed, however, to get beyond the door of the lumber room.
-
-“That girl of Abe’s” ruminated the old man deep in straw. In the stress
-of affairs, he had almost forgotten that the only child of a half
-brother many years his junior, was coming to London by the morning
-train.
-
-“Uncle Si!”
-
-With a hiss of disgust worthy of an elderly cobra he writhed his head
-free of the straw. “Confound her, turning up like this. Why couldn’t
-she come this afternoon when the boy’d be home? But that’s a woman.
-They’re born as cross as Christmas.”
-
-A third time his name was called.
-
-S. Gedge Antiques, unshaven, beslippered, bespectacled, slowly emerged
-from the decent obscurity of the back premises into the fierce
-publicity of the front shop. He was greeted by a sight of which his
-every instinct profoundly disapproved.
-
-The sight was youthful, smiling, fresh complexioned. In a weak moment,
-for which mentally he had been kicking himself round the shop ever
-since, he had been so unwise as to offer to adopt this girl who had
-lost her father some years ago and had lately buried her mother. Carter
-Paterson had delivered her trunk along with the packing case from
-Ipswich, a fact he now recalled.
-
-Had S. Gedge had an eye for anything but antiques, he must have seen at
-once that his niece was by way of being a decidedly attractive young
-woman. She was nineteen, and she wore a neat well-fitting black dress
-and a plain black hat in which cunning and good taste were mingled.
-Inclined to be tall she was slender and straight and carried herself
-well. Her eyes were clear, shrewd and smiling. In fact they appeared
-to smile quite considerably at the slow emergence from the back
-premises of S. Gedge Antiques.
-
-In the girl’s hand was a pilgrim basket, which she put carefully on
-a gate-legged table, marked “£4.19.6, a great bargain” and then very
-fearlessly embraced its owner.
-
-“How are you, niece?” gasped the old man who felt that an affront had
-been offered to the dignity of the human male.
-
-“Thank you, Uncle Si, I’m first rate,” said the girl trying for the
-sake of good manners not to smile too broadly.
-
-“Had a comfortable journey?”
-
-“Oh, yes, thank you.”
-
-“Didn’t expect you so soon. However, your box has come. By the way,
-what’s your name? I’ve forgotten it.”
-
-“June.”
-
-“June, eh? One of these new fangled affairs,” S. Gedge spoke
-aggrievedly. “Why not call yourself December and have done with it?”
-
-“I will if you like,” said June obligingly. “But it seems rather long.
-Do you care for De, Cem, or Ber for short?”
-
-“It don’t matter. What’s in a name? I only thought it sounded a bit
-sloppy and new fangled.”
-
-The eyes of June continued to regard S. Gedge Antiques with a demure
-smile. He did not see the smile. He only saw her and she was a matter
-for grave reflection.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-S. GEDGE ANTIQUES peered dubiously at his niece. He had a
-dislike of women and more than any other kind he disliked young women.
-But one fact was already clear; he had let himself in for it. Frowning
-at this bitter thought he cast his mind back in search of a reason.
-Knowing himself so well he was sure that a reason there must be and
-a good one for so grave an indiscretion. Suddenly he remembered the
-charwoman and his brow cleared a little.
-
-“Let me have a look at you, niece.” As a hawk might gaze at a wren he
-gazed at June through his spectacles. “Tall and strong seemingly. I
-hope you’re not afraid of hard work.”
-
-“I’m not afraid of anything, Uncle Si,” said June with calm precision.
-
-“No answers,” said S. Gedge curtly. “If you intend to stay here you’ve
-got to mind your p’s and q’s and you’ve got to earn your keep.” He
-sighed and impatiently plucked the spectacles from his nose. “Thought
-so,” he snarled. “I’m looking at you with my selling spectacles. For
-this job I’ll need my buying ones.”
-
-Delving into the capacious pockets of his dressing gown, the old man
-was able to produce a second pair of glasses. He adjusted them grimly.
-“Now I can begin to see you. Favour your father seemingly. And he was
-never a mucher--wasn’t your father.”
-
-“Dad is dead, Uncle Si.” There was reproof in June’s strong voice.
-“And he was a very good man. There was never a better father than Dad.”
-
-“Must have been a good man. He hardly left you and your mother the
-price of his funeral.”
-
-“It wasn’t Dad’s fault that he was unlucky in business.”
-
-“Unlucky.” S. Gedge Antiques gave a sharp tilt to his “buying”
-spectacles. “I don’t believe in luck myself.”
-
-“Don’t you?” said June, with a touch of defiance.
-
-“No answers.” Uncle Si held up a finger of warning. “Your luck is
-you’re not afraid of work. If you stop here you’ll have to stir
-yourself.”
-
-June confessed a modest willingness to do her best.
-
-S. Gedge continued to gaze at her. It was clear that he had undertaken
-an immense responsibility. A live sharp girl, nineteen years of age,
-one of these modern hussies, with opinions of her own, was going to
-alter things. It was no use burking the fact, but a wise man would have
-looked it in the face a little sooner.
-
-“The char is taking a day off,” he said, breaking this reverie. “So I’d
-better give you a hand with your box. You can then change your frock
-and come and tidy up. If you give your mind to your job I daresay I’ll
-be able to do without the char altogether. The woman’s a nuisance, as
-all women are. But she’s the worst kind of a nuisance, and I’ve been
-trying to be quit of her any time this ten years.”
-
-In silence June followed Uncle Si kitchenwards, slowly removing a pair
-of black kid gloves as she did so. He helped her to carry a trunk
-containing all her worldly possessions up a steep, narrow, twisty
-flight of uncarpeted stairs to a tiny attic, divided by a wooden
-partition from a larger one, and lit by a grimy window in the roof. It
-was provided with a bedstead, a mattress, a chest of drawers, a washing
-stand and a crazy looking-glass.
-
-“When the boy comes, he’ll find you a couple o’ blankets, I daresay.
-Meantime you can fall to as soon as you like.”
-
-June lost no time in unpacking. She then exchanged her new mourning
-for an old dress in which to begin work. As she did so her depression
-was terrible. The death of her mother, a month ago, had meant the loss
-of everything she valued in the world. There was no one else, no other
-thing that mattered. But she had promised that she would be a brave
-girl and face life with a stout heart, and she was going to be as good
-as her word.
-
-For that reason she did not allow herself to spend much time over the
-changing of her dress. She would have liked to sit on the edge of
-the small bed in that dismal room and weep. The future was an abyss.
-Her prospects were nil. She had ambition, but she lacked the kind of
-education and training that could get her out of the rut; and all the
-money she had in the world, something less than twenty pounds, was in
-her purse in a roll of notes, together with a few odd shillings and
-coppers. Nothing more remained of the sum that had been realized by the
-sale of her home, which her mother and she had striven so hard to keep
-together. And when this was gone she would have to live on the charity
-of her Uncle Si, who was said to be a very hard man and for whom she
-had already conceived an odd dislike, or go out and find something to
-do.
-
-Such an outlook was grim. But as June put on an old house frock she
-shut her lips tight and determined not to think about to-morrow.
-Uncle Si had told her to clean out the grate in the back kitchen. She
-flattered herself that she could clean out a grate with anybody. Merely
-to stop the cruel ache at the back of her brain she would just think of
-her task, and nothing else.
-
-In about ten minutes June came down the attic stairs, fully equipped
-even to an overall which she had been undecided whether to pack in her
-box but had prudently done so.
-
-“Where are the brushes and dust pan, Uncle Si?”
-
-“In the cupboard under the scullery sink.” A growl emerged from the
-packing case, followed by a gargoyle head. “And when you are through
-with the kitchen grate you can come and clear up this litter, and then
-you can cook a few potatoes for dinner--that’s if you know how.”
-
-“Of course I know how,” said June.
-
-“Your mother seems to have brought you up properly. If you give your
-mind to your job and you’re not above soiling your hands I quite expect
-we’ll be able to do without the char.”
-
-June, her large eyes fixed on Uncle Si, did not flinch from the
-prospect. She went boldly, head high, in the direction of the scullery
-sink while S. Gedge Antiques proceeded to burrow deeper and deeper into
-the packing case.
-
-Presently he dug out a bowl of Lowestoft china, which he tapped with a
-finger nail and held up to the light.
-
-“It’s a good piece,” he reflected. “There’s one thing to be said for
-that boy--he don’t often make mistakes. I wonder what he paid for
-this. However, I shall know presently,” and S. Gedge placed the bowl on
-a chair opposite the engraving “after” P. Bartolozzi.
-
-His researches continued, but there was not much to follow. Still,
-that was to be expected. William had only been given twenty pounds and
-the bowl alone was a safe fiver. The old man was rather sorry that
-William had not been given more to invest. However, there was a copper
-coal-scuttle that might be polished up to fetch three pounds, and a
-set of fire irons and other odds and ends, not of much account in
-themselves, but all going to show that good use had been made of the
-money.
-
-“Niece,” called Uncle Si when at last the packing case was empty, “come
-and give a hand here.”
-
-With bright and prompt efficiency June helped to clear up the débris
-and to haul the packing case into the backyard.
-
-The old man said at the successful conclusion of these operations:
-
-“Now see what you can do with those potatoes. Boil ’em in their skins.
-There’s less waste that way and there’s more flavour.”
-
-“What time is dinner, Uncle Si?”
-
-“One o’clock sharp.”
-
-S. Gedge Antiques, having put on his collar, and discarded his dressing
-gown for the frock coat of commerce, shambled forward into the front
-shop with the air of a man who has no time to waste upon trivialities.
-So far things were all right. The girl seemed willing and capable
-and he hoped she would continue to be respectful. The times were
-against it, certainly. In the present era of short skirts, open-work
-stockings, fancy shoes and bare necks, it was hard, even for experts
-like himself, to say what the world was coming to. Girls of the new
-generation were terribly independent. They would sauce you as soon
-as look at you, and there was no doubt they knew far more than their
-grandmothers. In taking under his roof the only child of a half-brother
-who had died worth precious little, S. Gedge Antiques was simply asking
-for trouble. At the same time there was no need to deny that June
-had begun well, and if at eight o’clock the next morning he was in a
-position to say, “Mrs. R. you can take another day off and get yourself
-a better billet,” he would feel a happier man.
-
-A voice with a ring in it came from the shop threshold. “Uncle Si, how
-many potatoes shall I cook?”
-
-“Three middling size. One for me, one for you, one for William if he
-comes. And if he don’t come, he can have it cold for his supper.”
-
-“Or I can fry it,” said the voice from the threshold.
-
-“You can fry it?” S. Gedge peered towards the voice over the top of his
-“buying” spectacles. “Before we go in for fancy work let us see what
-sort of a job you make of a plain bilin’. Pigs mustn’t begin to fly too
-early--not in the West Central postal district.”
-
-“I don’t know much about pigs,” said June, calmly, “but I’ll boil a
-potato with anyone.”
-
-“And eat one too I expect,” said S. Gedge severely closuring the
-incident.
-
-The axiom he had just laid down applied to young female pigs
-particularly.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-S. GEDGE ANTIQUES, feather duster in hand, began to flick
-pensively a number of articles of bigotry and virtue. The occupation
-amused him. It was not that he had any great regard for the things he
-sold, but each was registered in his mind as having been bought for so
-much at So-and-So’s sale. A thoroughly competent man he understood his
-trade. He had first set up in business in the year 1879. That was a
-long time ago, but it was his proud boast that he had yet to make his
-first serious mistake. Like everyone else, he had made mistakes, but it
-pleased him to think that he had never been badly “let in.” His simple
-rule was not to pay a high price for anything. Sometimes he missed a
-bargain by not taking chances, but banking on certainties brought peace
-of mind and a steady growth of capital.
-
-Perhaps the worst shot he had ever made was the queer article to which
-he now applied the duster. A huge black jar, about six feet high and
-so fantastically hideous in design as to suggest the familiar of a
-Caribbean witch doctor or the joss of a barbarous king, held a position
-of sufficient prominence on the shop floor for his folly to be ever
-before him. Years ago he had taken this grinning, wide-mouthed monster,
-shaped and featured like Moloch, in exchange for a bad debt, hoping
-that in the course of time he would be able to trade it away. As yet
-he had not succeeded. Few people apparently had a use for such an
-evil-looking thing which took up so much house room. S. Gedge Antiques
-was loth to write it off a dead loss, but he had now come to regard
-it as “a hoodoo.” He was not a superstitious man but he declared it
-brought bad luck. On several occasions when a chance seemed to arise of
-parting with it to advantage, something had happened to the intending
-purchaser; indeed it would have called for no great effort of the
-imagination to believe that a curse was upon it.
-
-By an association of ideas, as the feathers flicked that surface of
-black lacquer, the mind of S. Gedge reverted to his niece. She, too,
-was a speculation, a leap in the dark. You never knew where you were
-with women. Now that the fools in Parliament had given females a vote
-the whole sex was demoralised. He had been terribly rash; and he could
-tell by the look of the girl that she had a large appetite. Still if he
-could do without “that woman” it would be something.
-
-The picture, however, was not all dark. A flick of the feathers
-emphasised its brighter side as William recurred suddenly to his mind.
-Taking all things into account, he was ready to own that the able youth
-was the best bargain he had ever made. Some years ago, William, a
-needy lad of unknown origin, had been engaged at a very small wage to
-run errands and to make himself of general use. Finding him extremely
-intelligent and possessed of real aptitude, his master with an eye
-to the future, had taught him the trade. And he had now become so
-knowledgeable that for some little time past he had been promoted to an
-active part in the business.
-
-If William had a fault it was that in his master’s opinion he was
-almost too honest. Had it been humanly possible for S. Gedge Antiques
-to trust any man with a thousand pounds, William undoubtedly would have
-been that man. Besides, he had grown so expert that his employer was
-learning to rely more and more upon his judgment. The time had come
-when S. Gedge Antiques had need of young eyes in the most delicate art
-of choosing the right thing to buy; and this absolutely dependable
-young man had now taken rank in his master’s mind, perhaps in a
-higher degree than that master recognised, as an asset of priceless
-value. Sooner or later, if William went on in his present way, the
-long-deferred rise in his wages would have to enter the region of
-practical politics. For example, there was this packing case from
-Ipswich. Without indulgence in flagrant optimism--and the old man was
-seldom guilty of that--there was a clear profit already in sight. The
-bowl of Lowestoft might fetch anything up to ten pounds and even then
-it would be “a great bargain at clearance sale prices.” Then there was
-the engraving. William had a nose for such things; indeed his master
-often wondered how a young chap with no education to speak of could
-have come by it.
-
-At this point there was heard a quiet and respectful: “Good morning,
-sir.”
-
-S. Gedge, standing with his back to the shop door, the china bowl again
-in hand, was taken by surprise. William was not expected before the
-afternoon.
-
-That young man was rather tall and rather slight; he was decidedly
-brown from the sun of East Anglia; and some people might have
-considered him handsome. In his left hand he carried a small gladstone
-bag. And beneath his right arm was an article wrapped in brown paper.
-
-“Ah, that’s the bowl,” said William eagerly. “A nice piece, sir, isn’t
-it?”
-
-“I may be able to tell you more about that,” the cautious answer, “when
-I know what you gave for it.”
-
-William had given thirty shillings.
-
-S. Gedge Antiques tapped the bowl appraisingly. “Thirty shillings! But
-that’s money.”
-
-“I’m sure it’s a good piece, sir.”
-
-“Well, you may be right,” said S. Gedge grudgingly. “Lowestoft is
-fetching fair prices just now. What’s that under your arm?”
-
-“It’s something I’ve bought for myself, sir.”
-
-“Out of the money I gave you?” said the old man as keen as a goshawk.
-
-“No, sir,” said William with great simplicity. “Your money was all in
-the packing case. I’ll give you an account of every penny.”
-
-“Well, what’s the thing you’ve bought for yourself,” said the master
-sternly.
-
-“It’s a small picture I happened to come across in an old shop at
-Crowdham Market.”
-
-“Picture, eh?” S. Gedge Antiques dubiously scratched a scrub of whisker
-with the nail of his forefinger. “Don’t fancy pictures myself. Chancey
-things are pictures. Never brought _me_ much luck. However, I’ll
-have a look at it. Take off the paper.”
-
-William took off the paper and handed to his master the article it had
-contained. With a frown of petulant disgust the old man held an ancient
-and dilapidated daub up to the light. So black it was with grime and
-age that to his failing eyes not so much as a hint of the subject was
-visible.
-
-“Nothing to write home about anyhow,” was the sour comment. “Worth
-nothing beyond the price of the frame. And I should put that”--S. Gedge
-pursed a mouth of professional knowledge--“at five shillings.”
-
-“Five shillings, sir, is what I paid for it.”
-
-“Not worth bringing home.” S. Gedge shook a dour head. Somehow he
-resented his assistant making a private purchase, but that may have
-been because there was nothing in the purchase when made. “Why buy a
-thing like that?”
-
-William took the picture gravely from his master and held it near the
-window.
-
-“I have an idea, sir, there may be a subject underneath.”
-
-“Don’t believe in ideas myself,” snapped S. Gedge, taking a microscope
-from the counter. After a brief use of it he added, “There may be a bit
-o’ badly painted still life, but what’s the good o’ that.”
-
-“I’ve a feeling, sir, there’s something below it.”
-
-“Rubbish anyhow. It’ll be a fortnight’s job to get the top off and
-then like as not you’ll have wasted your time. Why buy a pig in a poke
-when you might have invested your five shillings in a bit more china?
-However, it’s no affair of mine.”
-
-“There’s something there, sir, under those flowers, I feel sure,” said
-the young man taking up the microscope and gazing earnestly at the
-picture. “But what it is I can’t say.”
-
-“Nor can anyone else. However, as I say, it’s your funeral. In our
-trade there’s such a thing as being too speculative, and don’t forget
-it, boy.”
-
-“I might find a thing worth having, sir,” William ventured to say.
-
-“Pigs might fly,” snapped S. Gedge Antiques, his favourite formula for
-clinching an argument.
-
-The mention of pigs, no doubt again by an association of ideas, enabled
-S. Gedge to notice, which he might have done any time for two minutes
-past, that his niece had emerged from the back premises, and that she
-was regarding William and the picture with frank curiosity.
-
-“Well, niece,” said the old man sharply. “What do you want now?”
-
-“Is the cold mutton in the larder for dinner, Uncle Si?” said June
-with a slight but becoming blush at being called upon to speak in the
-presence of such a very nice looking young man.
-
-“What else do you think we are going to have? Truffles in aspic or
-patty de four grass?”
-
-“No, Uncle Si,” said June gravely.
-
-“Very well then,” growled S. Gedge Antiques.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-IT was not until the evening, after tea, when S. Gedge Antiques
-had gone by bus to Clerkenwell in order to buy a Queen Anne sofa
-from a dealer in difficulties that William and June really became
-known to one another. Before then, however, their respective
-presences had already charged the atmosphere of No. 46 New Cross
-Street with a rare and subtle quality.
-
-William, even at a first glance, had been intrigued more than a little
-by the appearance of the niece. To begin with she was a great contrast
-to Mrs. Runciman. She looked as clean and bright as a new pin, she had
-beautiful teeth, her hair was of the kind that artists want to paint
-and her way of doing it was cunning. Moreover, she was as straight as a
-willow, her movements had charm and grace, and her eyes were grey. And
-beyond all else her smile was full of friendship.
-
-As for June, her first thought had been, when she had unexpectedly
-come upon William holding up to the light the picture he had bought at
-Crowdham Market, that the young man had an air at once very gentle and
-very nice. And in the first talk they had together in the course of
-that evening, during the providential absence of Uncle Si, this view of
-William was fully confirmed.
-
-He was very gentle and he was very nice.
-
-The conversation began shortly after seven o’clock when William had put
-up the shutters and locked the door of the shop. It was he who opened
-the ball.
-
-“You’ve come to stay, Miss Gedge, haven’t you?”
-
-“Yes,” said June, “if I can make myself useful to Uncle Si.”
-
-“But aren’t you adopted? The master said a fortnight ago he was going
-to adopt you.”
-
-“Uncle Si says I’m half and half at present,” said June demurely. “I’m
-a month on trial. If I suit his ways he says I can stay, but if I don’t
-I must get after a job.”
-
-“I hope you will stay,” said William with obvious sincerity.
-
-There was enough Woman in the heart of the niece of S. Gedge Antiques
-to cause her to smile to herself. This was a perfect Simple Simon of a
-fellow, yet she could not deny that there was something about him which
-gave her quite a thrill.
-
-“Why do you hope so?” asked Woman, with seeming innocence.
-
-“I don’t know why I do, unless it is that you are so perfectly nice to
-talk to.” And the Simpleton grew suddenly red at his own immoderation.
-
-Woman in her cardinal aspect might have said “Really” in a tone of ice;
-she might even have been tempted to ridicule such a statement made by
-such a young man; but Woman in the shrewdly perceptive person of June
-was now aware that this air of quaint sincerity was a thing with which
-no girl truly wise would dare to trifle. William was William and must
-be treated accordingly.
-
-“Aren’t you very clever?”
-
-She knew he was clever, but for a reason she couldn’t divine she was
-anxious to let him know that she knew it.
-
-“I don’t think I am at all.”
-
-“But you are,” said June. “You must be very clever indeed to go about
-the country buying rare things cheap for Uncle Si to sell.”
-
-“Oh, anybody can pick up a few odds and ends now and again if one has
-been given the money to buy them.”
-
-“Anybody couldn’t. I couldn’t for one.”
-
-“Isn’t that because you’ve not been brought up to the business?”
-
-“It’s more than that,” said June shrewdly. “You must have a special
-gift for picking up things of value.”
-
-“I may have,” the young man modestly allowed. “The master trusts me as
-a rule to tell whether a thing is genuine.”
-
-June pinned him with her eyes. “Then tell me this.” Her suddenness took
-him completely by surprise. “Is _he_ genuine?”
-
-“Who? The master!”
-
-“Yes--Uncle Si.”
-
-The answer came without an instant’s hesitation. “Yes, Miss June, he
-is. The master is a genuine piece.”
-
-“I am very glad to hear it,” said June with a slight frown.
-
-“Yes, the master is genuine.” Depth and conviction were in the young
-man’s tone. “In fact,” he added slowly, “you might say he is a museum
-piece.”
-
-At this solemnity June smiled.
-
-“He’s a very good man.” A warmth of affection fused the simple words.
-“Why he took me from down there as you might say.” William pointed to
-the ground. “And now I’m his assistant.”
-
-“At how much a week,” said the practical June, “if the question isn’t
-rude?”
-
-“I get fifteen shillings.”
-
-“A week?”
-
-“Yes. And board and lodging.”
-
-She looked the young man steadily in the eyes. “You are worth more.”
-
-“If the master thinks I’m worth more, he’ll give it to me.”
-
-June pursed her lips and shook a dubious head. Evidently she was not
-convinced.
-
-“Oh, yes, I’m sure he will. In fact, he’s promised to raise my wages
-half a crown from the first of the new year.”
-
-“I should just think so!” said June looking him still in the eyes.
-
-“Of course I always get everything found.”
-
-“What about your clothes?”
-
-With an air of apology he had to own that clothes were not included;
-yet to offset this reluctant admission he laid stress on the fact that
-his master had taught him all that he knew.
-
-June could not resist a frown. Nice as he was, she would not have
-minded shaking him a little. No Simon had a right to be quite so simple
-as this one.
-
-A pause followed. And then the young man suddenly said: “Miss June
-would you care to see something I bought the other day at Crowdham
-Market?”
-
-“I’d love to,” said the gracious Miss June. She had seen ‘the
-something’ already but just now she was by no means averse from having
-another look at it.
-
-“Perhaps you wouldn’t mind coming up to the studio.” William laughed
-shyly. “I call it that, although of course it isn’t a studio really.
-And I only call it that to myself you know,” he added naïvely.
-
-“Then why did you call it ‘the studio’ to me?” archly demanded Woman in
-the person of the niece of S. Gedge Antiques.
-
-“I don’t know why, I’m sure. It was silly.”
-
-“No, it wasn’t,” said Woman. “Rather nice of you, I think.”
-
-The simpleton flushed to the roots of his thick and waving chestnut
-hair which was brushed back from a high forehead in a most becoming
-manner; and then with rare presence of mind, in order to give his
-confusion a chance, he showed the way up the two flights of stairs
-which led direct to June’s attic. Next to it, with only a thin wall
-dividing them, was a kind of extension of her own private cubicle,
-a fairly large and well lit room, which its occupant had immodestly
-called “a studio.” A bed, a washing stand, and a chest of drawers were
-tucked away in a far corner, as if they didn’t belong.
-
-“The master lets me have this all to myself for the sake of the light,”
-said the young man in a happy voice as he threw open the door. “One
-needs a good light to work by.”
-
-With the air of a Leonardo receiving a lady of the Colonnas he ushered
-her in.
-
-A feminine eye embraced all at a glance. The walls of bare whitewash
-bathed in the glories of an autumn sunset, the clean skylight, the two
-easels with rather dilapidated objects upon them, a litter of tools and
-canvases and frames, a pervading odour of turpentine, and a look of
-rapture upon the young man’s face.
-
-“But it _is_ a studio,” said June. Somehow she felt greatly
-impressed by it. “I’ve never seen one before, but it’s just like what
-one reads about in books.”
-
-“Oh, no, a studio is where pictures are painted. Here they are only
-cleaned and restored.”
-
-“One day perhaps you’ll paint them.”
-
-“Perhaps I will; I don’t know.” He sighed a little, too shy to confess
-his dream. “But that day’s a long way off.”
-
-“It mayn’t be, you know.”
-
-He had begun already to try, but as yet it was a secret from the world.
-“_Ars est celare artem_,” he said.
-
-“What do you mean by that?”
-
-“Life is short, art eternal. It is the motto of the old man who teaches
-me how to clean and renovate these things. He says it keeps him up to
-his work.”
-
-“You go to an art school?”
-
-“I should hardly call it that. But the master wants me to learn as much
-as I can of the practical side of the trade, so he’s having me taught.
-And the more I can pick up about pictures, the better it will be for
-the business. You see, the master doesn’t pretend to know much about
-pictures himself. His line is furniture.”
-
-“Didn’t I say you were clever?” June could not help feeling a little
-proud of her own perception.
-
-“You wouldn’t say that”--the young man’s tone was sad--“if you really
-knew how little I know. But allow me to show you what I bought at
-Crowdham Market. There it is.” He pointed to the old picture on the
-smaller easel, which now divorced from its frame seemed to June a mere
-daub, black, dilapidated, old and worthless.
-
-She could not conceal her disappointment. “I don’t call that anything.”
-
-“No!” He could not conceal his disappointment either. “Take this
-glass.” A microscope was handed to her. “Please look at it ve-ry ve-ry
-closely while I hold it for you in the light.”
-
-June gave the canvas a most rigorous scrutiny, but she had to own at
-last that the only thing she could see was dirt.
-
-“Can’t you see water?”
-
-“Where?”
-
-With his finger nail the young man found water.
-
-“No,” said June stoutly. “I don’t see a single drop. And that’s a pity,
-because in my opinion, it would be none the worse for a good wash.”
-
-This was a facer but he met it valiantly.
-
-“Don’t you see trees?”
-
-“Where are the trees?”
-
-The young man disclosed trees with his finger nail.
-
-“I can’t see a twig.”
-
-“But you can see a cloud.” With his finger nail he traced a cloud.
-
-“I only see dirt and smudge,” said June the downright. “To my mind this
-isn’t a picture at all.”
-
-“Surely, you can see a windmill?”
-
-“A windmill! Why there’s not a sign of one.”
-
-“Wait till it’s really clean,” said William with the optimism of
-genius. He took up a knife and began delicately to scrape that dark
-surface from which already he had half removed a top layer of paint
-that some inferior artist had placed there.
-
-June shook her head. There was a lovely fall in the young man’s voice
-but it would take more than that to convince her. She believed her
-eyes to be as good as most people’s, but even with a microscope and
-William’s finger to help them they could see never a sign of a cloud or
-so much as a hint of water. As for a tree!... and a windmill!... either
-this handsome young man ... he really was handsome ... had a sense that
-ordinary people had not ... or ... or...!
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-JUNE suddenly remembered that she must go and lay the supper.
-
-William modestly asked to be allowed to help.
-
-“Can you lay supper?” Polite the tone, but June was inclined to think
-that here was the limit to William’s cleverness.
-
-“Oh, yes, Miss June, I lay it nearly always. It’s part of my work.”
-
-“Glad of your help, of course.” The tone was gracious. “But I daresay
-you’d like to go on looking for a windmill.”
-
-“Yes, I think perhaps I would.” It was not quite the answer of
-diplomacy, but behind it was a weight of sincerity that took away the
-sting.
-
-“Thought so,” said June, with a dark smile. It would have been pleasant
-to have had the help of this accomplished young man, but above all
-things she was practical and so understood that the time of such a one
-must be of great value.
-
-“But I’m thinking you’ll have to look some while for that windmill,”
-she said, trying not to be satirical.
-
-“The windmill I’ll not swear to, but I’m sure there’s water and trees;
-although, of course, it may take some time to find them.” William took
-up a piece of cotton wool. “But we’ll see.”
-
-He moistened the wool with a solvent, which he kept in a bottle, a
-mysterious compound of vegetable oils and mineral water; and then, not
-too hard, he began to rub the surface of the picture.
-
-“I hope we shall,” said June, doubtfully. And she went downstairs with
-an air of scepticism she was unable to hide.
-
-Supper, in the main, was an affair of bread and cheese and a jug of
-beer, drawn from the barrel in the larder. It was not taken until a
-quarter past nine when S. Gedge Antiques had returned from Clerkenwell.
-The old man was in quite a good humour; in fact, it might be said, to
-verge upon the expansive. He had managed to buy the Queen Anne sofa for
-four pounds.
-
-“You’ve got a bargain, sir,” said William. It was William who had
-discovered the sofa, and had strongly advised its purchase.
-
-“That remains to be seen,” said his master, who would have been vastly
-disappointed had there been reason to think that he had not got a
-bargain.
-
-After supper, when the old man had put on his slippers and an ancient
-smoking cap that made him look like a Turkish pasha, he took from the
-chimneypiece a pipe and a jar of tobacco, drew the easy chair to the
-fire, and began to read the evening paper.
-
-“By the way, boy,” he remarked, quizzingly, “have you started yet on
-that marvellous thing you were clever enough to buy at Ipswich?”
-
-“Crowdham Market, sir.”
-
-“Crowdham Market, was it? Well, my father used to say that fools and
-money soon part company.”
-
-June, who was clearing the table, could not forbear from darting at
-the young man a gleam of triumph. It was clear that Uncle Si believed
-no more in the windmill, not to mention the trees and the water than
-did she.
-
-A start had been made, but William confessed to a fear that it might be
-a long job to get it clean.
-
-“And when you get it clean,” said his master, “what do you expect to
-find, eh?--that’s if you’re lucky enough to find anything.”
-
-“I don’t quite know,” said William frankly.
-
-“Neither do I,” S. Gedge Antiques scratched a cheek of rather humorous
-cynicism. And then in sheer expansion of mood, he went to the length of
-winking at his niece. “Perhaps, boy,” he said, “you’ll find that Van
-Roon that was cut out of its frame at the Louvre in the Nineties, and
-has never been seen or heard of since.”
-
-“Was there one, sir?” asked William, interested and alert.
-
-The old man took up the evening paper, and began to read. “Canvas
-sixteen inches by twelve--just about your size, eh? One of the world’s
-masterpieces. Large reward for recovery been on offer for more than
-twenty-five years by French Government--but not claimed yet seemingly.
-Said to be finest Van Roon in existence. Now’s your chance, boy.” A
-second time S. Gedge Antiques winked at his niece; and then folding
-back the page of the _Evening News_, he handed it to William,
-with the air of a very sly dog indeed. “See for yourself. Special
-article. Mystery of Famous Missing Picture. When you find the signature
-of Mynheer Van Roon in the corner of this masterpiece of yours, I
-shouldn’t wonder if you’re able to set up in business for yourself.”
-
-Allowing Fancy a loose rein in this benign hour, the old man, for the
-third time honoured his niece with a solemn wink.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-THE next morning saw the beginning of a chain of epoch-making
-events in the history of S. Gedge Antiques.
-
-Shortly before eight o’clock Mrs. Runciman turned up as usual after her
-day off. With a most businesslike promptitude, however, she was given
-her quietus. In dispensing with her services, from now on, Uncle Si
-took a real pleasure in what he called “telling her off.” Many times
-had he warned her that she would play the trick once too often. And
-now that his prophecy had come true, he was able to say just what he
-thought of her, of her ancestry, and of her sex in general. She would
-greatly oblige him by not letting him see her face again.
-
-Mrs. Runciman, for her part, professed a cheerful willingness to take
-her late employer at his word. There was plenty of work to be had; and
-she departed on a note of dignity which she sustained by informing him
-in a voice loud enough for the neighbours to hear that “he was a miser,
-and a screw, and that he would skin a flea for its feathers.”
-
-On the top of this ukase to the char, the old man held a short private
-conversation with his niece. June had begun very well; and if she
-continued to behave herself, got up in the morning without being
-called, was not afraid of hard work, and had the breakfast ready by a
-quarter to eight she would receive, in addition to board and lodging,
-two shillings a week pocket money, and perhaps a small present at
-Christmas.
-
-As far as it went this was very well. “But,” said June, “there’s my
-clothes, Uncle Si.”
-
-“Clothes!” The old man scratched his cheek. “You’ve money of your own,
-haven’t you?”
-
-“Only twenty pounds.”
-
-“We’ll think about clothes when the time comes to buy some.”
-
-S. Gedge, however, admitted to William privately that he had hopes of
-the niece. “But let me tell you this, boy: it’s asking for trouble to
-have a young female sleeping in the house. Old ones are bad enough,
-even when they sleep out; young ones sleeping in may be the very
-mischief.”
-
-In fact, the old man deemed it wise to reinforce these observations
-with a solemn warning. “Understand, boy, there must be no carrying on
-between you and her.”
-
-“Carrying on, sir!” Such innocence might have touched the heart of King
-Herod.
-
-“That’s what I said. I can trust you; in some ways you hardly know
-you’re born; but with a woman, and a young one at that, it’s another
-pair o’ shoes. Women are simply the devil.”
-
-William’s blank face showed a fleck of scarlet; yet the true inwardness
-of these Menander-like words were lost upon him; and he was rebuked for
-being a perfect fool in things that mattered. However, the arrangement
-was merely temporary. If the girl behaved herself, well and good; if
-she didn’t behave herself, niece or no niece, she would have to go.
-But--touching wood!--there was nothing to complain of so far.
-
-William quite agreed, yet he dare not say as much to his master. In
-his opinion, there was no ground for comparison between the dethroned
-goddess of whom he had always been a little in awe, and the creature of
-grace and charm, of fine perception and feminine amenity who slept the
-other side the “studio” wall. For all that, in the sight of this young
-man, one aspect of the case was now a matter of concern.
-
-“Miss June,” he said on the evening of the second day, “do you mind if
-I get up early to-morrow and do a few odd jobs about the house?”
-
-“What sort of jobs?” Miss June’s air of suspicion was tinged with
-sternness. Now that she reigned in Mrs. Runciman’s stead she could not
-help feeling rather important.
-
-“If you’ll show me where the brushes are kept, I’ll blacklead the
-kitchen grate.”
-
-“Please don’t come interfering.” In June’s manner was a touch of
-hauteur.
-
-Beneath the tan of East Anglia, the young man coloured. “But you’ll
-spoil your hands,” he ventured.
-
-“My hands are no affair of yours,” said June, a little touched, and
-trying not to show it.
-
-“Let me take over the kitchen grate for the future. And if you don’t
-mind, I’ll scrub the shop floor.”
-
-“Is there anything else you’d like to do?” said June, with amused scorn.
-
-“I’d like to do all the really rough jobs if I may.”
-
-“For why?”
-
-The Sawney had given his reason already, and, in spite of a growing
-embarrassment, he stuck to his guns.
-
-Said June sternly: “You mustn’t come interfering.” Yet the light in
-her eyes was not anger. “You’ve got your department and I’ve got mine.
-Windmills are your department. Blackleading kitchen grates and cleaning
-floors won’t help you to find windmills. Besides, you have the shop to
-look after, and you have to go out and find things for Uncle Si, and
-study art, and talk to customers, and goodness knows what you haven’t
-got to do.”
-
-“Well, if you don’t mind,” said William tenaciously, “I’ll get in the
-coal, anyway.”
-
-June shook her head. “No interference,” was her last word.
-
-Nevertheless, the following morning saw a division of labour within
-the precincts of No. 46, New Cross Street. When June came downstairs
-at a quarter to seven, she found a young man on his knees vigorously
-polishing the kitchen grate. He was sans coat, waistcoat and collar;
-there was a smudge on the side of his nose, and as the temper of a lady
-is apt to be short at so early an hour, it was no wonder that he was
-rebuked crushingly.
-
-“Didn’t I say I wouldn’t have interference? I don’t come into your
-studio and look for windmills, do I?”
-
-William, still on his knees, had penitently to own that she didn’t.
-
-“It’s--it’s a great liberty,” said June, hotly.
-
-He looked up at her with an air to disarm the Furies. “Oh--please--no!”
-
-“What is it then?” Secretly she was annoyed with herself for not being
-as much annoyed as the case demanded. “What is it then? Coming into my
-kitchen with your interference.”
-
-“I’m ever so sorry, but----”
-
-“But what?”
-
-“I simply can’t bear to think of your spoiling your beautiful hands.”
-
-June’s eyes were fire; her cheek flamed like a peony. “Go and look for
-your beautiful windmills, and leave my hands alone.”
-
-But the owner of the beautiful hands was now fettered by the knowledge
-that she was beginning to blush horribly.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-IN the evening of the next day, about half an hour before
-supper, June climbed the attic stairs and knocked boldly upon the
-studio door.
-
-“Come in,” a gentle voice invited her.
-
-William, a lump of cotton wool in one hand, the mysterious bottle in
-the other, was absorbed in the task of looking for a windmill. He had
-to own, the queer fellow, that so far success had not crowned his
-search.
-
-“I should think not,” said June, uncompromisingly.
-
-“But there are the trees.” William took up a knife and laid the point
-to a canvas that was already several tones lighter than of yore.
-
-There was a pause while June screwed up her eyes like an expert; and in
-consequence she had reluctantly to admit that they were unmistakable
-trees.
-
-“And now we are coming to the water, don’t you see?” said the young man
-in a tone of quiet ecstasy.
-
-“Where’s the water?”
-
-With a lover’s delicacy, William ran the point of the knife along the
-canvas.
-
-“Don’t you see it, Miss June?” There was a thrill in the low voice.
-
-“Why, yes,” said June. “It’s water, right enough.” No use trying now
-not to be impressed. “Now I call that rather clever!”
-
-“I knew it was there. And if you know a thing’s there, sooner or later
-you are bound to find it. Do you know what my opinion is?” Of a
-sudden, the exalted voice sank mysteriously.
-
-June had no idea what William’s opinion was, but she was quite willing
-to hear it, whatever it might be, for he had just had a considerable
-rise in her estimation.
-
-“It wouldn’t surprise me at all if this turns out to be a----” He broke
-off with a perplexing smile.
-
-“Turns out to be a what?”
-
-“Perhaps I’d better not say.” The words, in their caution and their
-gravity intrigued a shrewd daughter of the midlands. June, in spite of
-herself, was beginning to respect this odd young man.
-
-“You think it might be something very good?”
-
-“It might be something almost _too_ good.” William’s tone had
-a deep vibration. “If it keeps on coming out like this, it’ll be
-wonderful. Do you see that cloud?”
-
-June peered hard, but she could not see a suspicion of a cloud.
-
-“Take the microscope.”
-
-Even with the microscope no cloud was visible to June.
-
-“I’m as sure of it as I ever was of anything,” said William. “There’s
-a cloud--oh, yes!” The note of faith was music. “And there’s a
-sky--oh, yes!” A stray beam of the September sunset made an effect so
-remarkable, as it slanted across the upturned eyes, that June paid them
-rather more attention at the moment than she gave to the canvas.
-
-“Has Uncle Si seen those trees?” she asked suddenly.
-
-“Yes, the master came up to look at them a few minutes ago.”
-
-“What did he say?”
-
-“He just scratched his cheek and changed his spectacles.”
-
-“Did you tell him what you’ve just told me?”
-
-The young man nodded.
-
-“Did Uncle Si believe you?”
-
-“He said he’d wait till he saw it.”
-
-“Well, he can’t deny the trees, anyway.”
-
-“No, he can’t deny the trees. But, of course the real picture is only
-just beginning to come out, as you might say. All the same, he’s made
-me an offer for it, even as it stands.”
-
-With a swift, sudden intuition, June cried: “I hope you haven’t taken
-it!”
-
-“As a matter of fact, I haven’t,” said William, casually. “I feel I’d
-like to keep the picture until I find out what it really is.”
-
-“Well, mind you do. And, if the question isn’t a rude one, what did
-Uncle Si offer?”
-
-“Seven and sixpence. But that’s for the frame mainly.”
-
-June grew magisterial. “You mustn’t think of parting with it.”
-
-With an innocence hard to credit in one so clever, William asked why.
-
-“Why!” June almost snorted. “Because if Uncle Si offers you seven and
-sixpence for a thing which he knows you bought for five shillings, you
-can be sure that he considers it may be valuable.”
-
-“The master has always been very good to me,” said the young man with
-extreme simplicity.
-
-At these words June felt a stab of pain, so great was the contrast
-between the two men. One saw the wares in which they dealt only in
-terms of beauty, the other in terms of money.
-
-“You are too modest. And, although you are so clever, if you don’t mind
-my saying so, you are also rather foolish in some ways--at least that’s
-my opinion.”
-
-William frankly admitted the impeachment.
-
-“Well, now,” said June, a cool and steady eye upon him, “suppose you
-tell me where you think your foolishness lies?”
-
-“Why, I was foolish enough to think that patch”--the Simpleton pressed
-the finger of an artist upon the patch--“was really and truly a
-windmill. But, of course, it’s nothing of the kind.”
-
-“I’m not speaking of windmills now,” said June severely. “I’m speaking
-of things much more important.”
-
-“Oh, but a windmill can be very important. Have you ever really seen a
-windmill?”
-
-“Yes, of course, I have.”
-
-The Sawney asked where.
-
-June had seen a windmill in Lincolnshire.
-
-“Lincolnshire! Oh, but you should see the one in the National Gallery.”
-
-“The one in the where?” said June, with a frown.
-
-Of a sudden his voice took its delicious fall. The rare smile, which
-lit his face, was for June an enchantment: “It’s a Hobbema.”
-
-“A what!--emma!”
-
-“A Hobbema. On Saturdays the shop closes at one, so that I could take
-you to see it, if you’d care to. I should like you so much to see
-it--that’s if it interests you at all. It will give you an idea of
-what a windmill can be.”
-
-“But I meant a real windmill. I’m only interested in real things,
-anyway.”
-
-“A Hobbema is better than real.”
-
-“Better than real,” said June, opening wide eyes.
-
-“When you see it, you’ll understand what I mean. I do hope you’ll come
-and look at it.”
-
-June was such a practical person that her first instinct was to refuse
-to do anything of the kind. But that instinct was overborne by the
-complexity of her feelings. In some ways he was the simplest Simon
-of them all; a longing to shake him was growing upon her, but the
-disconcerting fact remained that after a fashion he was decidedly
-clever. And leaving his mental qualities out of the case, when you got
-his face at an angle and you caught the light in his eyes, he was by
-far the handsomest young man she had ever seen. Therefore her promise
-was reluctantly given that on Saturday afternoon she would go with him
-to the National Gallery to see what a windmill was really like.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-JUNE’S promise was made on the evening of Monday. Before it
-could be fulfilled, however, much had to happen. Saturday itself was
-put out of the case by the departure of William early that morning to
-attend a sale in Essex, where several things might be going cheap. And
-on the following Thursday he had to go to Tunbridge Wells. During his
-absence on that day, moreover, June’s interest in the picture he had
-bought at Crowdham Market was roused suddenly to a very high pitch.
-
-Even before this significant event occurred, her mind had been full of
-this much-discussed purchase. Day by day William wrought upon it with
-growing enthusiasm. There was now no more doubt in regard to the clouds
-and the sky than there was as to the trees and the water. S. Gedge
-Antiques had been up to the attic several times to see for himself,
-and although in his opinion, the best that could be said for the
-picture was that it might turn out to be a copy of a fair example of
-the Dutch School, he went to the length of doubling his offer of seven
-and sixpence. In other words, which he issued with point at the supper
-table on the evening prior to William’s trip to Tunbridge Wells, there
-was “a full week’s extra wages sticking out,” if only the young man
-cared to take it in exchange for a dubious work of little or no value.
-
-William needed, among other things, a new pair of boots; he was short
-of the materials of his craft, and the sum of fifteen shillings meant
-a great deal to him at any time, facts with which his employer was
-well acquainted. The temptation was great. While the offer was under
-consideration, June held her breath. She had a frantic desire to signal
-across the table to William not to part with his treasure. Much to her
-relief, however, the young man resisted the lure. His master told him
-roundly that only a fool would refuse such an offer. William allowed
-that it was princely, but he had quite an affection for the picture
-now, besides, much had to be done to get it really clean.
-
-At present, moreover, he had not even begun to look for the signature.
-
-“Signature!” S. Gedge Antiques took up the word sarcastically. And
-there were times, as June knew already, when the old man could be
-terribly sarcastic. “You’ll be looking, I suppose, for the signature of
-Hobbema. Seems to me, boy, you’re cracked on that subject.”
-
-“I don’t think, sir,” said William, in his gentle voice, “that this
-picture is a Hobbema.”
-
-“Don’t you indeed?” To conceal a rising impatience Uncle Si made a face
-at his niece. “You’re cracked, my boy.” He gave his own forehead a
-symbolical tap. “Why waste your time looking for a signature to a thing
-you bought for five shillings at an old serendipity shop at Crowdham
-Market! You’d far better turn over a snug little profit of two hundred
-per cent and forget all about it.”
-
-The next day, however, when William set out for Tunbridge Wells, he was
-still the owner of the picture. And in the light of what was to follow
-it was a fact of considerable importance.
-
-In the course of that morning, while June was helping Uncle Si to dress
-the front window, there sauntered into the shop a funny, oldish, foxy
-little man, who wore a brown billycock hat at the back of his head, and
-had a pair of legs as crooked as a Louis Quinze chair. She set him down
-at once as a character out of Dickens.
-
-“Mornin’ to you, Mr. Gedge,” said this quaint visitor.
-
-“Mornin’ to you, Mr. Thornton!” said S. Gedge Antiques returning the
-salutation with deference.
-
-June cocked her ears. The note in Uncle Si’s rasping voice, which
-always seemed to need a file, told her at once that the visitor was no
-common man.
-
-As a preliminary to business, whatever that business might be, Mr.
-Thornton fixed an eye like a small bright bead on the Hoodoo, whose
-sinister bulk seemed to dominate half the shop. It was fixed, moreover,
-with an air of whimsical appreciation as he murmured: “The British
-Museum is the place for that.”
-
-“There I’m with you, Mr. Thornton.” S. Gedge Antiques looked his
-visitor steadily in the eye. “Wonderful example of early Polynesian
-craftsmanship.”
-
-“Early Polynesian craftsmanship.” The little man stroked the belly of
-the Hoodoo with a kind of rapt delicacy which other men reserve for the
-fetlock of a horse.
-
-“Only one of its kind.”
-
-“I should say so,” murmured Louis Quinze-legs, screwing up his eyes;
-and then, by way of after-thought: “I’ve just dropped in, Mr. Gedge, to
-have a look at that picture you mentioned to me yesterday.”
-
-“Oh, _that_, Mr. Thornton.” The voice of S. Gedge Antiques
-suggested that the matter was of such little consequence that it had
-almost passed from his mind. “S’pose I’d better get it for you.” And
-then with an odd burst of agility, which in one of his years was quite
-surprising, the old man left the shop, while June, her heart beating
-high, went on dressing the window.
-
-In three minutes or less, William’s picture appeared under the arm of
-William’s master. “Here you are, Mr. Thornton!” The voice was oil.
-
-June made herself small between a Chinese cabinet and a tallboys in the
-window’s deepest gorge. From this point of vantage, the privilege of
-seeing and hearing all that passed in the shop was still hers.
-
-Foxy Face received the picture in silence from Uncle Si, held it to his
-eyes, pursed his lips, took a glass from his pocket, and examined it
-minutely back and front, turning it over and tapping it several times
-in the process. The slow care he gave to this ritual began to get on
-June’s nerves.
-
-“There’s good work in it,” said Louis Quinze-legs, at last.
-
-“Good work in it!” said S. Gedge Antiques in what June called his
-“selling” voice. “I should just think there was.”
-
-“But there’s one thing it lacks.” The little man, looking more than
-ever like a fox, chose each word with delicacy. “It’s a pity--a very
-great pity--there’s no signature.”
-
-“Signature!” The old man’s tone had lost the drawling sneer of the
-previous evening. “Tell me, Mr. Thornton,----” He must have forgotten
-that June was so near--“if we happened to come upon the signature
-of Hobbema down there in that left hand corner--in that black
-splotch--what do you suppose it might be worth?”
-
-Mr. Thornton did not answer the question at once. And when answer he
-did, his voice was so low that June could hardly hear it. “I wouldn’t
-like to say offhand, Mr. Gedge. Mosby sent a Hobbema to New York last
-year, but what he got for it I don’t know.”
-
-“I heard twenty-eight thousand dollars.”
-
-“So did I, but I doubt it. Still, the Americans are paying big money
-just now. Did you see that thing of Mosby’s, by the way?”
-
-“Yes; it was a bit larger than this chap, but it hadn’t the work in it.”
-
-“Well, get it a bit cleaner; and then, if you can show me Hobbema’s
-signature with the date, about the place where I’ve got my finger, I
-dare say we can come to business, Mr. Gedge.”
-
-“I quite expect we’ll be able to do that,” said the old man with an air
-of robust optimism which surprised June considerably.
-
-Foxy Face ventured to hope that such might be the case, whereupon the
-voice of Uncle Si fell to a pitch which his niece had to strain a keen
-ear to catch.
-
-“Suppose, Mr. Thornton, we omit the question of the signature? Do you
-feel inclined to make an offer for the picture as it stands?”
-
-The pause which followed was long and tense, and then June was just
-able to hear the cautious voice of Foxy Face. “Possibly, Mr. Gedge--I
-dare say I might. But before I could think of doing that, I should like
-a friend of mine to vet it. He’s wise in these things, and knows what
-can be done with them.”
-
-“Right you are, Mr. Thornton,” said S. Gedge Antiques brisk and
-businesslike. “If you can tell me when your friend is likely to call,
-I’ll be here to meet him.”
-
-“Shall we say to-morrow morning at ten?”
-
-“Very well, Mr. Gedge. And if my friend can’t come, I’ll telephone.”
-
-Foxy Face was bowed out of the shop with a politeness that fairly
-astonished June. She could hardly believe that this mirror of courtesy
-was Uncle Si. In fact, it was as if the old man had had a change of
-heart. With the light step of a boy, he took back the picture to the
-attic, while June, thinking hard, retired to the back premises to cook
-two middling-sized potatoes for dinner.
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-IT was not until the evening that William returned from Tunbridge
-Wells. He had been to look at a picture which his master had seen
-already, but S. Gedge Antiques was wise enough to recognise that
-his assistant had an instinct for pictures far beyond his own. In the
-matter of bric-à-brac he would always trust his own judgment, but when
-it came to an oil painting he was very glad to have it fortified by the
-special and peculiar knowledge that William had now acquired. There was
-no doubt that in this sphere, which for his master was comparatively
-new and full of pitfalls, the young man had a remarkable gift. It was a
-gift, moreover, of which he had yet to learn the true value.
-
-In “summer-time” September the days are long; and as supper was not
-until nine o’clock, there was light enough for William, on getting
-home, to spend a rare hour in the studio, delving for further beauties
-in that derelict canvas which already had far exceeded his hopes.
-
-“I know where you are going,” whispered June, in the young man’s ear as
-he left the little sitting-room behind the shop, where sat Uncle Si,
-spectacles on nose, poring over the pages of Crowe and Cavalcaselle.
-
-The young man glowed at this friendly interest on the part of Miss
-June; in fact, he was touched by it. She was the master’s niece;
-therefore she was on a plane of being superior to his own. And he had
-learned already that those who are above you in the world, are apt to
-turn their advantage to your detriment; but Miss June, for all that
-she was the master’s niece and had been one term at the Blackhampton
-High School, and was therefore a person of social weight, had been
-careful so far not to assert her status. And so his heart was open
-to her; besides this present keen interest in his labours was most
-encouraging.
-
-“I’m coming up to look at it again, if I may,” whispered June, as she
-followed him out of the room.
-
-“Please, please do,” he said, delightedly.
-
-As she climbed the steep stairs, William in the seventh heaven,
-followed close upon her heels. What a pleasure to expound the merits
-of such a work to one so sympathetic! As for June, her quick mind was
-at work. Even before the coming of Foxy Face she had guessed, or some
-instinct had told her, that this picture was no ordinary one, and now
-that she had overheard that gentleman’s recent talk with Uncle Si she
-had been given furiously to think. To understand all its implications
-needed far more knowledge of a deep, not to say “tricky,” subject than
-she possessed, but one fact was clear: her opinion as to the picture’s
-value was fully confirmed. Here was a treasure whose real worth even
-William himself might not be able to guess.
-
-Now was the moment, June shrewdly saw, for prompt and decisive action.
-Uncle Si had set his heart upon this rare thing; but if flesh and blood
-was equal to the task, she must take immediate steps to baulk him.
-Alas, she knew only too well that it was likely to prove an immensely
-difficult matter.
-
-June stood in front of the easel, and set her head to one side quite in
-the manner of an expert.
-
-“It seems to grow finer and finer,” she said, in a soft voice.
-
-“Yes, it does,” said William, touching it here and there with loverly
-fingers. “If I can but manage to get the top off without hurting the
-fabric, I’m sure it’ll be a non-such.”
-
-June fervently said that she hoped it would be.
-
-“There’s the cloud I spoke to you about the other day.”
-
-“Why, yes,” said June, screwing up her eyes, in unconscious imitation
-of Foxy Face. “I see it now. And it’s very beautiful indeed.”
-
-“And the touch of sunlight in it. I hope you notice that!” As William
-spoke, it almost seemed to June that she could see the reflection of
-the sunlight in the eyes of this enthusiast.
-
-“Yes, I do,” said June stoutly.
-
-“A real painter has done that!” The young man’s voice took that dying
-fall she had learnt already to listen for. “This is a lovely thing,
-Miss June!” Pure cadence touched her heart with fire. “Do you know, I
-am beginning to think this little picture is the most perfect thing I
-have ever seen?”
-
-“Very valuable, I dare say,” said June, bringing him to earth.
-
-“I only know it’s good.”
-
-“But surely if it’s good it’s valuable? What do you think it might be
-worth?”
-
-“Miss June,”--the queer little tremble in his voice sounded
-divine--“don’t let us think of it as money.”
-
-But at those hushed words, at the far-off look in the deep eyes, she
-felt once more a touch of pain.
-
-“Uncle Si would call that sentiment. He believes that money is the
-most important thing there is; he believes it is the only thing that
-matters.”
-
-She meant it as a facer for this Sawney, who had declared to her that
-Uncle Si could neither think wrong nor ensue it. A hit, shrewd and
-fair, but the Sawney was still in business.
-
-“In a manner of speaking, it may be so. But I am sure the master will
-tell you there are things money can’t buy.”
-
-“What are they?” June’s frown was the fiercer for the effort to repress
-it.
-
-“Take this glint of sun striking through that wonderful cloud. All the
-money in the world couldn’t buy that.”
-
-“Of course it could. And I don’t suppose it would take much to buy it
-either.”
-
-He solemnly dissented. She asked why not.
-
-“Because,” said he, “that bit of sunlight only exists in the eye that
-sees it.”
-
-“That’s sentiment,” said June severely. “You might say the same of
-anything.”
-
-“You might, of course. Nothing is, but thinking makes it so.”
-
-Again June heard the queer little tremble in his voice, again she saw
-that strange look steal across his face.
-
-“What you say sounds very deep, but if you talk in that way I’m quite
-sure you’ll never get on in the world.”
-
-“I’ll be quite happy to live as I am, if only I’m allowed to see the
-wonderful things that are in it.”
-
-June had a fierce desire to shake him, but he beamed upon her, and she
-became a lamb.
-
-“On Saturday,” he said, “when we go to our little treasure house, you
-will see what I mean.”
-
-“If you talk in this way,” said June once more severe, “I shall not
-go with you on Saturday to your little treasure house. Or on Sunday
-either. Or on any day of the week. If you were a millionaire, you
-could afford to be fanciful. Being what you are, and your salary less
-than half what it should be, I really think you ought to be ashamed of
-yourself.”
-
-She was a little astonished at her own vehemence. He seemed a little
-astonished at it also.
-
-“Nothing is, but thinking makes it so,” said June, with fine scorn.
-“That’s what Mr. Boultby, the druggist at the bottom of our street at
-home, would call poppycock. It means you’ll be very lucky if some fine
-morning you don’t wake up and find yourself in the workhouse.”
-
-One smile more he gave her out of his deep eyes.
-
-“That sort of talk,” said June, with growing fierceness, “is just
-_potty_. It won’t find you tools and a place to work in, or three
-meals a day, and a bed at night.”
-
-“But don’t you see what I mean?”
-
-“No, I don’t. As I say, to my mind it’s potty. But now tell me, what do
-you think this picture’s worth if you were buying it for Uncle Si to
-sell again?”
-
-“That is a very difficult question to answer. The master is so clever
-at selling things that he might get a big price for it in the market.”
-
-“Even without the signature?” And June fixed the eye of a hawk on the
-young man’s face.
-
-“I don’t say that. The signature might make a lot of difference to a
-dealer. But don’t let us talk of the price. There are things in this
-picture that money ought not to buy.”
-
-An impatient “Poppycock!” all but escaped Mr. Boultby’s disciple. Yet
-of a sudden, in a fashion so unexpected as to verge upon drama, her own
-voice took that soft quick fall he had taught her the trick of.
-
-“I can’t tell you how much I love it,” she said, dreamily. “I would
-give almost anything if it were mine.”
-
-William’s limpid glance betrayed that he was only too happy to believe
-her.
-
-“It is quite as beautiful to me as it is to you.” June plunged on, but
-she did not dare to look at him. “And I think it would be a terrible
-pity if it ever came to be sold by Uncle Si. I simply love it. Suppose
-you sell it to me?”
-
-“To you, Miss June!”
-
-“Yes--to me.” There was swift decision and the fixing of the will. “I
-like it so much that I’ll give you nineteen pounds for it, and that’s
-all I have in the world.”
-
-William was astonished.
-
-“I hadn’t realised,” he said, in charmed surprise, “that you admire it
-so much as all that.”
-
-“Yes, I do admire it.” Her heart beat fast and high. “And I want it. I
-can’t tell you just what that picture means to me. But nineteen pounds
-is all I can pay.”
-
-He shook his head in slow finality.
-
-She did not try to conceal her disappointment.
-
-“I couldn’t think of taking a penny of your money,” he said, shyly.
-“But as you love it so much, I hope you will allow me to give it you.”
-
-She gave a little gasp. An act of such pure generosity was rather
-staggering.
-
-“I hope you will, Miss June.” He spoke with a delicious embarrassment.
-“Loving it so much really makes it yours. To love a thing is to
-possess it. And I shall always have the happiness of feeling that it
-has made you happy.”
-
-She turned away a face glowing with shame. She could never hope to feel
-about it in the way that he did, and it seemed almost wicked to deceive
-him. But a young man so poor as he could not afford to be so simple;
-and she soothed her conscience by telling herself what she was now
-doing was for his future good.
-
-Conscience, however, was not to be put out of action that way. The part
-she was playing hurt like a scald on the hand. Both their tongues were
-tied by the pause which followed, and then she said in a weak, halting
-manner that was not like her: “You must have something in exchange for
-it, of course--not that I shall ever be able to offer anything near its
-true value.”
-
-“I ask no more than what you have given me already.”
-
-“What have I given you?”
-
-“You have given me the wonderful look I see sometimes in your face, and
-the light that springs from your eyes and the glow of your hair. When
-you came to this house, you brought something with you that was never
-in it before.”
-
-“How funny you are!” June’s cheek was a flame. But he spoke so
-impersonally, delicately weighing each word before a passion of
-sincerity gave it birth, that any effective form of rebuke was out of
-the question.
-
-“Miss June,” this amazing fellow went on, speaking for all the world
-as if she were a picture whose signature he was looking for, “when
-you came here, you brought the sun of beauty. Colour and harmony and
-grace, you brought those too. If only I knew how to paint,”--he sighed
-gently,--“I could never rest until I had put you on canvas just as you
-stand at this moment.”
-
-It was clear that he had forgotten completely that this was the niece
-of his employer. She also forgot that no young man had ventured yet
-to speak to her like that. This was William the wonderful who was
-addressing her, and his voice was music, his eyes slow fire, his whole
-being a golden web of poetry and romance.
-
-“You oughtn’t to give away such a thing,” she persisted, but with none
-of her usual force. “It’s valuable; and I oughtn’t to take it.” The
-sound of her voice, she knew only too well, was thin and strange.
-
-“Please, please take it, Miss June,” he quaintly entreated her. “It
-will give me more pleasure to know that you are caring for it, and that
-its beauty speaks to you than if I kept it all to myself. I love it,
-but you love it, too. If you’ll share the happiness it brings me, then
-I shall love it even more.”
-
-Shadows of the evening were now in the room. His face was half hidden,
-and the wildness of her heart scarcely allowed his voice to be heard.
-She thought no longer of the worth of the gift, nor was she now
-concerned with the propriety of its acceptance. Her mind was in the
-grip of other things. Was it to herself he was speaking? Or was he
-speaking merely to a fellow worshipper of beauty? To such questions
-there could be no answer; she trembled at the daring which gave them
-birth.
-
-His mere presence was a lure. She longed to touch his hand very gently,
-and would perhaps have done so, had she not been cruelly aware that
-even the hem of her sleeve would defile it. She was cheating him, she
-was cheating him outrageously. The only excuse she had was that it was
-all for his own good; such, at least, must now be her prayer, her hope,
-her faith.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-THE next morning Foxy Face, true to the appointment he had
-made with S. Gedge Antiques, came at ten o’clock with a friend. A
-quarter before that hour William had been sent to the King’s Road,
-Chelsea, in quest of a Jacobean carving-table for which his master had
-a customer.
-
-June, in anticipation of the event, took care to be busy in a distant
-corner of the shop when these gentlemen arrived. As on the occasion
-of Louis Quinze-legs’ previous visit, Uncle Si lost no time in going
-himself to fetch the picture, but his prompt return was fraught for
-June with bitter disappointment. By sheer ill luck, as it seemed, his
-stern eye fell on her at the very moment he gave the picture to Mr.
-Thornton’s friend, a morose-looking man in a seedy frock coat and a
-furry topper.
-
-“Niece,” sharply called S. Gedge Antiques, “go and do your dusting
-somewhere else.”
-
-There was no help for it. June could almost have shed tears of
-vexation, but she had to obey. The most she dared venture in the way
-of appeasing a curiosity that had grown terrific was to steal back on
-tiptoe a few minutes later, to retrieve a pot of furniture polish she
-had been clever enough to leave behind. Like a mouse she crept back for
-it, but Uncle Si flashed upon her such a truculent eye that, without
-trying to catch a word that was passing, she simply fled.
-
-Fear seized her. She felt sure that she had seen the last of the
-picture. Her distrust of S. Gedge Antiques had become so great that
-she was now convinced that money would tempt him to anything. Twenty
-miserable minutes she spent wondering what she must do if the picture
-was disposed of there and then. She tried to steel her heart against
-the fact, now looming inevitable, that she would never see it again.
-
-At last the visitors left the shop. June then discovered that her fears
-had carried her rather too far, and that for the time being, at any
-rate, Uncle Si had been done an injustice.
-
-He shambled slowly into the kitchen and to June’s intense relief the
-picture was in his hand.
-
-“Niece,” he said, threatfully; “understand once for all that I won’t
-have you hanging about the shop when I am doing business with important
-customers.”
-
-The sight of the picture was so much more important than the words
-which came out of his mouth that June felt inclined to treat them
-lightly.
-
-“I’m telling you,” said the old man fiercely. “Mark what I say. I won’t
-have females listening with their mouths open when I’m doing business.
-And don’t laugh at me, else you’ll have to pack your box. Here!” Uncle
-Si handed her the picture with a scowl. “Take this back to where it
-came from; and just remember what’s been said to you, or you’ll find
-yourself short of a week’s pocket money.”
-
-Adjured thus, June was a model of discretion for the rest of that day;
-and yet she was the prey of a devouring curiosity. She would have
-given much to know what had taken place in the course of the morning’s
-traffic with Louis Quinze-legs and his friend. It was not until
-supper-time that she was able to gather a clue, when Uncle Si mentioned
-the matter to William. He was careful to do so, however, in the most
-casual way.
-
-“By the way, boy,” said the old man gravely balancing a piece of cheese
-on the end of his knife, and fixing June with his eye as he did so;
-“that daub of yours--I’ve had Mr. Thornton here to look at it.”
-
-“I hope he liked it, sir,” said William, with his eager smile.
-
-Uncle Si pursed his mouth. Then he went through the rest of his
-performance, which on this occasion ended in a noise through closed
-lips like a hornet’s drone, which might have meant anything.
-
-June felt an insane desire to give the old wretch a punch on his long
-and wicked nose.
-
-“What did he think of the cloud?” asked William. “And the light of the
-sun striking through on to the water?”
-
-“He says it’s very rough and dirty, and in bad condition, but if I
-could buy it for two pounds he might be able to show me a small profit.”
-
-“I should think so,” murmured June, holding a glass of water in
-suspense.
-
-Uncle Si laid down his knife and looked at her.
-
-“You _think_ so, niece,” he snarled. “Have the goodness to mind
-your own affairs, or you and I will quarrel. That’s twice to-day I’ve
-had to speak to you.”
-
-June covered a retreat from the impossible position strong feelings had
-led her into by emptying her glass in one fierce draught.
-
-“You see, boy,” said Uncle Si, turning to William with a confidential
-air, “this--this _picture_.”--It seemed a great concession on
-his part to allow that the thing was a picture at all--“is without a
-signature. That makes it almost valueless.”
-
-William smiled and gently shook his head.
-
-“Beg your pardon, sir, but it is signed in every line.”
-
-“Rubbish. No theorising--this is a business proposition. And I tell you
-that without the signature, this bit of pretty-pretty just amounts to
-nix.” The old man gave his fingers a contemptuous snap. “That’s what
-it amounts to. But as you’ve taken the trouble to bring it all the way
-from Suffolk and you’ve spent a certain amount of your master’s time
-in trying to get it clean, as I say, I’ll spring a couple of pounds to
-encourage you. But why I should I really don’t know.”
-
-June was hard-set to refrain from breaking the peace which followed,
-with the laugh of derision. Happily, by a triumph of will power, she
-bridled her tongue and kept her eyes modestly upon her plate.
-
-“Now, boy!” Uncle Si made a series of conjuror’s passes with his
-spectacles. “Two pounds! Take it or leave it! What do you say?”
-
-William did not say anything, yet one of his shy smiles was winged to
-June across the table. She promptly sent back a scowl quite feral in
-its truculence, which yet was softened by a world of eloquence and
-humour behind it. There was no other way of intimating that Uncle Si
-must not learn too soon that the picture was now hers.
-
-William, no fool, if he chose to use his wits, was able to interpret
-this wireless. Thus he began to temporise; and he did so in a way
-delightfully his own.
-
-“What difference, sir, do you think the signature would make to our
-little masterpiece?”
-
-The old man gave his assistant a look almost superhuman in its caution.
-
-“Heh?” said he.
-
-The question was repeated.
-
-“Depends whose it is,” was the testy answer. “You know that as well as
-I do. If it’s Hobbema’s, it might be worth money.”
-
-“It isn’t Hobbema’s.”
-
-“Ah!” said S. Gedge Antiques. “Interesting to know that.” Had he been
-on winking terms with his niece, he would have winked at her; as it
-was, he had to be content with a sarcastic glance at the tablecloth.
-“But how do you know?” he added, idly careless.
-
-“Anyone can see it isn’t.”
-
-Anyone could not see it wasn’t a Hobbema, and that was the snag in
-the mind of the old man at this moment. Neither Mr. Thornton nor his
-friend, Mr. Finch, was quite certain it was not a Hobbema; they were
-even inclined to think that it was one, but in the absence of proof
-they were not disposed to gamble upon it.
-
-“How do you mean, boy, that anyone can see it isn’t?”
-
-“That gleam of sunlight, sir.” The voice of William was music and
-poetry in the ear of June. “I doubt whether even Hobbema could have
-painted that.”
-
-“You tell that to the Marines,” said S. Gedge Antiques impatiently.
-All the same he knew better than to discourage William in the process
-of unbosoming himself. The young man was continually betraying such a
-knowledge of a difficult and abstruse subject that it was becoming a
-source of wonder to his master. “Maybe you’ve found somebody else’s
-signature?” The tone was half a sneer.
-
-“Yes, sir, I rather think I have,” said William quite calmly and simply.
-
-“You have!” A sudden excitement fused the cold voice. “When did you
-find it?”
-
-“It would be about half an hour ago.”
-
-“Oh, indeed!” said the old man.
-
-This queer fellow’s casual tone was extremely puzzling. Why should he
-be inclined to apologise for having discovered the name of the artist,
-when it was of such vital importance? The only possible explanation of
-the mystery at once presented itself to the astute mind which asked the
-question.
-
-“Then I expect you’ve been a fool. If you couldn’t find Hobbema’s
-signature you had no right to find the signature of anyone else.”
-
-William was out of his depth. He could only regard his master with eyes
-of bewilderment. But June was not out of hers; she was careful, all the
-same, not to regard Uncle Si with eyes of any kind. She merely regarded
-her plate. And as she did so, a little shiver that was almost pain ran
-through her. Uncle Si was such a deep one that she felt ashamed of
-knowing how deep he was.
-
-“I don’t understand, sir,” said William, in the way that only he could
-have spoken.
-
-“Boy,” said his master, “you make me tired. In some ways you are
-clever, but in others you are just the biggest idiot that ever
-happened. I should have thought a child would have known that this has
-either got to be a Hobbema or it has got to be nothing. The best thing
-you can do is to go upstairs right now and take out that signature.”
-
-“But I understood you to say, sir, that the picture has no market value
-without a signature.”
-
-“No more it has, you fool. But there may be those who think it’s a
-Hobbema. And if there are, it is up to us to help them to keep on
-thinking.”
-
-June hung breathlessly on every word that passed. She watched William
-shake his head in slow and grave perplexity.
-
-“But anybody can see that it isn’t a Hobbema.”
-
-“Anybody can’t,” said the old man. “Mr. Thornton can’t for one, and
-he’s a pretty good judge, as a rule. Mr. Finch is more doubtful, but
-even he wouldn’t like to swear to it.”
-
-William shook his head.
-
-“Boy, you are a fool. You are getting too clever; you are getting above
-your trade. Go at once and take out that signature, whatever it may be,
-provided it isn’t Hobbema’s, and I’ll give you two pounds for the thing
-as it stands. And let me tell you two pounds is money.”
-
-William shook his head a little more decisively.
-
-“I’d have to paint out the trees,” he said, “and the water, and that
-cloud, and that gleam of sunlight before I could begin to touch the
-signature.”
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-“It’s a Van Roon,” said William, in a voice so gentle that he might
-have been speaking to himself.
-
-S. Gedge Antiques laid his knife on his plate with a clatter. He gave
-an excited snort. “Van Fiddlestick!”
-
-William’s smile grew so intense that June could hardly bear to look at
-him.
-
-“Every inch of it,” said William, “and there are not so many, is Van
-Roon.”
-
-“Why, there are only about a dozen Van Roons in existence,” said the
-old man, a queer little shake coming into his voice.
-
-“There’s one more now, sir.” William’s own voice was curiously soft.
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-
-“IF you go on like this,” said S. Gedge Antiques, after a
-pause, full of drama, “you will have to have a cold compress put
-on your head. Do you mean to tell me you have actually found the
-signature?”
-
-“Yes, sir,” said William, “right down in the corner about half an hour
-ago.”
-
-“Then why didn’t you say so instead of keeping it all to yourself?”
-
-“Because it doesn’t seem half so important as the other things I’ve
-found.”
-
-“What other things?”
-
-“The trees and the water and that----”
-
-“We’ve heard more than enough about those. Here have you been rubbing
-for that signature for the best part of a fortnight, and you pretend to
-have found a Van Roon, and you keep it as close as the tomb.”
-
-“I had found Van Roon, sir, long before I came upon his name.”
-
-“Rubbish! What do you know of Van Roon?”
-
-“There is a Van Roon in the treasure house in the Square,” said William
-with his inward smile.
-
-“There’s only one,” snapped S. Gedge Antiques, “in the treasure house
-in the Square, as you call it, and it’s a very small one, too.”
-
-“Ours is very small, sir. All Van Roons are small. And they are very
-scarce.”
-
-“They are so scarce, my friend, that you’ll never convince anybody that
-ours is genuine.”
-
-“There’s no need, sir, provided you know it is yourself.”
-
-“But that’s just what I don’t know,” said the old man. “Anyhow you had
-better go upstairs and fetch it. I’ll have a look at the signature of
-Mynheer Van Roon.” And then Uncle Si scowled at his niece who, in a
-state of growing excitement, had already begun to remove the bread and
-cheese from the supper table.
-
-While the young man went up to the attic, his master ruminated.
-
-“Fellow’s cracked,” he declared, a hostile eye still fixed upon June.
-“That’s his trouble. I’ll never be able to make anything of him. This
-comes of Hobbemaising. Van Fiddlestick!”
-
-“Uncle Si,” said June, in the voice of a dove, “if it is a Van Roon,
-what is the value of it?”
-
-“Heh?” growled Uncle Si, and his eye became that of a kite. “Never you
-mind. Get on with the clearing of that table, and don’t interfere. I
-never knew such creatures as women for minding other people’s business.
-But I can tell you this, only a born fool would talk of Van Roon.”
-
-A born fool came down the stairs at that moment, the picture in one
-hand, a microscope in the other.
-
-“It’s not a very good light, sir--” William’s voice trembled a
-little--“but I think if you hold it up to the gas, you will be able to
-see the signature right down in the corner. Just there, sir, along by
-my thumb.”
-
-The old man, glass in hand, brought a close scrutiny to bear upon the
-spot along by William’s thumb. Then he shook his head.
-
-“No, it is just as I thought. There doesn’t begin to be the sign of a
-signature.”
-
-“Don’t you see the upstroke of the R?”
-
-“Don’t I see the leg of my grandmother!”
-
-“Just there, sir. Round by the edge of my finger nail.”
-
-S. Gedge Antiques solemnly exchanged his “selling” spectacles for his
-“buying” ones, screwed up his eyes and grunted: “Why, that’s the tail
-of a Q, you fool.” Again he took up the microscope and made prodigious
-play with it. “That’s if it’s anything. Which I take leave to doubt.”
-
-William, however, was not to be moved. And then Uncle Si’s manner had
-a bad relapse. He began to bully. William, all the same, stuck to his
-guns with a gentle persistence that June could only admire. This odd
-but charming fellow would have Van Roon, or he would have none.
-
-At last the old man laid the microscope on the supper table, and there
-came into his cunning, greedy eyes what June called the “old crocodile”
-look. “If you’ll take my advice, boy, you’ll turn that R into an A, and
-you’ll make that upstroke a bit longer, so that it can stand for an H,
-and you’ll touch up those blurs in the middle, so that ordinary common
-people will really be able to see that it _is_ a Hobbema. Now what
-do you say?”
-
-William shook a silent, rather mournful, head.
-
-“If you’ll do that, you shall have five pounds for it. That’s big money
-for a daub for which you paid five shillings, but Mr. Thornton says
-American buyers are in the market, and with Hobbemas in short supply,
-they might fall for a thing like this. But of course the job must be
-done well.”
-
-William was still silent.
-
-“Now what do you say, boy?” The Old Crocodile was unable to conceal his
-eagerness. “Shall we say five pounds as it stands? We’ll leave out the
-question of the signature. Mr. Thornton shall deal with that. Now what
-do you say? Five pounds for it now?”
-
-William did not speak. It was at the tip of June’s tongue to relieve
-his embarrassment by claiming the picture as her own; but, luckily,
-she remembered that to do so just now might have an effect opposite to
-the one intended. Even as it was, she could not refrain from making a
-“mouth” at William to tell him to stand firm.
-
-He saw the “mouth,” but unfortunately so did Uncle Si. There were few
-things escaped the old man when he happened to be wearing his “buying”
-spectacles.
-
-“Niece, you cut off to bed,” he said sternly. “And you must learn not
-to butt in, or one of these days you’ll bite granite.”
-
-June showed no desire to obey, but Uncle Si, with a look set and dour,
-shuffled as far as the parlour door and opened it. “No more of it, my
-girl.” The voice was full of menace.
-
-One further instant June hesitated. The picture had been given to her,
-and the right and proper course was to claim it. But this daughter of
-the midlands was afraid of a false move. The revelation sprang to the
-tip of her tongue, yet a mysterious power seemed to hold it back. She
-may have expected help from William, but he, alas, seemed too much
-occupied in proving his case to be able to give a moment’s thought to
-the picture’s ownership.
-
-“Off to bed with you.” The old man’s voice was now savage. “Or--!”
-There was a world of meaning in the strangled threat.
-
-June climbed up to her attic with the best grace she could, her
-thunderbolt unlaunched. As slowly she undressed by the uncertain light
-of one poor candle, she felt very unhappy. Not only was there something
-unpleasant, one might almost say wicked, about Uncle Si, but his manner
-held a power of menace which fed her growing fear.
-
-What _was_ there to be afraid of? As she blew out the candle and
-leapt into the meagre, rickety bed which had lumps in the middle, that
-was the question she put to a rather stricken conscience. To ask the
-question was not to answer it; a fact she learnt after she had said
-her prayers in which Uncle Si was dutifully included. Perhaps the root
-of the mischief was that the old man was so horridly deceitful. While
-he held the picture up to the light, and he gazed at it through the
-microscope, she fancied that she had seen the devil peeping out of
-him. In a vivid flash she had caught the living image of the Hoodoo.
-And June was as certain as that her pillow was hard, that cost what it
-might he had made up his mind to get possession of the treasure.
-
-At the same time, she lacked the knowledge to enter fully into the
-niceties of the case. The picture might be a thing of great value; on
-the other hand it might not. She was not in a position to know; yet she
-was quite sure that William in spite of his cleverness was in some ways
-a perfect gaby, and that his master was out to take advantage of the
-fact.
-
-As she sought in vain for a soft place in her comfortless bed, she was
-inclined to admire her own astuteness in persuading William to bestow
-the picture upon herself. It was for the Sawney’s own sake, that at
-least was how she chose to view the transaction now. But a sense of
-vague triumph was dashed by the thought lurking at the back of her
-mind. Uncle Si was bound to get the picture from the feckless William
-somehow; indeed the young man, being as clay in the hands of his
-master, she was soon besieged with a fear that he had parted with it
-already.
-
-The slow passing of the tardy minutes gave form and pressure to this
-spectre. With an excitement that grew and grew she listened intently
-for William ascending to the room next door. Soon or late she would
-hear his feet on the carpetless stairs; but to one burning with
-impatience it seemed that an age had to pass.
-
-At last came the sounds for which she was so expectantly listening.
-The door of the next room was softly closed. What had happened? Was
-the picture still in his keeping? To lie all night with that question
-unanswered was more than she could bear. Suddenly she jumped out
-of bed, flung a macintosh over her white nightdress, so that the
-proprieties might be observed, thrust her feet into slippers and then
-knocked upon William’s door.
-
-It was opened at once.
-
-“Why, Miss June!” Astonishment was in the tone. “Are you ill?”
-
-“The picture?” said June, in quick whisper, so that Uncle Si should not
-hear. “You haven’t left it downstairs, I hope?”
-
-Laughing gently, William half turned from the threshold and pointed to
-a small table in the middle of the room, on which lay the treasure
-with a bit of candle burning beside it.
-
-A deep sigh expressed June’s relief. “Please give it to me. I will lock
-it up in my box for safety.”
-
-He smiled at her eagerness, and declared that it was quite all
-right where it was. Besides, another week’s work was needed to give
-the last touches to the delicate process of cleaning. June, whose
-careful bringing-up would not allow her to enter the room in such
-circumstances, tried from its threshold to make clear that the picture
-was already clean enough for her. But William was not to be moved. Many
-exquisite details yet called for the labours of a true lover.
-
-“Well, you must promise,” whispered June finally, “to take
-_enormous_ care of it. You must promise not to let it out of your
-sight for a single moment.”
-
-William hesitated to give this pledge. It appeared that his master
-wanted to show the picture to a friend; a fact which did but serve to
-confirm June in her suspicions. But she had the wisdom not to put them
-into words. She was content to affirm once more that the picture was
-now hers and that she would not trust _anyone_ with a thing of
-such value.
-
-“But I’d trust the master with my life,” said William softly.
-
-June felt that she would like to beat him for his innocence, as her
-manner plainly showed. In some things he was almost too simple to live.
-
-Suddenly she gave him a stern good-night, and abruptly closed the door.
-But it was long after Saint Martin’s Church had struck the hour of two
-that sleep visited her pillow.
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-
-THE next day was Saturday; and as the shop closed at one, June
-prepared to keep her promise of accompanying William to his “treasure
-house.” Strategy was needed, all the same. After she had washed up, she
-put on her “going out” dress. But when she came downstairs in it, Uncle
-Si, who took a most unwelcome interest in all her movements, inquired
-what was in the wind.
-
-“I’m going to look at a hat,” was the answer, bland and cool.
-
-“Going to look _at_ a hat!” To the mind of Uncle Si it was an
-unheard-of proceeding. “Next thing you’ll be wanting to buy a hat.”
-
-June confessed that it might be so.
-
-“You’ve got one already, haven’t you? Besides, the shops won’t be open.”
-
-The good shops might not be open, June allowed. But she was not seeking
-a good hat. The article to which her fancy turned was for every-day
-use; yet when all was said it was a mere blind. She did not really
-intend to buy a hat, but she certainly meant if possible, to throw dust
-in the eyes of the Old Crocodile. Had he been able to guess that she
-was going with William to the National Gallery he would have banned the
-expedition.
-
-In order to stand well with her conscience and not be a story teller
-in the eyes of the world, June walked as far as the Strand, and
-carefully inspected the window of a cheap milliner’s. And then, as
-arranged, she met William as the clocks were striking three at the
-Charing Cross corner of Trafalgar Square.
-
-It was a glorious September afternoon. And for June it was an exquisite
-if brief escape from servitude. She had yet to see William apart from
-the shop, yet now, as she came upon him standing by the post office,
-she was quite struck by his appearance. Tall and slight of form, he
-carried himself well, his neat suit of blue serge, old though it was
-in the revealing light of the sun, was brushed with scrupulous care,
-and his large flowing tie which he had the art of tying in a way of his
-own, made him look so interesting that June secretly was rather proud
-of being seen in his company. For undeniably he was handsome. In fact,
-standing there straight, alert and smiling upon the world, he had a
-look of mysterious charm which in the eye of one beholder raised him
-above the run of men.
-
-At the sight of June, he lifted his old straw hat with a little air
-of homage, and also with a slight blush that became him adorably. And
-in his mood there was a poetry that delighted her, although she was
-careful not to let him know it.
-
-“How wonderful it all is!” He waved his hand gaily to the sky. “And to
-think that every bit of it belongs to you and me!”
-
-June, as matter-of-fact a young woman as the city of Blackhampton had
-ever produced, felt bound to ask what William meant by this extravagant
-remark. Charmed she was, and yet she was a little scandalised too.
-
-“Beauty, beauty everywhere,” said the young man, letting his voice
-take its delicious fall. “There was an old Frenchman who said, that to
-see Beauty is to possess it. Look, Miss June, at that marvellous blue,
-and those wonderful, wonderful clouds that even Van Roon himself could
-hardly have painted. It is all ours, you know, all for our enjoyment,
-all for you and me.”
-
-“But you are speaking of the world, aren’t you?” There was a slight
-note of protest in June’s solemn tone.
-
-“If you fall in love with beauty, all the world is yours. There’s no
-escape from beauty so long as the sky is above us. No matter where we
-walk we are face to face with beauty.”
-
-June was afraid that a girl who looked so smart in a lilac silk dress
-and a picture hat that she had the air of a fashion plate must have
-caught William’s injudicious observation. At any rate, she smiled at
-him as they passed. But then arose the question, had he not first
-smiled at her? Certainly, to be up against that intriguing frock, to
-say nothing of the hat, must have meant rare provocation for such an
-out-and-out lover of the ornamental.
-
-Miss Grandeur, no doubt, had caught the look in his eyes which a minute
-ago June herself had surprised there. He simply could not help paying
-tribute to such radiance.
-
-But was the girl beautiful? There was no doubt that William thought so.
-Still, the worst of it was that in his eyes everything under the sun
-was beautiful.
-
-“She’d be nothing at all if it were not for the money she spends on
-herself,” June remarked, with more severity than relevance.
-
-All the same it was a rare experience to walk abroad with William.
-He had an eye for all things and in all things he found the thing he
-sought.
-
-On the steps of the National Gallery was a majestic policeman. To June
-he was but an ordinary symbol of the law, but for William he had a
-different message.
-
-“Good morning, sir!”
-
-At the compliment of this unwonted style of address, Constable X drew
-himself up, and returned the greeting with a proud smile.
-
-“I can’t tell you how grateful we are to you,” said William, “for
-taking such care of our treasures.”
-
-The policeman seemed rather amused. “It’s my job,” he said, training,
-at the same time, upon June an eye of quizzical intelligence. It was
-odd, yet all in a moment Constable X had ceased to be a stern-looking
-fellow.
-
-As soon as William crossed the threshold of his treasure house, a
-kind of rapture came upon him. His voice grew hushed. And to June it
-seemed doubtful whether he would ever get beyond the Hermes on the main
-staircase. Once within this palace of many enchantments, he began to
-lose all sense of time and place; and, in spite of the fact that he was
-the soul of chivalry, he even seemed in danger of forgetting that he
-was accompanied by a lady.
-
-Troubled at last by the silence of her escort, June gently observed:
-“This place seems nearly as big as the Blackhampton Art Museum.”
-
-To William’s fine perception it was a delicate reminder that art is
-eternal, and that in the month of September the National Gallery closes
-at six.
-
-The young man sighed deeply and turned away from the Hermes. Up the
-main staircase they walked side by side.
-
-“Keep straight on, Miss June. If we glance to the right or the left, we
-may not get to the Van Roon before next Saturday.”
-
-“We!” was June’s thought. “Better speak for yourself. In the
-Blackhampton Art Museum we have things far nicer than a few old chipped
-statues.” Happily, for the time being at least, it remained a thought
-without words.
-
-They went through a room on the right, and then into an inner room.
-June was led to its farthest corner, and proudly marshalled into the
-presence of an object so small, and so insignificant, that she felt
-it was really surprising that even William should attach the least
-importance to it.
-
-However, a mere glance proved that it was not so surprising after all.
-The picture contained a cloud, a tree, some water and a windmill. And
-these objects in themselves so trivial, yet sufficed, as June had
-learned already, to raise William at any time to the seventh heaven of
-bliss.
-
-A moment’s inspection of the picture was enough for June. To her mind
-the work was quite commonplace. Yet William stood in front of it in
-an attitude of silent adoration, his head a little to one side, and
-apparently holding his breath for such a long period that June began to
-wonder how the trick was done. She was bound in honour to share this
-silent ecstasy, but having varied the proceedings a little by standing
-first on her right foot, and then on her left, she decided at last to
-throw up her part.
-
-Very gently she put an end to William’s reverie.
-
-“I think I will sit down,” said June.
-
-“Please, please do!” The queer fellow came back with a start to the
-world of reality. “Let us sit over there on the corner of that sofa.
-Perhaps we may be able to see it even better then than we do now.”
-
-To the sofa they went accordingly and to June’s discomfiture her mentor
-was at pains to dispose them both in a way that should enable them to
-keep the picture in their eye. June had no wish to keep the picture in
-her eye. She had had more than enough of it already. Besides, the large
-room was full of things vastly more imposing, much better worth looking
-at. But William, even seated on the sofa by her side, was still in
-thrall to this remarkable work.
-
-There is no saying how long June’s trial would have lasted, but after
-it had gone on for a length of time that began to seem interminable, it
-came to an end in the most abrupt and dramatic way. Without any kind of
-warning, a strange appearance swam into their ken. Uncle Si, looking
-spruce and businesslike, and much better dressed than usual, entered
-the room through the door behind them.
-
-
-
-
-XIII
-
-
-JUNE held her breath, while S. Gedge Antiques with thought for
-nothing save the object that had brought him there, made a bee-line for
-the picture at which William was still solemnly staring. The old man
-put on his spectacles. Whether they were his “buying” or his “selling”
-ones, June was unable to decide, but whichever they might be they had
-an important function to perform. Uncle Si’s long and foxlike nose bent
-so close to the paint that it might have been smelling it.
-
-June’s instinct was to flee before they were discovered. And perhaps
-she would have urged this course upon William had not pride said no.
-She was in mortal fear of the old man, yet she despised herself for
-that emotion. After all, they were doing no wrong in spending Saturday
-afternoon in such a very elevated form of amusement. Surely it devolved
-upon her to stand up to this tyrant.
-
-William, for his part, was without misgiving. Thinking evil of none,
-least of all his master, he was a little awed by that odd arrival, and
-yet he was unfeignedly glad of his presence. The simpleton regarded
-it as a compliment to himself that S. Gedge Antiques should take the
-trouble to come in his own person to look at the Van Roon.
-
-At last S. Gedge Antiques turned away from the Van Roon, and little
-suspecting who were so near to him, came full upon William and June
-seated together upon the adjacent sofa. For a moment it was as if a
-feather would have knocked him down. He could trust his eyes so little
-that he hastily changed his spectacles.
-
-“What!” His brow was thunder. “You! Here!”
-
-June, ready to carry the war into the country of the enemy, was
-prepared to offer a cool “Why not?” Happily, a second and wiser thought
-led her to await developments. Secretly, Uncle Si was in a pretty rage
-as June could tell by the look of him. But he was not one to let his
-feelings override his judgment. Whatever they were, they could keep. He
-had come there for a particular purpose; this afternoon he was bent on
-business only.
-
-In the rasping voice which made June think of a file and sandpaper, S.
-Gedge Antiques remarked: “Still Hobbemaising, eh?”
-
-William modestly admitted that he hoped Miss June would have a look at
-The Avenue.
-
-“Let’s hope she’ll be the better for it.” The old man did his best to
-be polite. “It will improve her mind, no doubt.”
-
-“But we have come to see the Van Roon, sir,” said William impulsively.
-
-“Oh, you have.” There was a sudden narrowing of foxy eyes. “Seems to
-me, boy, you’ve got Van Roon on the brain.”
-
-William could not help laughing at his master’s tone of playfulness,
-but June did not laugh. She knew but too well that as far as Uncle Si
-was concerned, Van Roon was an exceedingly serious matter.
-
-“You are wise, boy”--the old man tried very hard to keep the sneer out
-of his voice--“to come and find out what a Van Roon really looks like.”
-
-William modestly said that he thought he knew that already.
-
-His master shook the head of wisdom. “Judging by the way you’ve
-been going on lately I take leave to doubt it. If you can trace the
-slightest resemblance to that thing of ours”--as Uncle Si half turned
-to point to the picture, June noticed that he was careful to say
-“ours”--“I’m afraid, boy, you’re qualifying for Colney Hatch.”
-
-William laughed gaily at his master’s humour. He felt bound in honour
-to do so, since the jokes from that quarter were thin and few. But June
-did not laugh. Something cold, subtle, deadly, was creeping into her
-heart.
-
-The old fox struck an attitude before the Van Roon. “How a man who
-has his wits can compare that daub of ours with this acknowledged
-masterpiece passes me altogether.”
-
-As a fact, William had not exactly compared his Crowdham Market
-purchase with Number 2020 in the official catalogue. He had merely
-affirmed that it was by the same hand.
-
-June was privileged to hear great argument. And as at her birth a kind
-fairy had bestowed the gift of penetration upon her, she listened
-to all that passed with a fixity of mind that was almost painful.
-Carefully weighing the pros and the cons as they were advanced, she
-was fully determined to get a real insight into the merits of a most
-singular and perplexing matter.
-
-Who was in the right? It was the opinion of William against the
-opinion of Uncle Si. From the first she had had horrid doubts of the
-old man’s sincerity, yet she must not prejudge so grave an issue.
-Account must be taken, moreover, of the entire range of William’s
-fantastic ideas. The thought was not pleasant, but on the face of it,
-Uncle Si was likely to be far the safer guide of the two.
-
-As June listened, however, to the wheedling sneers of the one and the
-forthright tone of the other, almost too transparent in its honesty,
-she could only conclude that Uncle Si was deliberately cheapening
-William’s discovery for purposes of his own.
-
-Looking at the masterpiece on the opposite wall, with what June was
-only too keenly aware were the eyes of ignorance, it was impossible to
-deny an extraordinary similarity of subject and treatment. And this,
-as she perceived at once, was where Uncle Si overdid it. He would not
-allow that to the vision of a technical expert, the possession of which
-he did not scruple now to claim for himself, there was the slightest
-resemblance. Such similarities as might exist on the surface to delude
-the untutored eye he explained away in a flood of words whose force
-was intended to convince them both. But he convinced neither. June,
-pinning her wits to a plain argument, smiled secretly as more than once
-he contradicted himself. William on the other hand, was not permitted
-by the love and reverence he bore his master, to submit his speeches to
-the scale. He took his stand upon the divine instinct that was his by
-right of birth. Such being the case he could but gently dissent from
-the old man. It was one of his peculiarities that the surer he was,
-the more gentle he grew. And therein, as June perceived, he differed
-strangely from Uncle Si who could only render conviction in terms of
-vehemence.
-
-Finally, as a clincher, S. Gedge Antiques growled: “Boy, you talk like
-a fool!” and head in air, marched with the aid of his knobby walking
-stick out of William’s treasure house.
-
-William and June having stood to talk with the old man, now sat down
-again.
-
-“Thank goodness he’s gone!” said June.
-
-William confessed that the master had puzzled him considerably.
-
-“’Tisn’t like him to close his eyes to the facts of a case. I can’t
-think what has happened to the master. He hardly ever makes a mistake.”
-
-Said June sagaciously: “Uncle Si being so wise about most things, isn’t
-it likely that the mistake is yours?”
-
-“It may be so,” William allowed. But at once he added, with a divine
-simplicity: “I will stake my life, all the same, Miss June, that our
-picture is a Van Roon.”
-
-“Or a clever forgery, perhaps.”
-
-“No, no. As sure as you and I sit here, only one hand painted that
-little thing of ours.”
-
-“Then why should Uncle Si declare that it doesn’t in the least resemble
-a Van Roon?”
-
-“Ah, that I don’t know. It is very strange that he should be so blind
-to the truth. As I say, it is the first time I have known it to happen.”
-
-“It may be,” said June, “that this is the first time there has been so
-much money in the case.”
-
-William dissented gravely. “The master would never let money influence
-him in a matter of this kind.”
-
-“Uncle Si lets money influence him in matters of every kind.”
-
-William shook his head. “I am afraid you don’t quite understand the
-master,” he said, with a wonderful look in his deep eyes.
-
-June was too wise to contest the point. He might know more about
-pictures than did she, but when it came to human nature it was another
-pair of shoes. It made her quite hot with anger to feel how easily he
-could be taken in.
-
-Sitting by William’s side on the edge of the sofa she made a vow. From
-now on it should be her aim in life to see that Uncle Si did not get
-the better of this young man. She had made a good and wise beginning
-by inducing him to bestow the picture upon herself, instead of giving
-it, as so easily might have happened, to the Old Crocodile. She knew
-that some bad quarters of an hour lay ahead, in the course of which she
-and her box might easily find themselves in the street; but come what
-might, let her cherish that picture as if it were life itself. For she
-saw with a startling clearness that William’s future, and perhaps her
-own, was bound up in its fortunes.
-
-This surmise as to trouble ahead was borne out very exactly by events.
-When accompanied by William she returned to tea in a state as near
-positive happiness as she had ever known, Uncle Si’s aspect was so
-hostile that it would not have been surprising had she been sent
-packing there and then. The presence of William helped to restrain the
-anger of S. Gedge Antiques, since there was more to lose than to gain
-just now by fixing a quarrel upon him; but it was clear that the old
-man did not intend to pass over the incident lightly.
-
-“Niece,” he began the moment his cup had been handed to him, “kindly
-tell me what you mean by gallivanting about London.”
-
-A hot flame of resentment ran in June’s cheek. But she was too proud to
-express it otherwise than by rather elaborately holding her peace. She
-continued to pour out tea just as if not a word had been said on the
-subject.
-
-“It’s my fault, sir,” said William, stepping into the breach
-chivalrously, but with an absence of tact. “Miss June very kindly
-consented to come and look at the Van Roon.”
-
-“There must be no more of it.” Miss June received the full benefit of a
-north eye. “I will not have you going about with a young man, least of
-all a young man earning fifteen shillings a week in my employ.”
-
-It was now the turn of William’s cheek to feel the flame, but it was
-not in his nature to fight over a thing of that kind, even had he been
-in a position to do so. Besides, it hardly needed his master to tell
-him that he had been guilty of presumption.
-
-Indeed, the circumstances of the case made it almost impossible for
-either of the culprits to defend such conduct in the other’s presence.
-Yet June, to the intense astonishment of Uncle Si, and no doubt to her
-own, contrived to give battle in hostile territory.
-
-“I can only say,” she remarked, with a fearlessness so amazing that
-Uncle Si scalded his mouth by drinking out of his cup instead of out of
-his saucer, “that if fifteen shillings a week is all that William gets,
-it is just about time he had a rise in his wages.”
-
-For a moment Uncle Si could only splutter. Then he took off his
-spectacles and wiped them fiercely.
-
-“Gracious goodness me! God bless my body and my soul!” June would not
-have been at all surprised had the old slave-driver “thrown a fit.”
-
-“William is very clever,” she said undaunted.
-
-“Niece, hold your tongue.” The words came through clenched teeth. “And
-understand, once for all, that I’ll have no more carryings-on. If you
-don’t look out, you’ll find your box in the street.”
-
-Having put June out of action, the old man turned his attention to
-William. But with him he walked more delicately. There must be no more
-Van Rooning, but the ukase was given in a tone so oily that June just
-had to smile.
-
-In spite of his own edict, however, it was clear that Van Roon
-continued much in the mind of William’s master. The next day, Sunday,
-instead of taking the air of the west central postal district, his
-custom as a rule, when the forenoon was fine, he spent most of the
-morning with the young man in the studio. June felt this boded so ill
-that she went about her household chores in a fever of anxiety. She was
-sure that Uncle Si had fully made up his mind to have the picture; he
-meant, also, to have it at his own price. However, she had fully made
-up hers that this tragedy simply must not occur.
-
-
-
-
-XIV
-
-
-JUNE, preparing for dinner a Yorkshire pudding, brought an
-acute mind to bear on the still graver problem before it. What would
-happen when Uncle Si found out that William had been persuaded to give
-her the picture? It was a question she was bound to ask, yet she dare
-not foretell the answer. William and she were completely in his power.
-Wholly dependent upon the food and lodging the old man provided and the
-few shillings a week with which he grudgingly supplemented them, they
-could not afford to come to an open breach with him; at the same time
-to June’s practical mind, it would be an act of sheer madness to give
-up the rare thing that fortune had put into their hands.
-
-Her need just then was the advice of some able and disinterested
-friend. There was only her power of putting two and two together to
-tell her that the picture might be worth a large sum. And even that
-did not allow her to know for certain; she must find a means of making
-sure. Unhappily, there was not one person in the world to whom she
-could turn for advice, unless it was William himself; and in plain
-matters of business he seemed so hopelessly at sea--if they involved
-dealings with his master at all events--that June was convinced he
-would be no use at all.
-
-Beating up an egg for the Yorkshire pudding, she felt a deep concern
-for what was now taking place up that second pair of stairs in the
-garret next the tiles. Vainly she wished that she had had the sense to
-ask William to keep back as long as possible the fact that he had given
-the picture to her. But the mere request would have opened the door to
-another anxiety. If the picture was what he thought it was, could such
-a gift, made in such circumstances, be regarded as irrevocable? That
-must be left to the giver himself to decide: assuming the simpleton had
-enough strength of mind to prevent Uncle Si deciding it for him.
-
-The pudding was just ready for the oven when she heard Uncle Si come
-downstairs. He went into the parlour, where every Sunday morning, with
-the help of the _Exchange and Mart_ and half an ounce of shag, he
-spent an hour in meditation. As soon as the door closed upon the old
-man, June ran attic-wards to confer with William.
-
-There was no beating about the bush. Bursting in upon him breathlessly,
-she cried: “I hope you have not told Uncle Si the picture is mine. I
-had meant to warn you not to do so on any account--not for the present,
-at least.”
-
-William looked up from the treasure with his absorbed air; but it
-appeared that as yet he had not let the cat out of the bag.
-
-“I am very glad.” June breathed freely again.
-
-“I thought,” said William sadly, “it would be best not to tell the
-master until after his dinner. But I fear that whenever he knows it
-will upset him terribly.”
-
-“Why should it?”
-
-“It’s like this, Miss June--the master is fairly setting his heart upon
-this picture.”
-
-“Then he’d better unset it,” said June harshly.
-
-Trouble came unmistakably into the expressive face of the picture’s
-late owner.
-
-“I am afraid it will be quite a blow to him if he doesn’t get this
-beautiful thing,” he said, gazing affectionately at what he held in his
-hand.
-
-“And yet he thinks so little of it?”
-
-“Oh no! Not now. This morning after a careful examination he’s changed
-his mind.”
-
-June was not impressed by this face-about on the part of S. Gedge
-Antiques. “If you ask me,” she declared scornfully, “he changed his
-mind some time ago. But he’s a bit too artful to let you know that.”
-
-“But why?” said William perplexedly.
-
-“Don’t you see that he thinks the more he cheapens it the easier it
-will be to get it from you?”
-
-William could not bring himself to take so harsh a view.
-
-“What does he offer for it now?” the new owner of the Van Roon sternly
-inquired.
-
-“You are not fair to the dear old master, believe me, Miss June.” The
-young man spoke with charming earnestness. “He has such a reverence for
-beauty that he cannot reckon it in terms of money. This morning I have
-brought him to see with my eyes.” Pride and affection deepened in the
-voice of the simpleton. “He has now such a regard for this lovely thing
-that he will not be happy until he possesses it, and I shall not be
-happy until you have given it to him.”
-
-June was simply aghast.
-
-“But--but it was given to me!”
-
-“I know--I know.” The giver was pink with confusion. “But you see, Miss
-June, your uncle has quite set his heart on it. And I am wondering if
-you will return it to me, so that I may offer it to him, as a token
-of my love. No one could have had a better or kinder master. I owe
-everything to him.” Suddenly, however, the young man was aware of her
-dismay. “I do hope you will not mind too much,” he said, anxiously. “If
-you will allow me, I will give you something else.”
-
-June averted her eyes. “You gave me this. And you can’t believe how
-much it means to me.”
-
-“Yes, I know you have a great feeling for it. To part with it will
-hurt you, I can see that. But please think of the dear old master’s
-disappointment if he doesn’t get it.”
-
-“He merely wants it to sell again.”
-
-“You are unjust to yourself, Miss June, in thinking so. Money does not
-enter into your feeling about this beautiful thing; it doesn’t enter
-into mine. Why should it enter into the master’s, whose love of art is
-so intense?”
-
-“Because his love of money is intenser. It’s his ruling passion. Where
-are your eyes that they can’t see a thing as plain as that?”
-
-She must be as gentle as she could with this absurd fellow, yet she
-feared that such words must cause a wound. And the wound was wilfully
-dealt. It was so important that he should be made to see the whole
-thing as really and truly it was. But her hope was slight that he would
-ever be brought to do so.
-
-“I beg you,” he said, almost with passion, “to let me have it back, so
-that I may give it to the dear old master.”
-
-“It is madness,” said June bitterly. “He has no true feeling for the
-picture at all.”
-
-She saw that her words were unwise. They made her own position worse.
-But faced by such an appeal she had to do her best on the spur of the
-moment.
-
-“I know how much it means to you.” Pain was clouding the eyes of this
-dreamer. “I know your love for it is equal to mine, but that will make
-our joy in giving it to your uncle so much the greater.”
-
-“But why to Uncle Si--of all people?”
-
-“He wants it.” William’s voice was low and solemn. “At this moment, I
-believe he wants it more than anything else in the world.”
-
-June said with scorn: “He wants it as much as he wants a thousand
-pounds. And he doesn’t want it more. I believe money is his god. Think
-of the fifteen shilling he pays you a week. It makes my blood boil.”
-
-A quick flush sprang to the young man’s cheek. “Money has nothing to do
-with this, Miss June.”
-
-“It has to do with everything.”
-
-Delicately he ventured to contradict. “Where love is, money doesn’t
-come in. I simply want to offer this priceless thing to the old master
-out of a full heart, as you might say.”
-
-“Then you shouldn’t have parted with it.” She hated herself for her
-words, but she was not in a mood to soften them. “You have already had
-the pleasure of giving it to me, therefore it is only right that you
-should now deny yourself the pleasure of giving it to Uncle Si. It is
-like eating your cake and having it.”
-
-William was not apt in argument, and this was cogent reasoning. He
-lacked the wit to meet it, yet he stuck tenaciously to his guns. “When
-you realize what this rare treasure means to the old man, I’m sure
-you’ll change your mind.”
-
-June shook her head. Secretly, however, she felt like weakening a bit.
-In the wistful voice was a note that hurt. But she could not afford
-to yield; there was far too much at stake. “I shall have to think the
-matter over very carefully,” she temporised. “And, in the meantime, not
-a word to Uncle Si that the picture’s mine.”
-
-She mustered the force of will to exact a promise. Bewildered, sad, a
-little incredulous, he gave it.
-
-“_I hope he doesn’t hate me half as much as I hate myself_,” was
-the swift and sickening thought that annihilated June, as she ran from
-the studio, having recollected with a pang of dismay that she had not
-put in the pudding for dinner.
-
-
-
-
-XV
-
-
-DINNER was a miserable meal. The Yorkshire pudding was light,
-the roast sirloin was done to a turn, the potatoes were white and
-floury, the kidney beans were tender, but June could find nothing in
-the way of appetite. The mere presence of William at the other side of
-the table was almost more than she could bear. So keen was her sense of
-a terribly false position that she dare not look at him. What did he
-think of her? How must she appear to one all high-minded goodness and
-generosity?
-
-Surely he must know, after what had just passed, that her love of the
-picture was mere base deceit. Surely he must hold such an opinion of
-her now that he would never believe or trust her again. And the tragedy
-of it was that she could not hope to make him see the real motive which
-lay behind it all.
-
-Seated at the table, making only a pretence of eating, but listening
-with growing anger and disgust to the artful change she now detected
-in the tone of Uncle Si, it was as if the chair in which she sat was
-poised on the edge of an abyss. William must despise her quite as much
-as she despised the Old Crocodile, was the thought which turned her
-heart to stone.
-
-S. Gedge Antiques having had the wit to discover the set of the wind,
-had begun most successfully to trim his sails. An hour’s careful
-examination of the picture that morning had convinced him that he
-had underrated its merits. There was very good work in it, and as a
-lifelong lover of art--with a devout glance at William--good work
-always appealed to him. But whether the thing, as a whole, was to be
-rated as highly as William put it, was decidedly an open question.
-Still the picture had merit, and personally he should treasure it as
-much for William’s sake as for its own.
-
-June realized that it was now the turn of this cunning old fox to make
-love to the Van Roon’s owner. But was he cunninger than she? Yet what
-concerned her more than anything just now was the plain fact that he
-had already managed to persuade himself that the treasure was his
-property.
-
-This was not the hour to disabuse his mind. And no matter when that
-hour came she foresaw a dire quarrel. She was now involved in a
-business to strain all the resources of her diplomacy. But William
-needed help. Cost what it might the task devolved upon her of looking
-after his affairs.
-
-William, meanwhile, in his own peculiar way, seemed not averse from
-looking after hers. After dinner her first duty was to clear the table
-and wash up; and he simply insisted upon bearing a hand. He carried the
-tray into the back kitchen, and then, almost with defiance, presided
-at the washing of the crockery, while she had to be content with the
-humbler office of drying it.
-
-“It’s your hands I’m thinking of, Miss June.”
-
-“My hands are no affair of yours,” was the terse reply.
-
-The lover of beauty shyly declared that such hands were not meant for
-such a task.
-
-“Nothing to write home about--my hands aren’t.”
-
-Politely sceptical, William drew from his pocket a bit of pumice stone.
-
-“It is to take the soils out of your fingers,” he said, offering this
-talisman shyly.
-
-June’s face was now a tawny scarlet. She did not know whether to laugh
-or to be angry. Yet how was it possible to be angry with a creature who
-was so charmingly absurd?
-
-“May I take them out for you?”
-
-The answer was “no.”
-
-But somehow her face must have said “yes.” For without more ado, the
-amazing fellow took one of her hands and with nice discretion began to
-apply the pumice stone.
-
-“There, now,” he said finally.
-
-A stern rebuke trembled upon her lips, yet with the best will in the
-world it could not find a form of words whereby to get itself uttered.
-
-
-
-
-XVI
-
-
-A LITTLE later in the day Uncle Si came into the back kitchen
-where June was at work. It seemed that he had an announcement to make.
-
-“Niece, there’s a piece of news for you. I’ve decided to take Mrs.
-Runciman back.”
-
-June saw no reason why Mrs. Runciman should not be taken back. Indeed,
-she would welcome the return of the charwoman. It would certainly
-reduce the burden of her own labours which was by no means light.
-
-“You and I are not going to hit it off, I can see that. Already there’s
-been too much of your interference. Next thing you’ll upset that boy.
-And I wouldn’t have that happen--not for a thousand pounds. So I think
-the best thing I can do is to take Mrs. Runciman back, and get her to
-find you a job.”
-
-“For me!” said June slowly. “Mrs. Runciman find a job for me!”
-
-“If she comes you’ll have to go. I can’t afford to keep a couple o’
-women eating their heads off. The times don’t run to it.”
-
-“What sort of a job do you expect a charwoman to find for me?” June
-asked, biting her lip.
-
-“She may know of somebody who wants a domestic help. As far as I can
-see, you are not fitted for anything else.”
-
-That was true enough, as June felt with a sharp pang. She was a girl
-without any sort of training except in the tedium of housework. No
-other career was open to her and she was going to be turned adrift.
-There came a hot flame to her cheeks, a sting of quick tears to her
-eyes. She was a proud and ambitious girl; never had she felt so keenly
-humiliated.
-
-“If you stay here,” said Uncle Si, “you’re sure to upset that boy. And,
-as I say, rather than that should happen I’d pay a thousand pounds to a
-hospital.”
-
-June didn’t reply. But in a surge of feeling she went up to her attic,
-and with rage in her heart flung herself full length on the bed.
-
-The blow was fully expected, yet that hardly made the weight of it
-less. Soon or late this miser was bound to turn her out of doors; yet
-coming at such a time “the sack” was in the nature of a calamity.
-
-Well, she must face it! Domestic service was the only thing to which
-she could turn her hand, and that, she foresaw, was likely to prove a
-form of slavery. A future, hard, confined and miserable, lay in front
-of her.
-
-Bitterly she regretted now that she had not been able to fit herself
-for some other way of life. She had had a reasonably good education, as
-far as it went, in her native town of Blackhampton, where her father at
-one time had been in a moderately good position. But he had died when
-she was fourteen. And her mother, with health completely broken several
-years before her death had been left so badly off that June, perforce,
-had to give up all thoughts of a wider field. Stifling vague ambitions,
-she had bravely submitted to the yoke but, in spite of a sense of duty
-honestly, even nobly done, the sequel was a grim distaste of household
-drudgery. And this had not been made less by a month under the roof of
-S. Gedge Antiques.
-
-With a gnawing sense of misery that was like a toothache, June slid off
-the bed and looked at herself in the cracked mirror which adorned the
-crazy dressing-table. Her only assets were comprised in her personal
-appearance. Instinctively she took stock of them. Alas, as she beheld
-them now, they were pretty much a “washout.”
-
-First to strike her was the tell-tale redness of her eyelids, and that
-disgusted her to begin with. But, apart from that, she felt in her own
-mind that her personality was not really attractive. Her education was
-small, her life had been restricted and narrow; and now there seemed no
-way out.
-
-Honestly she was not pretty, she was not clever, and she knew next to
-nothing of the world. Even at Blackhampton, where the supply of smart
-girls was strictly limited, she had never passed for anything out of
-the common. She had felt sometimes that her nature was too serious. In
-a girl a serious nature was a handicap, she had once heard Mr. Boultby,
-the druggist at the corner of Curzon Street, remark. One “asset,”
-however, she certainly had. The mop of golden-brown hair had always
-been her stand-by, and Mr. Boultby, that man of the world, had paid
-her compliments upon it. An artist would revel in it, he had said.
-Certainly there was a lot of it, and the colour having aroused comment
-even in her early days at the High School among her form-mates, it was
-no doubt rather striking. She was also inclined to be tall and long in
-the leg, she knew that her shoulders and chest were good, she prided
-herself upon the neatness of her ankles, yet at the back of her shrewd
-mind lurked the fear that the general effect must be plainness, not
-beauty. She had heard Mr. Boultby, always a friend, describe her as
-“unusual,” but she had felt that it was his polite way of saying she
-was not so good-looking as she might be.
-
-No, wherever her fortune might lie, it was not in her face. Once
-or twice, in her romantic Blackhampton phases, which at best were
-very brief and few, she had thought of the stage. But one month of
-London had convinced her that it was not her line. Considering her
-inexperience of life her fund of horse sense was rather remarkable. She
-was a great believer in the doctrine of “looking facts in the face.”
-And the fact she had to meet now was that she was not in any way pretty
-or talented. Unless you were one or the other, and London teemed with
-girls who were both, the doors of the theatre were locked and barred.
-
-Back on the edge of the bed, she began to consider the question of
-learning shorthand and typing, so that she might become a clerk in an
-office. But her means were so scant that the plan was hardly feasible.
-Really it seemed that no career was open to her, other than the one she
-loathed. And then the thought of William came. At once, by a strange
-magic, it eased the pressure. Heart, brain and will were merged in an
-immediate task; she must stand between this child of nature and the
-avarice of his master.
-
-The sudden thought of William brought courage, tenacity, fighting
-power. She knew that at this moment he was the other side the wall. An
-impelling need urged her to go to him. Forgetful of red and swollen
-lids she got up at once and went and knocked on the studio door.
-
-A familiar voice said, “Come in!”
-
-William, as usual in that room, was pottering about amid oils,
-canvasses and varnish. He was in shirt sleeves, he wore a large apron,
-his shock of fair hair, which gave him the look of a poet, was rumpled,
-there was a smudge on his cheek, but the absorption of his eyes, their
-look of intensity, half filled her with awe.
-
-She had really come to tell him that she was going to be sent away. But
-as soon as she found herself in his presence she was overcome by sheer
-pride. From the first this young man had treated her with a deference
-which implied that she was of a clay superior to his own. His bearing
-towards her always stressed the fact that she was the niece of his
-good master, and that he was a servant humbly grateful for his fifteen
-shillings a week.
-
-At first this attitude had fed her vanity in a subtle way. But now, in
-present circumstances, it seemed almost to enrage her. It was quite
-absurd that a man of such distinguished talent should place her upon a
-pedestal. The truth of the matter was she was unfit to lace his shoes,
-and it was amazing that he did not know it.
-
-Upon her entrance William had immediately risen from his stool, and
-had bowed slightly over the pot of varnish he held in his hand, with
-a half-humorous air of homage, as some famous chemist might have
-done when disturbed by a great lady in the midst of his wonderful
-researches. “I know it’s not me you have come to see,” his gentle
-manner seemed to say; “it is this marvellous thing on the easel at my
-elbow.”
-
-All the same it was William she had come to see. She had come to him
-for countenance and sympathy. And it did not help her at all that
-she should be treated with a shy reserve. She craved to be told that
-she had come to mean something to him; she craved to be told that his
-fastidious concern for her hands, and the regard he had for a beauty in
-which she herself did not believe was more than mere chivalry towards
-women in general. Alas, in spite of the eager friendliness of her
-reception this was not apparent. In the eyes of William she was just
-the master’s niece, and the incident of the pumice stone was without
-significance, beyond the fact that he was no more than the least of her
-servants.
-
-It was very exasperating.
-
-“But if you are wise,” said a voice within, “you will not let this Gaby
-know that you think so.”
-
-
-
-
-XVII
-
-
-JUNE spent a worried and disconsolate night. She had very
-little sleep. Time and again she listened to the melancholy drip-drip
-of rain on the eaves just over her head. Never in her life had she felt
-so wretched. She was horribly lonely, without resources or friends. How
-she was to live through the endless years of servitude and dependence
-on the will of others that lay ahead she did not know.
-
-To keep on telling oneself to bear up seemed of little use. She had had
-to do that each hour of each day since her mother’s death. The prospect
-of being cast upon the world was indeed dispiriting, yet in the end it
-might turn out better than to sacrifice one’s youth upon the altar of
-such a Moloch as Uncle Si.
-
-As people who sleep ill are apt to do, she fell into a comfortable doze
-just about the time she ought to be getting up. Thus, to her dismay,
-she entered upon the trying institution known as Monday morning at a
-quarter past seven instead of half past six.
-
-“Uncle Si will be growling for his breakfast in another quarter of
-an hour,” was the thought that urged her into her clothes with a
-frantic haste. One twist she gave and no more, without so much as a
-glance in the glass, at the mane of brown gold hair, and then she flew
-downstairs, buttoning the front of her dress.
-
-A fire was burning in the kitchen grate, and upon it slices of bacon
-were sizzling in a frying-pan; the cloth was laid for breakfast;
-moreover, the parlour was already swept and dusted. In fact, at the
-precise moment of June’s belated appearance upon the scene, William,
-with a businesslike air, was returning from a visit to the dustbin.
-
-When they met in the passage by the scullery she came within an ace
-of rebuking him. “Even if I oversleep myself you’ve no right to be so
-officious,” was the sharp phrase which rose to her lips. But a saving
-sense of justice, not always at the service of the female soul, held it
-back. After all, such kindness and devotion were worthy of respect; he
-had saved, besides, an unpleasant scene with Uncle Si.
-
-“Oh, thank you, William, ever so much,” she had the grace to murmur,
-hoping as she hastily disposed of the last button of her dress, that he
-wouldn’t notice she had come down, “half undone.”
-
-“Please don’t mention it, Miss June,” he said, with the politeness of
-a courtier, as he returned the empty dustpan to its home beneath the
-scullery sink. “As you didn’t seem quite yourself last night I was
-hoping you would not get up at all this morning. I was going to bring
-your breakfast up to you, and set it outside your door.”
-
-“Oh, but you are much too kind.” A sudden fierce rush of colour made
-her cheeks burn horribly. He was a very nice fellow, even if he was not
-so bright in some things as he ought to be.
-
-Uncle Si, by the grace of providence, was a few minutes late for his
-breakfast. This seldom happened for, as a rule, he was the soul of
-punctuality. However, he was going down to Newbury by the nine o’clock
-from Paddington to attend a sale; in consequence, he had bestowed far
-more pains upon his appearance than was usual at this early hour. He
-was in a fairly good humour. The fact that the charwoman’s return would
-enable him “to fire” his niece had cheered him so much that for once he
-had slept like a just man.
-
-“Don’t expect me until supper time,” he said to June, as he put on his
-high felt hat and his macintosh, and grasped the knobbed stick, as ugly
-as himself, which invariably accompanied his travels. “And my advice to
-you, my girl, is to think over very carefully what I said to you last
-night.”
-
-With an air of quiet satisfaction, S. Gedge Antiques stepped briskly
-forth into a soft autumn day where the sun as yet could not quite make
-up its mind to greet him.
-
-It was to be a day of great events. And the first of these began to
-materialise shortly before eleven when June chanced to enter the shop.
-William, just at that moment, was fathoms deep in conversation with a
-customer. The customer was very tall, she was strikingly distinguished
-and, in the opinion of June, she was dressed exquisitely. Soft silk and
-faint blue Chinese embroidery clothed her with a dangerous beauty. But
-it was the coquetry of her hat, an artful straw wreathed wonderfully in
-flowers of many a subtle shade that gave the crowning touch.
-
-The hat it was, no doubt, that completed William’s overthrow. There was
-a look of rapture in the eyes with which the vain fellow regarded its
-wearer, for which June could have found it in her heart to slay him on
-the spot.
-
-That tell-tale look was really a little too much. June could not help
-lingering on the threshold to watch these two. So shamelessly was
-William engrossed with this vision of pure beauty that there was not
-a chance of his eyes straying to look at her. And she would not have
-cared if they had. Such an irrational surge of jealousy was now in her
-heart that she would have welcomed his seeing what she thought of his
-gazing like that, even upon the grandest young woman in the land.
-
-“So nice of you to take so much trouble,” the fair customer said in
-a voice of such melody that June had to own that the celebrated Miss
-Banks, the daughter of Blackhampton’s chief physician, whose charm of
-manner had ever remained in her mind as the high-water mark of human
-amenity, would now have to take second place.
-
-“Not at all, madam,” said William, in the William way. Even June had to
-admit that such fine courtesy, a little excessive, no doubt, was far
-removed from mere sycophancy. Had he not practised on her? For that
-reason she had a perfect right to feel furious; William’s homage was
-far too inclusive. At the same time, there was no gainsaying that in
-this case he had every excuse. Regarded as the mirror of fashion and
-the mould of form, Miss Banks of Blackhampton was now a back number.
-
-“The friend I sent it to liked it very much indeed,” said the
-Super-girl. “It was so exactly what she wanted. And if by chance you
-are able to match it, I shall be most grateful.”
-
-William, with that divine air of his, promised quite simply and
-sincerely to do his best.
-
-“The price, too, was very moderate,” said the Super-girl with the
-geniality of one who owns a province. Then suddenly she half turned,
-and her merry glance, assisted by a Miss Banksian stick-eyeglass was
-trained full upon the Hoodoo. “What a delicious monster!” The voice had
-quite a Brahms trill in it, not that June had ever heard of Brahms. “It
-reminds one of Edgar Allan Poe or the Grand Guignol.”
-
-Unabashed by culture, William stood to his full height. June could only
-marvel at his coolness.
-
-“So Oriental. So grotesque. Makes one think of Ali Baba and the Cave of
-the Forty Robbers. Very valuable, of course?”
-
-“No, I wouldn’t exactly call it valuable.” June hardly knew whether to
-admire or to deplore this candour. “And it takes up a lot of room, and
-absorbs a lot of light. Almost needs the British Museum, as you might
-say, to show it to advantage.”
-
-Again the Brahms trill, as the eye of the Super-girl travelled from the
-Hoodoo to William. “Those fearful eyes and those grinning jaws studded
-with crocodile’s teeth make it look absolutely alive. And it’s so
-perfectly hideous that one feels sure there must be a curse on it.”
-
-“Mr. Gedge declares there is.”
-
-“Really?” The eyes, the blue eyes of the Super-girl grew round and
-merry. “I’d love to have a thing with a curse on it--if it’s a real
-one?”
-
-“Mr. Gedge would part with it for a very reasonable sum I feel sure,”
-said William, with a judicious air that June admired the more for being
-hardly able to credit it in him.
-
-With the casual air so becoming to riches, the young woman asked the
-price.
-
-“Twenty pounds would buy it,” she was informed.
-
-“Curse and all?”
-
-“Curse and all, madam.” William had a nice sense of humour, which June
-had discovered before she had known him an hour, but in this big moment
-he did not relax a muscle.
-
-For about a quarter of a minute the Super-girl looked again at the
-Hoodoo. And then with the air of one who takes a great decision, she
-gave the ugly chin a playful tap and said: “I believe the long gallery
-at Homefield is the very place for you, my friend. You may not be a
-thing of beauty, but at the far end I am sure you would be a joy for
-ever!” She made then such fine play with her stick-eyeglass, that Miss
-Banks was put off the map altogether. “And a real live curse given in,
-I think you said?”
-
-William bowed a grave affirmative.
-
-It was clear that Miss Blue Blood was intrigued. She folded, unfolded,
-refolded her stick-eyeglass; she looked the Hoodoo up, she looked the
-Hoodoo down, standing three paces back in order to do so. “Before I
-really decide”--addressing the monster in a voice of warm caresses--“I
-must get my father to come and look at you, my dear. He’s wiser than I
-in these matters. You might kill all the pictures in the long gallery.”
-
-At this point William bowed again with exceeding deference. But here
-was not the end. The stick-eyeglass lit on the bowl of Lowestoft, which
-the Sawney who was turning out to be not quite such a sawney as he
-seemed, had picked up in his recent travels in Suffolk.
-
-“I like that. What a charming piece!”
-
-Mr. Half-Sawney held the charming piece to the light for Miss
-Stick-eyeglass to gaze upon.
-
-“Yes--really quite charming!”
-
-Their heads were so close while together they bent over its beauties,
-that June, without wishing real harm to either, could have found it in
-her heart to hope that the bowl might fall from the hands of William
-and break into a thousand pieces.
-
-“What is the price?”
-
-The bowl was turned on to its base while the young man glanced at the
-mystic code which had been traced by the hand of S. Gedge Antiques.
-
-“Six guineas, madam,” she was most deferentially informed.
-
-“I collect Lowestoft. A charming piece. It will go so well with my
-others. Will you kindly send it to 39b, Park Lane?”
-
-“Certainly, Miss Babraham.”
-
-The amazing Miss Babraham opened a vanity bag, took out a sheaf of
-notes, and chose six which, with the smile of a siren, she handed to
-William, who received them with one more bow from his full height, and
-proceeded to write out a receipt.
-
-Somehow this transaction was altogether too much for June. Flashing one
-long last glance of immeasurable venom upon the stick-eyeglass who, all
-unconscious of the deadly passions it had aroused, had now returned to
-elegant and final contemplation of the Hoodoo, the niece of S. Gedge
-Antiques withdrew hurriedly to the scullery sink, filled a bucket of
-water, and proceeded with a kind of contained fury to scrub the floor
-of the larder.
-
-
-
-
-XVIII
-
-
-WHEN William came in to dinner there was music to face. But
-as there was no sure ground at the moment for real battle, the music
-opened _pianissimo_. It began with a few rather pointed enquiries.
-
-“Had a rather busy morning, haven’t you?”
-
-“I don’t think it has been anything out of the way,” was the
-non-committal answer.
-
-“Done any business?” The question was casual, but June fixed him with
-her eye.
-
-“Oh, yes!” So light and airy was the tone that business might have
-mattered nothing. “I’ve sold the Lowestoft bowl.”
-
-“Uncle Si’ll be pleased, I expect.” She found it terribly difficult to
-keep a sneer out of her voice, but you never know what you can do till
-you try. “Fetch much?”
-
-She knew perfectly well, of course, the price it had fetched.
-
-“Six guineas!”
-
-“Isn’t that a pretty good profit on what you paid for it at
-Saxmundham?” said June, with the precision of the born head for affairs.
-
-“I got it for thirty shillings at Saxmundham, but of course that was at
-a sale.”
-
-“Seems a fair profit, anyway.”
-
-“Yes, I suppose it is.”
-
-“Will you get any?”
-
-“Oh no!” said William, trying to spear a pickled walnut in a glass jar.
-
-“Then I think it’s an infamous shame that the whole of that six guineas
-should go into the pocket of Uncle Si.”
-
-With a polite shake of the head, William dissented. “But don’t you see,
-I couldn’t have bought it unless the master had given me the money, and
-also marked the catalogue.”
-
-“It was your brains that bought it. And your brains sold it, too. I
-think you ought to see that Uncle Si is simply living upon them.”
-
-“No, no, Miss June,” said William staunchly. “Please don’t forget that
-it is the master who taught me everything.”
-
-June declined to argue the point. She knew it was no use. For the
-hundredth time she was up against his fixed idea. Besides, there was
-something else to talk about.
-
-“To whom did you sell that beautiful bowl?” Her voice was that of the
-dove.
-
-“I sold it to a Miss Babraham,” said the Sawney in a voice of perfectly
-stupendous impersonality.
-
-“To a Miss Who?”
-
-She had caught the name quite clearly, and not for the first time
-that day, but there was a kind of morbid fascination in toying with a
-subject which was really without significance, and could lead nowhere.
-All the same she pined for an insight into the workings of the mind
-of this strange young man who was such a baffling mixture of the
-over-simple and the highly gifted.
-
-“Her name is Miss Babraham.”
-
-“Who is she when she is at home?”
-
-She tried hard to imitate a detachment which was a little uncanny, yet
-knowing all the time that she was making a sad hash of the performance.
-The trick seldom comes easy to the daughters of Eve.
-
-“Who did you say she was?”
-
-“Her father is Sir Arthur Babraham.” The impersonality of William made
-her writhe.
-
-“Oho!” said June, still trying her best to rise to William’s level, and
-fully conscious that she was failing miserably. “One of the big bugs,
-eh?”
-
-It was vulgar, she knew, to speak in that way. Among the things she had
-learned at the Blackhampton High School was a due and proper regard
-for baronets. Miss Preece, its august headmistress, would have been
-shocked, not merely by her tone, but also by her choice of words. But
-High School or no High School, the intrusion of Sir Arthur Babraham
-suddenly made her see red. She must be vulgar--or burst!
-
-“What you’d call one of the smart set, I suppose?” said June abruptly
-breaking a long and rather trying pause. “Well, I don’t think much of
-her stick-eyeglass, anyway.”
-
-Terrific disparagement of Miss Babraham, her works and her belongings
-was intended, yet to the queer creature seated opposite who by now
-was almost ready for the tapioca pudding, which had been so carefully
-prepared for him, it did not seem to imply anything at all.
-
-“You take no stock of smart sets, I dare say,” said June, with growing
-truculence. “You’ve never heard of them, have you? China tea sets are
-more in your line, aren’t they?”
-
-That was real wit, and people far less clever than this Sawney--a
-contradiction in terms and yet the only word which seemed to describe
-him after all!--must have seen the force of it. But not he! He solemnly
-rose and collected the plates, and then fetched in the tapioca pudding
-for all the world as if there was absolutely no point in the remark.
-
-“Who did you say that tall girl was?” said June, returning mothlike to
-the flame, as she helped the Sawney very substantially to his favourite
-dish.
-
-“Miss Babraham!”
-
-“And who did you say her father was?”
-
-“Sir Arthur Babraham!”
-
-“And what might _he_ do for a living?”
-
-This was not ignorance. It was mere facetiousness. She knew quite well
-that no Sir Arthur Babraham since first invented by that ridiculous
-monarch, King James, had ever done anything for a living. But it was
-good to feel how such a “break” would have hurt Miss Preece.
-
-“He’s one of the richest men in England,” said William, dipping his
-spoon into his tapioca with an impersonality which approached the
-sublime.
-
-June knew that. There was the daughter of Sir Arthur Babraham to prove
-it.
-
-“One of Uncle Si’s best customers, I suppose?”
-
-“Doesn’t often come here. But he has wonderful taste.”
-
-“In daughters?” said June sardonically.
-
-“In everything. Only last night I read in the paper that there isn’t a
-better judge of pictures living.”
-
-June merely said “Oh!”
-
-“He’s one of the trustees of the National Gallery, you know.”
-
-“Oh!” said June.
-
-“And owns a very fine private collection of the Dutch School.”
-
-“Does he?” It was June’s turn now to be impersonal; in fact, it was up
-to her to let him see that it would take more than Sir Arthur Babraham
-and a private collection of the Dutch School to impress her.
-
-“I suppose his daughter is what you’d call rather _fetching_?”
-She had once heard the word on the lips of the admired Miss Banks at a
-charity bazaar.
-
-But in William’s opinion it was not adequate to the occasion.
-
-“To my mind,” he said, and his voice fell, “she’s a non-such.”
-
-June stepped midway in the act of bestowing upon him a second helping
-of tapioca.
-
-“She’s a what?” she demanded fiercely.
-
-“A museum piece, Miss June.” His enthusiasm was restrained but none the
-less absurd. “She’s hallmarked. She walks in beauty.” A blush, faint
-yet becoming, slowly overspread William’s delicately tinted complexion.
-
-June snorted. Had it been within the province of eyes to slay, this
-Gaby would have had no use for a second helping of tapioca.
-
-“Glad to know that!” said June, homicidally. “As you are so set on
-beauty, you must have had an interesting morning.”
-
-A disgracefully impersonal silence was William’s only answer. The
-deadliness of the observation seemed completely lost upon him. But was
-it?--that was the question for gods and Woman. Such a silence might
-mean anything.
-
-“I suppose you’d say she had wonderful taste?”
-
-“Miss Babraham?”
-
-“No, Joan of Arc,” said Woman, venomously.
-
-“Her taste is very good indeed--that is, in some things.”
-
-“In hats, I suppose.”
-
-“I meant in old china,” said the impersonal one. “I’ve never known her
-to make a mistake in old china.”
-
-“That’s interesting.” It was a weak remark, but June had seldom felt
-less conversationally brilliant.
-
-Silence again. A third helping of tapioca was politely declined. June
-then pushed across the cheese. William removed its cover, and disclosed
-an extremely meagre piece of Leicestershire.
-
-“Please may I give you a little?” he asked, with his inimitable air.
-
-“There’ll be none for yourself if you do. Besides, I don’t want any. No
-thank you.” She remembered her manners, although that was not easy just
-now. “I’ll go out presently and buy some more. I’d quite forgotten the
-cheese.”
-
-“Please--please take this tiny piece.”
-
-“When I say no, I don’t mean yes,” said June, tempering strength of
-character with calm politeness. “I can’t imagine Miss Babraham eating a
-piece of Leicestershire cheese in a dirty overall--can you?”
-
-The remark was so irrelevant that it verged upon the grotesque. Heaven
-knows from what malign impulse it sprang. No girl in her senses would
-ever have made it. Giant Despair and the Hag Desperation must have been
-its sponsors.
-
-It was quite open to William to follow the line of least resistance
-and ignore the question. A William less true-blue, a William less a
-gentleman right through to the core might without dishonour have done
-so. But this was a William of a nobler clay.
-
-“Miss June, your overall isn’t dirty.”
-
-The rich sincerity of these six and a half little words seemed gravely
-to imperil the whole sublime edifice of his impersonality.
-
-He was contradicted flatly for his pains; yet she knew in her heart
-that whether the overall was dirty or whether it was clean, the
-renegade was already half forgiven.
-
-“What did you think of her dress?” This new on-rush of irrelevance was
-despicable, but she seemed quite to have lost control of herself.
-
-“It was perfect. To my mind, nothing is more becoming to a tall lady
-than a dress of soft dark blue silk.”
-
-Dyed-in-the-wool idiot! As though it was not his clear and obvious duty
-never even to have noticed whether Miss Babraham wore a dress of soft
-blue silk or a muslin with spots or a grey alpaca, or just a plain
-serge coat and skirt. Times there are when the stupidity of the human
-male has really no limit.
-
-“Must have cost a pretty penny,” said June acidly.
-
-William shook his head, and boldly affirmed that it couldn’t be bought
-for money.
-
-“That’s just nonsense,” said June tartly. “There isn’t a dress in the
-world that couldn’t be bought for money.”
-
-“What I really mean is, to have a dress which looked like that, you
-would also have to buy the wearer,” said William the amazing.
-
-June expressed a ripe scorn by vehemently beginning to clear the
-table. High time, certainly. They had been discussing cold mutton and
-pickled walnuts and tapioca pudding and Leicestershire cheese and
-things and women for one solid hour by the Queen Anne clock, a real
-antique, in the middle of the chimneypiece, for which S. Gedge had
-lately refused the sum of forty guineas.
-
-
-
-
-XIX
-
-
-IN the course of the afternoon, June found herself immersed in
-the crisis of her fate. It began with a desire to own a dress of soft
-blue silk. This, she well knew, was insane. In the first place, she was
-still in mourning for her mother; in the second, she must hoard every
-penny of her slender means; in the third, was William’s conviction that
-the success of a dress depended upon its wearer.
-
-Not a shade of excuse could be found for this vaulting ambition. But
-it was fixed so firmly in the centre of her mind, that when she set
-out soon after three to order the cheese she could think of nothing
-else. The grocer was at the end of the street and two minutes did
-her business with him. And then in the toils of imperious desire she
-marched boldly down to Charing Cross and took a bus to Oxford Circus.
-
-A yearning for a dress of blue silk was upon her like a passion. It was
-madness and yet it was very delicious. What could a blue silk dress
-avail when at any moment she was likely to be cast adrift? That thought
-hit hard as she sauntered slowly along the Street of Streets gazing
-wistfully upon its long array of too-fascinating drapers’ windows.
-
-Her store of worldly wealth was nineteen pounds and a few odd
-shillings. It was as certain as anything could be that she was about to
-enter upon the most critical period of her life, and this was all she
-had to tide her over. But do what she would to act like a reasonable
-being she was now at the mercy of a demon more powerful than common
-prudence. She was haunted by a passion for a blue silk dress and no
-matter what happened to her afterwards she must satisfy that craving.
-
-It was a rather thrilling business to rake these forbidden windows in
-quest of a thing it was sheer madness to buy, yet within one’s power to
-do so. Why was she going to buy it? Because she wanted it so badly? Why
-did she want it so badly? That was a question she could not answer.
-
-Had she been really pretty this folly might have seemed less amazing.
-But she knew she was plain. At least, she always felt and always passed
-for plain at Blackhampton. But her pilgrimage along Oxford Street
-which, in the middle of a bright afternoon of early October, seemed the
-Mecca of fashion, beauty and good taste went some way to change the
-attitude she had taken up in regard to her personal appearance.
-
-Plain she might be, her clothes might be severely provincial, their
-hue depressing, but she was clearly informed by the sixth sense given
-to Woman that she was not wholly unlooked at. It was nice to feel that
-such was the case; indeed, it was stimulating, yet so deeply was she
-occupied just then with large affairs that she didn’t think much about
-it.
-
-After many windows she had seen, she found herself drifting with the
-tide into a store of regal aspect. Here she was received by young
-women, elegant and gracious, with a courteous charm that made a search
-for five yards of blue silk fabric in its least expensive form a
-perfectly simple and yet delightful adventure. Moreover, it brought
-in its train a great idea. Was it necessary, after all, that domestic
-servitude should be her lot? Might it not be possible to become one of
-these smart and pleasant ladies in their very attractive clothes?
-
-Expenditure of spirit, anxious care, went to the final purchase of four
-and a half yards of cotton silk material, more cotton than silk, at
-eight and elevenpence three farthings a yard; and then the new thought
-gained such a hold upon her, that before leaving the store she took an
-inventory of her person in one of the huge mirrors which made the place
-so enchanting. Standing boldly in front of the great glass, surveying
-herself with a curiosity that was half fear, she went over her “points”
-as might an Eastern merchant who buys a slave.
-
-She was taller than she supposed. That was thought the first. And if
-she wore shoes with high heels, as so many girls did, she could look
-still taller. She could pass for slender, that was her second thought;
-and her chest was something to be proud of. She might not have much
-in the way of grace, and she might lack style, yet she didn’t lack
-dignity. Her features were irregular, and there was no denying their
-freckles, but seeing her frontispiece this afternoon, with its fighting
-chin and determined eyes, the full effect was rather striking. But
-when all was said it was her hair that was important. This she had
-always known, but in the strong and subtle lights of the best mirror
-into which she had ever gazed, it ministered considerably to the sum
-and total of her charms. Perhaps her friend, Mr. Boultby the druggist,
-had not overshot the mark when he compared her hair to the Empress
-Eugenie’s, and said it ought to be painted by an R. A.
-
-A mop of russet gold hair was little enough for a girl who stood in her
-particular shoes. She felt that as she gazed upon it; felt it besides
-with something akin to resentment. But even a self-criticism, cool and
-stern, must allow that she made a better showing in Mr. Selfridge’s
-mirror than could have been expected. She was far from being beautiful,
-but that hair in its subtle-tinted abundance saved her somehow from
-being ordinary. And to-day she looked very much alive with the bloom of
-youth and health.
-
-Four and a half yards of blue material under her arm, she went out
-into Oxford Street, feeling rather better equipped for the battle of
-life. She drew back a pair of shoulders that were really not so bad,
-and defiantly lifted a chin that had looked uncommonly square in the
-mirror. It was good to feel that she had underrated herself. She must
-learn to dress in the London way, and then she might be able to hold
-her own.
-
-Walking slowly back to Oxford Circus, head higher now, she began quite
-to like this new idea of becoming a shop assistant. At the worst, it
-would be a far easier and more dignified way of life than domestic
-service. So much was she engaged by it, and so great the pressure of
-her thoughts that at first she didn’t notice that a man was following
-her.
-
-The knowledge overtook her by degrees. Stopping to look in various
-windows, each time she did so brought a vague feeling that the eyes of
-a man were upon her. She crossed the Circus, but the feeling was still
-there; and at the corner of Berners Street, without quite knowing how,
-surmise entered the region of fact. Moreover, she even contrived to
-learn the style of man he was.
-
-Out of the tail of an eye, as she stood by the edge of the kerb, she
-saw that he was pale and dark, neither short nor tall, that he had
-a slight moustache, and wore a hat of peach coloured velours. His
-presence gave her an odd feeling; in fact, it might be said to frighten
-her just a little, although there was certainly no reason why it should
-in broad daylight. But she had an idea that he was going to speak to
-her and that he was seeking an opportunity to do so.
-
-Hastily she moved on, determined to give further shop windows “a miss”
-for the present. However, she had not gone far when it occurred to
-her that she was in need of a cup of tea, and that it would be very
-pleasant to have one.
-
-Just across the road was an A. B. C. shop. The fear of pursuit still
-upon her, the sudden dash she made for this bourn was so ill-timed that
-her sovereign faculty of keeping her head in a crisis was needed to
-save her from being run over by Bus 13, which was going to the “Bell”
-at Hendon.
-
-With quite a sense of adventure, she went to one of a row of vacant
-tables at the far end of the shop. She ordered a small pot of tea, a
-scone and a pat of butter. And then she realized that a pale, dark man,
-neither short nor tall, with a slight moustache, and wearing a hat of
-peach-coloured velours had followed her in, and was just about to take
-a seat at the table next her own.
-
-
-
-
-XX
-
-
-JUNE was not a timid girl. She had no lack of courage; and
-now that a chance had been given her to reason things out, a feeling
-akin to fear promptly yielded to mere annoyance. And even that emotion
-took wings when she had had time to glance at the hat of peach-coloured
-velours. Its owner looked harmless enough. He was a man of thirty,
-or perhaps a little more; he wore a well-cut black jacket, a pair of
-rather baggy trousers of a light grey check, a silk collar, a flowing
-bow tie, a diamond ring on the little finger of the left hand. The
-general effect of what to June was a decidedly interesting personality
-was somehow to fulfil her preconceived idea of an artist.
-
-As soon as the man felt the gaze of June upon him, he swept off the hat
-of peach-coloured velours with a gesture at once easy and graceful,
-fortified it with a smile at which it would have been impossible to
-take offence, and said with a slight lisp,
-
-“Miss Graham?”
-
-“I am not Miss Graham,” said June calmly. She always prided herself
-upon her self-possession. Just now it seemed to help her considerably.
-
-The man carried off his question with such an air of tact that it must
-have ranked as a bona fide mistake had not June been aware that he had
-crossed the road and followed her into the shop. Rather strangely, as
-soon as he took it upon himself to speak to her, the lingering sense of
-vexation gave way to curiosity. The mere look of the man had the power
-to excite an immediate interest, but June was careful to keep strictly
-upon her guard.
-
-He ordered a bottle of ginger beer, and when the waitress had gone for
-it, he turned to June and said, with the companionable air of an old
-friend: “It’s funny, but you are exactly like a girl I used to know.”
-
-“Why funny?” asked June bluntly.
-
-The nature of the question, and the look of June’s keen eye made the
-man smile a little. Evidently she was a bit of a character. It appeared
-to stimulate him.
-
-“It’s always funny when you mistake someone for someone else.”
-
-“Is it?” said June, warily.
-
-“Don’t you agree,” he said, with a laugh that sounded decidedly
-pleasant.
-
-“It’s a thing I should never think of doing myself.”
-
-“You are lucky.” He was amused by her bluntness. “I wish I had your
-good memory.”
-
-The tea arrived, and June poured it out in a spirit of thankfulness. As
-soon as she had drunk half a cup, which was reviving, she forgot all
-about her annoyance in a new feeling of exhilaration tempered by quiet
-amusement.
-
-“You are most remarkably like a Scotch girl I used to know in Paris,”
-said the man, taking up the thread of conversation, after having drunk
-a little, a very little, ginger beer.
-
-“Am I?” said June, coolly.
-
-“She was an artist’s model. Sometimes she used to sit for me.”
-
-“Are you an artist?” said June, allowing herself to become interested,
-for the reason perhaps that she simply could not help it.
-
-“Of sorts,” was the answer. “I studied several years in Paris before
-the war.”
-
-From the moment he had sat down at the next table and June had been
-able to get a clear view of him she had somehow known that art was his
-calling. He looked an artist so emphatically that there would have
-been something fatally wrong with the cosmos had he turned out to be
-anything else.
-
-In spite of a determination to be cautious indeed, she was not equal to
-the task of repressing an ever growing curiosity. Art had lately come
-to have a magic meaning for her.
-
-“What kind of pictures do you paint?”
-
-“Portraits and the figure chiefly.”
-
-“Do you ever paint landscapes?”
-
-“They are not quite my line of country,” said the man. “Portraits and
-the figure are what I go for as a rule. I am looking for a model now.
-Would you like to sit to me?”
-
-“I don’t know.” June spoke doubtfully. “I don’t think I could.”
-
-“Haven’t you ever sat?”
-
-“No, I haven’t.”
-
-“Time you began. You are just the sort of girl.”
-
-“Why am I?”
-
-“For one thing you have personality.”
-
-This was a surprising and rather thrilling corroboration of Mr.
-Boultby. At the back of her mind the old druggist had always figured
-as “a bit of a gasbag” with a ready flow of conversation and a gift of
-easy compliment. But it would seem that this estimate did him less than
-justice. Mr. Boultby was better informed than she had thought. And at
-this moment a phrase he had used came back to her with a force that was
-a little startling. “A girl as good-looking as you can always get a
-living,” Mr. Boultby had once said.
-
-“I suppose you mean my hair?” said June naïvely.
-
-He showed two rows of very white and level teeth in a smile which
-piqued her curiosity.
-
-“Partly your hair, and partly your figure,” he said, taking a second
-tiny sip of ginger beer. “Why not come and try? I have a studio in
-Haliburton Street, just out of Manning Square.”
-
-June shook a doubtful head. She then gave a glance sideways at
-the imbiber of the ginger beer. Her knowledge of the world was
-slender, but she was not a fool, and there was something about this
-“forthcomingness” which even exceeded that of Mr. Boultby himself, that
-warned her to be careful.
-
-“You’d be well paid, of course.”
-
-“How much?” June had no false modesty when it came to a question of
-money. This was an aspect of the matter that had not struck her until
-then.
-
-“I’d pay you five shillings an hour,” he said lightly. “And ten for the
-altogether.”
-
-June’s heart gave a leap. To a girl in her position it was a
-princely reward. Such an offer seemed most tempting. But a moment’s
-consideration of the issues it raised brought on a sudden fit of
-shyness.
-
-“I don’t think I could,” she said.
-
-“Why not?” The eyes of the man were now fixed intently upon her face.
-
-“Oh, I don’t----”
-
-“Not enough, eh?”
-
-She felt his eyes so forcibly upon her that she coloured hotly.
-
-“It isn’t that.”
-
-“What’s your reason then?”
-
-“I’ve not been used to that sort of thing.”
-
-He smiled broadly.
-
-“It’s only a matter of keeping still. Of course, I shall not press you
-to sit for ‘the altogether’ if you had rather not.”
-
-“The altogether” was Greek to June.
-
-However, she did not confess her ignorance, but was content to make a
-mental note to ask William what it meant. And at the moment she did so
-the thought of William brought the Van Roon to her mind.
-
-“I suppose you know a lot about pictures?” An idea was forming already
-in that practical head.
-
-“Perhaps I know as much about them as some people,” said the man,
-beginning to roll a cigarette. June could not help feeling that his
-answer was in piquant contrast to what William’s would have been had
-such a question been put to him. It had a self-complacency which even
-if it implied deep knowledge was also open to criticism.
-
-“What do you think a Van Roon would be worth?”
-
-“A Van Roon!” he said, offhandedly. “Well, you know, that might depend
-on many things.”
-
-“They are very valuable, I suppose,” said June, trying to look innocent.
-
-“Very valuable indeed, at the present time. Privately, I think they
-are overrated. The Flemish School is being run to death, but of course,
-that’s only my opinion.”
-
-“Would it be worth a hundred pounds?”
-
-“What! A Van Roon!” The man laughed. “My good girl, you might multiply
-a hundred pounds by a hundred, and then think you had got ‘some’
-bargain if you found yourself the owner of a Van Roon.”
-
-“This mightn’t be a good one.” June spoke cautiously. She saw at once
-that it would be wise “to go slow.”
-
-“All Van Roons are good, you know. But some, of course, are a bit
-better than others.”
-
-“I’ve been told it is one of the best,” said June, after a moment’s
-deliberation.
-
-“Which are you talking about? The one in the National Gallery, I
-suppose. That’s the only Van Roon in this country. The Americans have
-robbed us of three within the last ten years.”
-
-“Yes, I’ve heard so,” said June, with a wise air.
-
-“In my humble opinion, it can’t be compared with the chap in the
-Louvre, and they say that its stable companion, which was cut out of
-its frame back in the Nineties, and has never been found, is even
-finer.”
-
-“Still you think it’s very valuable?”
-
-“The one in the National Gallery? Sure! It wouldn’t be there, you
-know, if it wasn’t. The Flemish School is booming these days, and Van
-Roon is the pick of the bunch, and the least prolific. Tell me,” the
-man’s small and rather furtive eyes began to twinkle, “why are you so
-interested in Van Roons? Is it, by any chance, that you’ve got one for
-sale?” And he laughed very softly and gently at what he evidently
-considered a rich joke.
-
-June looked at him gravely.
-
-“It so happens that I have!” she said with a caution which seemed to
-give the value of drama to a simple announcement.
-
-
-
-
-XXI
-
-
-ADOLPH KELLER was the man’s name. And as June was to learn
-later, he had never felt more amused in his life. It was really a jest
-that he should follow a countrified-looking girl into a teashop, get
-into conversation with her, and then be quietly told that she had a
-Van Roon to sell. There was something rather pathetic in a girl of her
-class making such a statement. All she could mean was that somehow she
-had got hold of a more or less “dud” copy of “Sun and Cloud,” that much
-lithographed work in the National Gallery which in consequence was now
-familiar to the big public.
-
-“So you’ve got a Van Roon for sale, have you?” said Adolph Keller, who
-was hardly able to keep from laughing outright. “Good for you! What’s
-the size of it?”
-
-“Sixteen inches by twelve,” said June, with the patness of one who
-prided herself, and with reason, upon a most excellent memory.
-
-“Without the frame?”
-
-June nodded.
-
-“Yes, that’s about the size,” said Keller. “It’s called ‘Sun and
-Cloud,’ I suppose?”
-
-“It’s not called anything at present,” said June, “as far as I know,
-although sun and cloud are in it.”
-
-“Bound to be--if it’s a Van Roon.”
-
-“And there are trees as well.”
-
-“Trees, are there? A copy of the one in the National Gallery, I expect.
-Is there a windmill in the left hand corner?”
-
-There was no windmill in the left hand corner, June declared with
-confidence. She remembered that at first William had thought there was,
-but had changed his opinion later.
-
-“Then that washes out the National Gallery. I dare say it’s a copy of
-‘L’Automne’ in the Louvre. By the way, how did you come by it?”
-
-“It was given to me by a gentleman, a friend of mine,” said June, after
-a moment for reflection.
-
-“A very good friend, too.” The tone of the laugh had a little too much
-banter to be pleasant. “Isn’t everybody, you know, who gives a Van Roon
-to his best girl? A bit of a plutocrat evidently.”
-
-June didn’t know what a plutocrat was, but she was too proud to say so.
-She made a mental note to look up the word in the dictionary.
-
-“How did your rich friend come by it? Do you happen to know?”
-
-“He isn’t rich,” said June, with a wish for perfect honesty. “He found
-it in a shop.”
-
-“Where was the shop?”
-
-“It was at a place called Crowdham Market.”
-
-“Down in Suffolk. Sounds a funny place to find a Van Roon.”
-
-“It was ever so dirty when it was found. And another picture seemed to
-have been painted on the top of it.”
-
-“Queer.” The eyes of Adolph Keller narrowed in their intentness. “Who
-told you it was a Van Roon?”
-
-“The man who gave it to me.”
-
-“Who told him?”
-
-“He found the signature.” June’s quiet precision owed something to the
-fact that she was now fully and rather deliciously aware of the effect
-she was making.
-
-“What!... The signature of Mynheer Van Roon?”
-
-“Yes,” said June.
-
-The incredulity of Keller had yielded now to a powerful curiosity. He
-looked at June with a keenness he tried hard to veil. This was a very
-unlikely story, yet he knew enough of life to appreciate the fact that
-mere unlikelihood is no reason why a story should not be true. Besides,
-this girl had such an ingenuous air that it was impossible to believe
-her tale was a deliberate invention. At the same time, it had elements
-which were particularly hard to swallow.
-
-“Why was the picture given to you?”
-
-“I asked for it,” said June, whose simple honesty now involved a
-tell-tale blush.
-
-Mr. Keller looked her steadily in the eye, and then he laughed, but not
-unsympathetically.
-
-“Your best boy, I suppose, and he could deny you nothing.”
-
-“That’s it,” said June awkwardly. This audacious irony was new to her,
-and she did not know how to meet it.
-
-“By the way, what is this young chap of yours? An artist?”
-
-“Yes,” said June. “I suppose he is--in a way. He studies art and
-renovates pictures, and he knows a lot about them.”
-
-“Not so much as he thinks,” said Adolph Keller, “else he would not
-be such a fool as to give away a Van Roon, even to a girl as nice and
-pretty as you are.”
-
-He had lowered his voice to a whisper of rare sweetness and carrying
-power. There was something about him that was powerfully attractive;
-at the same time, a look had crept into a pair of rather furtive eyes
-which was oddly repellent.
-
-“Do you say you really have this picture in your possession?”
-His intentness when he put this question made June feel a little
-uncomfortable.
-
-“Yes, it has been given to me.”
-
-“Could you let me see it?”
-
-June hesitated.
-
-“I think I could,” she said, after a pause.
-
-“Well, suppose you bring it round to my studio for me to look at?”
-
-Again June hesitated.
-
-“As you like, of course,” said Keller, carelessly. “I was only thinking
-it might be worth your while, that’s all. You see, I happen to know one
-or two dealers and people, and I might be able to find out for you just
-what it’s worth.”
-
-June saw the force of this. She was in desperate straits, and this man
-had the appearance of a friend in need.
-
-“Perhaps I will,” she said.
-
-“Very well,” said the man. “When will you come?”
-
-For a moment June thought hard. “I couldn’t come before Thursday.”
-
-“The day after to-morrow--that’ll suit me. What time?”
-
-June continued to think hard. “It would have to be between three and
-four.” She spoke with slow reluctance. “That’s the only time I can
-really get away.”
-
-“All right,” said the man, briskly. “You’ll find me at the Haliburton
-Street Studios up till five o’clock on Thursday. Number Four. Give a
-good ring; the bell is a bit out of gear. My name is Keller. Can you
-remember it, or shall I write it down for you, with the address?”
-
-“Write them down for me, please.”
-
-The man tore a leaf from a pocket book, and wrote his name and address
-with a fountain pen: Adolph Keller, 4 Haliburton Street Studios,
-Manning Square, Soho. When he had done this, and given it to her,
-he tore out another leaf and asked her to write down hers. This she
-accordingly did, and then the sudden thought of William’s tea caused
-her to rise abruptly.
-
-Mr. Keller wished to pay her bill, which was five-pence, but she
-declined to let him.
-
-“Au revoir! Thursday afternoon. Manning Square is only about three
-minutes from here. Don’t forget,” were the words with which he took
-leave of her. “Bring it along. I dare say I’ll be able to tell you
-whether it is genuine, and perhaps give you an idea of its value.”
-
-He laughed slightly, and then offered his hand in a very friendly
-manner. She took it with a reluctance she was rather ashamed of
-showing. He was so kind, so agreeable, so anxious to be of use that
-there seemed no warrant for the subtle complexity of feeling he had
-aroused in her.
-
-
-
-
-XXII
-
-
-JUNE’S way home to New Cross Street was beset with anxieties.
-Much would depend on what she did now. She felt that her whole life
-was about to turn on the decision she had to take in a very difficult
-matter.
-
-There was no one to guide her, not a soul on whose advice she might
-lean. But before she had returned to the threshold of S. Gedge Antiques
-she had made a resolve to get immediate possession of the picture, and
-to let this Mr. Keller have a look at it. She did not altogether like
-him, it was true. But the feeling was irrational; she must be sensible
-enough not to let it set her against him without due cause. For he was
-a friend whom Providence had unmistakably thrown in her way, and there
-was no other to whom she might turn.
-
-William was a broken reed. With all his perception and talent, he
-was likely to prove hopeless now that Uncle Si was setting his wits
-to work to obtain the picture for himself. William’s devotion to his
-master’s interest would be simply fatal to her scheme. For the sake of
-them both, June felt she must take a full advantage of the heaven-sent
-opportunity provided by this Mr. Keller.
-
-Other decisions, too, would have to be made. As soon as Uncle Si knew
-the picture was hers, he would almost certainly carry out his threat
-of putting her in the street; at least she was no judge of character
-if the event proved otherwise. A means of livelihood must be sought
-at once. That afternoon’s experience of Oxford Street had opened up
-new vistas, which, however, might lead nowhere. But even if she could
-not get employment in a shop Mr. Keller’s offer of work as an artist’s
-model at five shillings an hour must not be lightly put aside.
-
-The first thing to be done, however, was to clinch William’s gift of
-the picture once and for all. She made up her mind that it should be
-fully consummated before the return of Uncle Si from Newbury.
-
-As soon as William had been given his tea she broached the subject. But
-when she asked for possession, there and then, his crest fell.
-
-“I was still hoping, Miss June,” the simpleton owned, “that you’d let
-the dear old master have this lovely thing. It has come to mean so much
-to him, you see. I will get another one for you.”
-
-“Not another Van Roon,” said June, sharply.
-
-“No, I’m afraid I couldn’t promise a Van Roon.” A cloud passed over
-William’s face. “But I might be able to pick up something quite good,
-which perhaps you would come to like as much.”
-
-June shook a disconsolate head.
-
-“I don’t think,” she said, in a slow voice, as she fixed her eyes on
-the wall in front of her, “there is another picture in the world I
-should value so much as that one. I simply love that picture.”
-
-William was troubled.
-
-“The old master loves it, too.”
-
-“But you gave it me, you know.” June was painfully conscious of a swift
-deepening of colour.
-
-The plain fact was not denied.
-
-“You mustn’t think me very hard and grasping if I hold you to the
-bargain.”
-
-“No, Miss June. If you insist, of course the picture is yours.”
-
-“To do with just as I like.”
-
-“Why yes, certainly.”
-
-June proceeded to take the bull by the horns. “Very well,” she said.
-“After supper, I shall ask you to hand it over to me, and I will put it
-in a place of safety.”
-
-William sighed heavily. He seemed almost upon the verge of tears. June
-simply loathed the part she was playing. The only consolation was that
-she was acting quite as much in his interest as in her own.
-
-Uncle Si came in shortly before eight. He sat down to supper in quite a
-good humour. For once the old man was in high conversational feather.
-
-It was clear that his mind was still full of the picture. Without
-subscribing for one moment to William’s preposterous theory that the
-thing was a genuine Van Roon, he had had a further talk on the matter
-with his friend, Mr. Thornton, with whom he had travelled down to
-Newbury; and, he had arranged with that gentleman to bring his friend,
-Monsieur Duponnet, the famous Paris expert who was now in London,
-to come and look at it on Thursday afternoon. Monsieur Duponnet who
-knew more about Van Roon than anybody living, and had had several
-pass through his hands in the last ten years, would be able to say
-positively whether William was wrong, and S. Gedge Antiques was right,
-or with a devout gesture for which June longed to pull his ugly nose,
-vice versâ.
-
-The time had now come for June to show her hand. Very quietly indeed
-her bolt was launched. William had given the picture to her.
-
-The old man simply stared at her.
-
-It was clear, however, that his thoughts were running so hard upon M.
-Duponnet and the higher potentialities that just at first he was not
-able to grasp the significance of June’s bald statement.
-
-So that there should be no doubt about the position June modestly
-repeated it.
-
-“Given it to you!” said the old man, a light beginning to break. “How
-do you mean--given it to you?”
-
-Calmly, patiently June threw a little more light on the subject. And
-while she did so her eyes were fixed with veiled defiance upon the face
-of Uncle Si. The thought uppermost in her mind was that he took it far
-better than could have been expected. “Given it to you,” he kept on
-saying to himself softly. There was no explosion. “Given it to you,” he
-kept on. He grew a little green about the gills and that was all.
-
-At last he turned to William: “Boy, what’s this? Is the girl daft?” The
-mildness of tone was astonishing.
-
-William explained as well as he could. It was a lame and halting
-performance, and at that moment June was not proud of him. But she
-was even less proud of herself. The part she was playing, gloss it
-over as one might, was ignoble. And William’s embarrassment was rather
-painful to witness. He stammered a good deal, he grew red and nervous;
-and all the while the voice of his kind and good master became more
-deeply reproachful, and melted finally in a note of real pathos.
-“How could you do such a thing?” he said. “Why you know as well as I
-do, my boy, that I would have given you anything in reason for that
-picture--anything in reason.” And there he sat at his supper, the very
-image of outraged benevolence and enthusiasm, a Christian with a halo!
-
-“Old Serpent” said the fierce eyes that June fixed upon his face. For a
-moment it looked as if the old wretch was going to shed tears. But no,
-he was content with a mild snuffle and that was all.
-
-
-
-
-XXIII
-
-
-BY bedtime, when June went to her attic, she had fully made
-up her mind that there must be no half measures now. She feared Uncle
-Si more than ever. There was something in that snuffle at the supper
-table, in that whine of outraged feeling, in that down-gazing eye which
-was far more formidable than any mere outburst of violence. Here was
-such a depth of hypocrisy that she had got to look out.
-
-A light was showing under the studio door. June’s knock met with a
-prompt invitation to enter. William was affectionately lingering over a
-few final touches, which should prove beyond a doubt the authenticity
-of this masterpiece.
-
-“Have you got it really clean at last?” said June, trying to speak
-lightly, yet not succeeding. Emotional strain could not be so easily
-concealed; and--uncomfortable thought--her acting was not so finished
-as that of Uncle Si.
-
-“Yes,” said William, with a little thrill of rapture. “And how
-wonderful it is!”
-
-June agreed. “Yes, wonderful!” Also with a little thrill of rapture,
-yet loathing herself because her tone was so vibrant--Uncle Si was not
-to have a walk over after all! “And now if you don’t mind I’ll put it
-in a place of safety.”
-
-He flashed one swift glance at her. “But, Miss June, isn’t it quite
-safe here?”
-
-“I should just think it wasn’t!” leapt to the tip of her tongue. But
-Uncle Si’s masterly snuffle recalled to her mind the value of meiosis.
-Thus she had recourse to a gentle “I think I’ll sleep better if I take
-care of it myself,” which sounded quite disarming.
-
-With one of his deep sighs which made her feel a perfect beast, William
-handed over the picture. “If you only knew, if you could only guess
-what pleasure this exquisite thing would give the dear old master----”
-
-Overcome by a kind of nausea, June fled headlong to the room next door.
-She groped for her candle, found and lit it; and then she proceeded to
-bury the treasure at the bottom of her trunk. Heaping and pressing down
-as many things upon the picture as the trunk would hold, she locked it
-carefully, and put the key in her purse. Then she undressed, knelt and
-said her prayers; she then blew out the candle and crept into bed with
-a stifling sense of disgust, tempered by grim satisfaction.
-
-
-
-
-XXIV
-
-
-NEXT morning at the breakfast table, June looked for developments.
-To her surprise, however, things went their accustomed way, except
-that if anything Uncle Si was a little more amiable than usual.
-He made no reference to the Van Roon; but it was referred to in
-his manner, inasmuch that he bore bacon and coffee to his lips with
-the air of a known good man deeply wounded in his private feelings.
-Not a feather of this by-play was lost upon his niece; and no doubt
-what was of more importance, it was not lost upon William. But its
-impact was very different in the two cases. While June simply longed
-to hit the Old Crocodile upon his long and wicked nose, William seemed
-hard set to refrain from tears.
-
-About midday, however, while June was in the back kitchen preparing a
-meal, Uncle Si came to her.
-
-“Niece,” he said, in the new voice, whose softness June found so
-formidable, “you remember the other day I told you to look for a job?”
-
-June nodded.
-
-“Have you got one?”
-
-“No, I haven’t.”
-
-“Well, Mrs. R. is coming back on Monday, so the sooner you get fixed
-up the better. Your best plan, I think, is to go this afternoon and
-have your name put down at a registry office as a cook-general.
-Cook-generals earn good money, and they live all found. Your cooking
-won’t be the Carlton or the Ritz, of course”--a gleam of frosty humour
-played upon that subtle face--“but you seem strong and willing, and you
-know how to boil a potato, and no doubt you’ll improve with experience.”
-
-June was inclined to curtsey. The old wretch plainly felt that he was
-giving her a handsome testimonial. But at the back of her mind was
-anger and contempt, and it was as much as she could do to prevent their
-peeping out.
-
-After dinner, as soon as the table was clear, and the pots washed, she
-proceeded to take Uncle Si at his word. She decided to go out at once
-and look for a place which, however, except as a last resort, should
-not be domestic service. To begin with, she would try the shops, or
-perhaps the dressmakers, as her mother always said she was handy with
-her needle; or, failing these, she might consider the exciting proposal
-of becoming an artist’s model.
-
-Fixing her hat before the crazy looking glass the thought of Mr. Keller
-recurred to her mind. Had the day only been Thursday she could have
-taken the picture to him there and then, and had his opinion upon
-it. Not that such a course would have been altogether wise. She knew
-nothing about this new and rather mysterious acquaintance, beyond the
-fact that if speech and manner meant anything he was a gentleman.
-Certainly, to talk to he was most agreeable.
-
-Before setting out on her pilgrimage, she had to make up her mind as to
-whether it would not be advisable to take the Van Roon with her, and
-put it in a place of safety. So long as it remained under that roof
-it was in jeopardy. Uncle Si was not to be trusted an inch. The fact,
-however, that she had nowhere to take the treasure decided her finally
-to let it stay where it was until the next day.
-
-Anyway, it was under lock and key. That was something to be thankful
-for; yet as she came downstairs and passed through the shop into New
-Cross Street, drawing on her neat black gloves with a sinking heart,
-instinct told her that she was taking a grave risk in leaving the
-picture behind.
-
-No, S. Gedge Antiques was not to be trusted for a moment. Of that she
-was quite sure. By the time she had gone twenty yards along the street
-this feeling of insecurity took such a hold upon her that she stopped
-abruptly, and faced about. To go back? Or not to go back? Indecision
-was unlike her, but never was it so hard to make up her mind. Could
-it be that Uncle Si was as wicked as she thought? Perhaps she had now
-become the prey of her own guilty conscience. In any case, she knew of
-nowhere just then in which to place the precious thing; and this fact
-it was that turned the scale and finally settled the question.
-
-She went down to the Strand, and took a bus to Oxford Circus. That
-Mecca, alas, did not prove nearly so stimulating as the previous
-afternoon. As soon as she came really to grips with that most daunting
-of all tasks, “the looking for a job,” her hopes and her courage were
-woefully dashed. Real pluck was needed to enter such a palace as David
-Jones Limited, to go up without faltering to some haughty overseer in a
-frock coat and spats and ask if an assistant was wanted.
-
-Three times, in various shops, she screwed herself to the heroic pitch
-of asking that difficult question. Three times she met with a chilling
-response. And the only gleam of hope was on the last occasion.
-
-“There is one vacancy, I believe,” said Olympian Zeus. “But all
-applicants must apply by letter for a personal interview with the
-manager.”
-
-Sooner than renew the attempt just then, June felt she would prefer to
-die. A girl from the provinces, new to London and its ways, without
-credentials or friends, or knowledge of “the ropes” must not expect to
-be taken on, at any rate in Oxford Street.
-
-Much cast down she returned to her teashop of yesterday. Seated at the
-same table, her mind went back to the fascinating acquaintance she had
-made there. Was it possible that a career had been offered her? Or was
-the suggestion of this new friend merely the outcome of a keen interest
-in the picture?
-
-It could not be so entirely, because she clearly remembered that Mr.
-Keller had proposed her sitting to him as a model before she had
-mentioned the picture at all.
-
-She went back to New Cross Street in a state of gloom; her mind was
-dominated by a sense of being “up against it.” And this unhappy feeling
-was not softened by the discovery she made as soon as she entered that
-cold and uninviting garret. In her absence the lock of her trunk had
-been forced and the picture taken away.
-
-The tragedy was exactly what she had foreseen. But faced by the bitter
-fact she was swept by a tempest of rage. It could only be the work of
-one person. Her fear and dislike of Uncle Si rose to hatred now.
-
-In a surge of anger she went downstairs and in the presence of William
-charged Uncle Si.
-
-“You’ve been at my box,” she stormed.
-
-He looked at her with a kind of calm pensiveness over the top of his
-spectacles.
-
-“If you lock away things, my girl, that don’t belong to you, I’m afraid
-you’ll have to stand the racket.” So lofty, so severe was the old man’s
-tone that for the moment June was staggered.
-
-“It’s stealing,” she cried, returning hectic to the attack.
-
-Uncle Si waggled a magisterial finger in her face. “Niece,” he said,
-with a quietude which put her at a disadvantage, “I must ask you not to
-make an exhibition of yourself. Have the goodness to hold your tongue.”
-
-June maintained the charge. “The picture’s mine. William gave it me.
-You’ve broken open my box and stolen it.”
-
-S. Gedge Antiques, after a mild side glance in the direction of
-William, proceeded to fix a glacial eye upon his niece. “What I have
-to say is this.” His tone was more magisterial than ever. “At present,
-my girl, you are under age, and as long as you live with me the law
-regards me as your guardian. And, as I have told William already, in
-my opinion you are not a fit and proper person to have the care of a
-thing so valuable as this picture may prove to be. Mind you,”--the
-old fox gave William a meaningful look--“I don’t go so far as to say
-that it _is_ valuable, but I say that it _might_ be. And, in
-that case, I can’t allow a mere ignorant girl from the country who, in
-a manner of speaking, doesn’t know the letter A from a pig’s foot to
-accept it from you, my boy. It’s very generous of you, and I hope she’s
-thanked you properly, but if I allow her to take it, some unscrupulous
-dealer is sure to bamboozle her out of it. That’s assuming it’s
-valuable, which, of course, I don’t go so far as to say that it is.”
-
-“Thief!” stormed June. “Wicked thief!”
-
-However, she knew well enough that it was a real pity to let her
-feelings get the better of her; it enabled the Old Crocodile to
-shine so much by comparison. He addressed himself to William in his
-most sanctimonious manner. For the good of all concerned, such a
-bee-yew-ti-ful thing--it sickened June to see the old humbug lift his
-eyes to heaven--must be cared for by him personally. An uneducated
-mawkin could not hope to appreciate a work of art of that quality, and
-if anything happened to it, as in such hands something inevitably must,
-William’s master would never be able to forgive himself, he wouldn’t
-really!
-
-The old man spoke so gently and so plausibly and hovered at times so
-near to tears, that William would have been less than human not to
-have been moved by his words. Uncle Si had not the least difficulty
-in making clear to his assistant that he was swayed by the highest
-motives. His own private regard for the picture, which, of course,
-William must know was intense, did not enter into the case at all; but
-wisdom and experience declared that until Monsieur Duponnet of Paris
-had seen the picture it must remain in responsible hands.
-
-“But I tell you the picture’s mine, mine, mine!” cried June.
-
-No, the picture was William’s. That outstanding fact was emphasized
-again in his master’s kindly voice. Was he not William’s guardian also
-in the eyes of the law? Not for a moment could he think of allowing
-the young man in a fit of weak generosity to give away a thing that
-might prove to be a real work of art.
-
-June was a little disappointed by William’s attitude in the matter.
-The way in which he submitted to Uncle Si did him no credit. Surely
-the picture was his to do with as he chose; yet to judge by Uncle Si’s
-handling of the affair the young man had no right to dispose of it.
-June deplored this lack of spirit. He should have fought for his own.
-At the same time, her mind was tormented by the unpleasant thought that
-he really wanted to revoke his gift.
-
-The more she considered the position, the less she liked it. She could
-not rid herself of a feeling that she was playing an unworthy part.
-It was all very well to regard her actions as strictly in William’s
-interest. But were they? She was haunted by a sense of having descended
-perilously near to the level of Uncle Si himself.
-
-Anyhow, she had tried her best to outwit S. Gedge Antiques. And he
-had outwitted her. There was no disguising it. Both were playing the
-same game, the same crooked game, and it seemed that Uncle Si, as was
-only to be expected, was able to play it much better than could she.
-The artful old fox had bested her with her own weapons. Were they not
-equally unscrupulous? Was not William the toy of both?
-
-
-
-
-XXV
-
-
-IN the course of the next morning, June was informed by Uncle
-Si, with his most sanctimonious air that “he could not pass over her
-impudence, and that she had better pack her box and go.” Moreover, that
-force might be lent to this ukase, he sternly summoned William from the
-lumber room, and ordered the young man to help her down with her box as
-soon as it was ready; and then he must fetch her a cab.
-
-This was more than June had bargained for. She was expecting to be
-kicked out; but she had not looked for the process to be quite so
-summary. It did not suit her plans at all.
-
-“Get a room for yourself in a decent neighbourhood,” said the old man.
-“Mrs. Runciman will know of one, no doubt. You’ve money enough to keep
-you while you look for work.”
-
-June’s swift mind, however, saw instant disadvantages. Secretly, she
-cherished the hope, a slender one, no doubt, of being able to discover
-where the picture was hid. Once, however, she left the house that
-hope would vanish. And it was painfully clear that it was Uncle Si’s
-recognition of this fact which now made him so determined to be quit of
-her.
-
-The old serpent was fully alive to what lay at the back of her mind. He
-knew that so long as she slept under his roof the picture could never
-be safe.
-
-She was shrewd enough to size up the position at once. Reading the
-purpose in the heart of Uncle Si she told him plainly that much as she
-disliked her present address she did not propose to change it until her
-lawful property had been restored to her.
-
-“You are going to leave this place within an hour, my girl, for good
-and all.”
-
-“I shall not,” said June flatly. “Until you give me the picture, I
-don’t intend to stir.”
-
-“The picture is not yours. You are not a fit person to have it. And if
-you don’t go quietly your box will be put into the street.”
-
-“Dare to touch my box again, and I shall go straight to the police.”
-
-Uncle Si didn’t care a straw for the police. She had not the slightest
-claim upon him; in fact she was living on his charity. As for the
-picture, it had nothing whatever to do with the matter.
-
-At this point it was that William came out in his true colours. He
-had been standing by, unwilling witness of these passages. Anxiously
-concerned, he could no longer keep silent.
-
-“Beg your pardon, sir,” he said, stammering painfully, and flushing
-deeply, “but if Miss June leaves the house, I’m afraid I’ll have to go
-as well.”
-
-This was a thunderbolt. S. Gedge Antiques opened his mouth in wide
-astonishment. He gasped like a carp. The atmospheric displacement was
-terrific. Slowly the old man took off his “selling” spectacles, and
-replaced them with his “buying” ones. Certainly the effect was to make
-him look a shade less truculent, but at the moment there was no other
-result. “Boy, don’t talk like a fool,” was all he could say.
-
-William, however, was not to be moved. He never found it easy to make
-up his mind; for him to reach a decision in things that mattered was a
-slow and trying process. But the task achieved it was for good or ill.
-His stammers and blushes were a little ludicrous, he seemed near to
-tears, but the open hostility of his master could not turn him an inch.
-
-“Never in my born days did I hear the like.” S. Gedge Antiques seethed
-like a vipers’ nest. “Boy, you ought to be bled for the simples to let
-a paltry hussy get round you in this way.”
-
-“Give me the picture, Uncle Si,” cried the paltry hussy, with a force
-that made him blink, “and I’ll take precious good care you don’t see me
-again.”
-
-The old man whinnied with rage. But he had not the least intention of
-giving up the picture; nor had he the least intention of giving up
-that which was almost as valuable, the services of his right-hand man.
-William was irreplaceable. And the instant his master realised that
-this odd fellow was very much in earnest, he saw that there was only
-one line to take. He must temporize. With all the tact he could muster,
-and on occasion the old man could muster a good deal, the Old Crocodile
-proceeded to do so.
-
-The “firing” of his niece should stand in abeyance for the time being.
-He gave solemn warning, however, that she must get a job right away,
-as his mind was quite made up that he was not going to find house room
-for the likes of her an hour longer than he could help. As for the boy,
-of whom he had always held such a high opinion ever since the day he
-had first picked him out of the gutter and upon whom he had lavished a
-father’s kindness, he was really quite at a loss--with a snuffle of
-heart-melting pathos--to know how to put his deeply wounded feelings
-into words.
-
-For June, all the same, the upshot was victory. The inevitable packing
-of her box could be postponed to her own good time. But well she knew
-that the reprieve was due to William and to him alone. It was his
-splendidly timed intervention that had enabled her to win the day.
-
-The previous evening harsh thoughts of the Sawney had crept into her
-heart. After giving her the picture, surely it was his duty to take
-a stronger line upon the rape of it. But that phase of weakness was
-forgotten now. He had come out nobly. At a most critical moment he had
-fought her battle; and he had fought it with magical effect.
-
-All was forgiven. He was O. K.
-
-
-
-
-XXVI
-
-
-JUNE was dominated now by a single thought. By hook or by
-crook she must get back the picture before she left that house. If she
-failed to do so, she would never see it again, and there would be an
-end of all her hopes. Exactly what these hopes were she did not venture
-to ask herself; in any case, they would not have been easy to put into
-words. But she felt in a vague way that William’s future and her own
-were bound up in them.
-
-It was clear that the picture was concealed somewhere upon the
-premises, because Mr. Thornton and his friend, M. Duponnet, were coming
-there the next day to look at it. June was quick to realize that this
-fact offered a measure of opportunity which, slender as it was, must
-certainly be used. No other was in the least likely to come her way.
-
-Three o’clock on Thursday afternoon she had learned already was the
-hour of the appointment. It was now the afternoon of Wednesday. No
-matter what the penalty, if flesh and blood could contrive it, she must
-be present at this interview, and see what happened to the treasure.
-
-Despair heavy upon her, she lay awake the best part of the night
-searching her mind for a plan of action. But the quest seemed hopeless.
-Uncle Si could so easily thwart any scheme she might evolve. And he
-would not have a scruple. She must outwit him somehow, but to outwit
-one of such cunning was a task for a brain far stronger and nimbler
-than hers.
-
-Lying up there in her comfortless bed, wild thoughts flocking round
-her pillow like so many evil spirits, the whole sorry affair was as
-haunting as a bad dream. And, interwoven with it, in the most fantastic
-way, was the shop below, and more particularly the Hoodoo, the
-presiding genius, which now stood forth in June’s mind as the replica
-of Uncle Si himself. He was surely possessed by a devil, and this
-heathen joss as surely embodied it.
-
-On Thursday morning June rose early. She was in a mood of desperation.
-Little sleep had come to her in the long and dreary night hours. But,
-in spite of feeling quite worn out, her determination to “best” Uncle
-Si and regain her own property had not grown less. No ray was to be
-seen anywhere, yet defiant of fate as she still was, the time had not
-yet come to admit even to herself that all was lost.
-
-As dustpan and brush in hand she began the day’s work, more than one
-reckless expedient crossed her mind. In the last resort she might put
-the matter in the hands of the police. If she could have counted on
-William’s support, she would have been tempted to do this, but the
-rub was, he could not be depended on at all. Nobly as he had fought
-her recent battle, it was clear that so far as the picture itself was
-concerned, his sympathies were wholly with Uncle Si. Even if he did not
-deny that the picture was her lawful property he had certainly done his
-best to revoke his gift.
-
-No, she would gain nothing by calling in the police. She must find some
-other way. During the night a wild plan had entered her mind. And if in
-the course of the morning no scheme more hopeful occurred to her, she
-was now resolved to act upon it.
-
-To this end, she began at once to throw dust in the eyes of Uncle
-Si. At the breakfast table he was told that she meant to spend the
-afternoon looking for a job if, with a modest eye on her plate, “he had
-no objection.”
-
-The Old Crocodile had not the least objection. With gusto he assured
-her that it was quite the best thing she could do. Privately he assured
-himself that he didn’t want her hanging around the place while he was
-transacting business of great importance with Mr. Thornton and Monsieur
-Duponnet. Ever in the forefront of his mind was the fact that these
-gentlemen were coming to see him at three o’clock.
-
-About an hour before the time appointed the old fox sent William on an
-errand which would keep him away most of the afternoon. And further
-to ensure that the coast should be quite clear, S. Gedge Antiques
-said sharply to his niece, “Go and put on your hat, my girl, and make
-yourself scarce. Get after that job you spoke about. I won’t have you
-hanging around while these gentlemen are here.”
-
-June, however, had other views. And these, whatever they were, she was
-at great pains not to disclose. First she watched William go innocently
-forth on a long bus ride to Richmond. Next she made sure that Uncle Si
-was composing himself in his armchair for his usual “forty winks” after
-dinner. And then she proceeded boldly to develop her audacious design.
-
-To start with, she crept into the front shop and surveyed the Hoodoo.
-The quaintly hideous vase was fully six feet tall, its body huge, its
-mouth wide. Was it possible to get inside? There was little doubt that
-if she was able to do so, this curious monster was quite large enough
-to conceal her.
-
-She saw at once that the task before her was no light one. But by the
-side of the Hoodoo, inscrutable Providence had placed a genuine antique
-in the shape of a gate-legged table, £4.19.6--a great bargain. The
-sight of this was encouraging. She climbed onto it. And then wedging
-the Hoodoo most cunningly between the table and the wall, and artfully
-disposing her own weight, so that the monster might not tip over, she
-lowered herself with the caution and agility of a cat into the roomy
-interior.
-
-It was almost a feat for an acrobat, but she managed it somehow.
-Keeping tight hold of the rim as she swung both legs over, her feet
-touched bottom with the vase still maintaining the perpendicular. The
-space inside was ample, and without even the need to bend, the top of
-her head was invisible. Near the top of the vase, moreover, was the
-monster’s open mouth, a narrow slit studded with teeth, which not only
-afforded a means of ventilation, but also through which, to June’s
-devout joy, she was able to peer.
-
-For such a crowning boon on the part of Providence she had every reason
-to feel grateful. So far everything was miraculously right. Her daring
-had met with more success than could have been hoped for. One problem
-remained, however, which at that moment she did not venture to look in
-the face. To get into the vase was one thing; to get out of it would be
-quite another.
-
-No friendly table could avail her now. In ascending that sheer and
-slippery face of painted metal-work, she must not expect help from
-outside when the time came to escape from her prison. Besides one
-incautious movement might cause the whole thing to topple. And if
-topple it did, the results would be dire.
-
-This, however, was not the time to consider that aspect of the case.
-Let her be thankful for a concealment so perfect which allowed her to
-breathe and to see without being seen or her presence suspected. For
-such material benefits she must lift up her heart; and hope for the
-best when the time came to get out. With a sense of grim satisfaction
-she set herself “to lie doggo,” and await the next turn in a game that
-was full of peril.
-
-It was not long before Uncle Si shambled into the shop. June could
-see him quite clearly, as he came in with that furtive air which she
-had learned to know so well. First he took off his spectacles and
-applied to them vigorously a red bandanna handkerchief. Then he peered
-cautiously round to make sure that he was alone.
-
-June had not dared to hope that the picture was concealed in the
-shop; and yet it offered every facility. There were many nooks and
-crannies, and the whole place was crammed with old pieces of furniture,
-bric-à-brac, curios. But June had felt that S. Gedge Antiques was not
-likely to run the risk of hiding his treasure in the midst of these.
-She thought that his bedroom, under lock and key, was the most likely
-place of all.
-
-Howbeit, with a sharp thrill, half torment, half delight, she saw that
-this was not the case. Within a few feet of the Hoodoo itself was an
-old oak chest which Uncle Si cautiously drew aside. The very spot
-whereon it had rested contained a loose board. He took a small chisel
-from a drawer in the counter, prised up the board and from beneath it
-took forth the buried treasure.
-
-Long and lovingly the old man looked at it, hugging it to his breast
-more than once in the process, and as he did so June was reminded
-irresistibly of the Miser Gaspard in “Les Cloches des Corneville,” that
-famous play she had once seen at the Theatre Royal, Blackhampton. To
-hide such a thing in such a place was a regular miser’s trick. It was
-just what she had expected of him. Presently a grandfather clock, with
-a Westminster Abbey face, “guaranteed Queen Anne,” chimed the hour of
-three. June could scarcely breathe for excitement. Her heart seemed to
-rise in her throat and choke her.
-
-At five minutes past three came Mr. Thornton and Monsieur Duponnet.
-The Frenchman was a small and dapper personage, with a keen eye and a
-neat imperial. In manner he was much quieter than tradition exacts of
-a Frenchman, but it was easy to tell that Uncle Si was much impressed
-by him. Louis Quinze-legs, too, was full of deference. That gentleman,
-whose face was almost as foxy as that of Uncle Si himself, and about
-whose lips a thin smile flitted perpetually, had an air of tacit homage
-for the smallest remark of M. Duponnet, who was clearly a man of great
-consequence if the bearing of Mr. Thornton was anything to go by.
-
-June, at the back of the shop, inside the Hoodoo and her keen eyes
-hidden by its half-open jaws, which, in addition to other advantages
-was partly masked by a litter of bric-à-brac, was in a position to gain
-full knowledge of all that passed between these three. To begin with,
-S. Gedge Antiques ceremoniously handed the picture to Louis Quinze-legs
-who, with a fine gesture, handed it to Monsieur Duponnet.
-
-The Frenchman examined the canvas back and front through his own
-private glass, scratched portions of it with his nail, pursed his lips,
-rubbed his nose, and no doubt would have shrugged his shoulders had not
-that been such a jejune thing for a Frenchman to do.
-
-With a deference that was quite impressive, Mr. Thornton and S. Gedge
-Antiques waited for M. Duponnet to say something.
-
-“Ze tail of ze R. is a little faint, hein!” was what he said.
-
-“But it is a tail, Mussewer,” said S. Gedge Antiques in a robust voice.
-
-“And it is an R,” said polite Mr. Thornton, as he bent over the picture.
-
-“You can bet your life on that,” said S. Gedge Antiques.
-
-M. Duponnet did not seem inclined to wager anything so valuable as
-his life. After a little hesitation, which involved further minute
-examination through his glass, he was ready to take the ‘R’ for
-granted. But he went on to deplore the fact that the picture was
-without a pedigree.
-
-“A pedigree, Mussewer!” It was now the turn of S. Gedge Antiques to rub
-his nose.
-
-M. Duponnet succinctly explained, with the air of a man expounding a
-commonplace in the world of art, that Van Roons were so few, their
-qualities so rare, their monetary value so considerable, that as soon
-as one came into the market its history was eagerly scrutinised. And
-should one suddenly appear that previously had not been known to exist
-it would have to run the gauntlet of the most expert criticism.
-
-“May be, Mussewer!” S. Gedge Antiques wagged a dour head. “But that’s
-not going to alter the fact that this be-yew-ti-ful thing is a genuine
-Van Roon.”
-
-In a manner of speaking it would not, agreed M. Duponnet, but it might
-detract considerably from its market value.
-
-“That’s as may be.” The old man suddenly assumed quite a high tone.
-
-M. Duponnet and Mr. Thornton took the picture to the other side of the
-shop and conferred together. So low were their voices that neither
-Uncle Si nor June could hear a word of what passed between them.
-Times and again they held the canvas to the light. They laid it on
-a tallboys, and pored over it; they borrowed the microscope of one
-another and made great show of using it; and then finally Mr. Thornton
-crossed the floor and said to Uncle Si, who was handling a piece of
-Waterford glass with the most pensive unconcern: “What’s your price,
-Mr. Gedge?”
-
-“Heh?” said the old man, as if emerging from a beautiful dream. “Price?
-You had better name one.”
-
-Excitement at this point seemed to cause June’s heart to stop beating.
-
-“The trouble is,” said Mr. Thornton, “our friend, M. Duponnet, is not
-quite convinced that it is a Van Roon.”
-
-“But there’s the signature.”
-
-“It seems to have been touched up a bit.”
-
-“Not by me,” said S. Gedge Antiques, austerely.
-
-“We don’t think that for a moment,” said Mr. Thornton, in a voice of
-honey. “But the signature is by no means so clear as it might be, and
-in the absence of a pedigree M. Duponnet does not feel justified in
-paying a big price.”
-
-There was a pause while the old man indulged in a dramatic change of
-spectacles. And then he said rather sourly, in a tone that M. Duponnet
-could not fail to hear: “Pedigree or no pedigree, I shall have no
-difficulty in selling it. You know as well as I do, Mr. Thornton, that
-American buyers are in the market.”
-
-“Quite so, Mr. Gedge,” said Mr. Thornton suavely. And then while Uncle
-Si glared at both gentlemen as if they had been caught with their
-hands in his pocket, they conferred again together. This time it was
-M. Duponnet who ended their discussion by saying: “Meester Gedge, name
-your figure!”
-
-“Figure?” said Uncle Si dreamily; and then in his odd way he scratched
-his scrub of whisker with a thumbnail and rubbed a forefinger down his
-long and foxlike nose.
-
-“Your price, Meester Gedge?”
-
-“Mussewer!” said the old man solemnly, “I couldn’t take less than five
-thousand pounds, I couldn’t really.”
-
-June held her breath. For some little time past she had been convinced
-that the picture was valuable, but she was hardly prepared for this
-fabulous sum.
-
-M. Duponnet shook his head. “Meester Gedge, if only we had its ’istory!”
-
-“If we had its history, Mussewer, I should want at least twice the
-money. Even as it is I am taking a big chance. You know that as well as
-I do.”
-
-This seemed to be true. At all events, M. Duponnet and Mr. Thornton
-again talked earnestly together. Once more they fingered that rather
-dilapidated canvas. Head to head they bent over it yet again; and then
-suddenly M. Duponnet looked up and came abruptly across to the old man.
-
-“Meester Gedge,” he said, “I can’t go beyond four t’ousand pounds. That
-is my limit!”
-
-“Five, Mussewer Duponny, that is mine,” said Uncle Si, with a dark
-smile.
-
-It was a jejune thing for a French gentleman to do, but at this point
-M. Duponnet really and truly gave his shoulders a shrug, and advanced
-three paces towards the shop door. Uncle Si did not stir a muscle. And
-then M. Duponnet faced about and said: “Guineas, Meester Gedge, I’ll
-give four t’ousand guineas, and that’s my last word.”
-
-Uncle Si having no pretensions to be considered a French gentleman, did
-not hesitate to give his own shoulders a shrug. It was his turn then
-to confer with the discreet and knowledgeable Mr. Thornton, who it was
-clear was acting the difficult part of a go-between.
-
-June heard that gentleman say in an audible whisper: “A fair price, Mr.
-Gedge, for the thing as it stands. It hasn’t a pedigree, and to me that
-signature looks a bit doubtful. In the market it may fetch more or it
-may fetch less, but at the same time four thousand guineas is a fine
-insurance.”
-
-Finished dissembler as Uncle Si was, even he did not seek to deny the
-truth of this. There could be no gainsaying that four thousand guineas
-_was_ a fine insurance. True, if the picture proved to be a
-veritable Van Roon it might fetch many times that sum. In that shrewd
-mind, no bigger miracle was needed for the thing to turn out a _chef
-d’œuvre_ than that it should prove to be worth the sum offered by
-M. Duponnet. Either contingency seemed too good to be true. Besides, S.
-Gedge Antiques belonged to a conservative school, among whose articles
-of faith was a certain trite proverb about a bird in the hand.
-
-It went to the old man’s heart to accept four thousand guineas for
-a work that might be worth so very much more. June could hear him
-breathing heavily. In her tense ear that sound dominated even the
-furious beating of her own heart. A kind of dizziness came over her, as
-only too surely she understood that the wicked old man was giving in.
-Before her very eyes he was going to surrender her own private property
-for a fabulous sum.
-
-“Four t’ousand guineas, Meester Gedge,” said M. Duponnet, with quite an
-air of nonchalance. But he knew well enough that the old man was about
-to “fall.”
-
-“It’s giving it away, Mussewer,” whined Uncle Si. “It’s giving it away.”
-
-“Zat I don’t t’ink, Meester Gedge,” said the French gentleman, quietly
-unbuttoning his coat and taking a fountain pen and a cheque book from
-an inner pocket. “It’s a risque--a big risque. It may not be Van Roon
-at all--and zen where are we?”
-
-“You know as well as I do that it’s a Van Roon,” Uncle Si verged almost
-upon tears.
-
-“Very well, Meester Gedge, if you prefer ze big chance.” And cheque
-book in hand the French gentleman paused.
-
-June was torn. And she could tell by the strange whine in the rasping
-voice that the Old Crocodile was also torn.
-
-At this moment of crisis, Mr. Thornton interposed with masterful
-effect. “In my humble opinion,” he said, “it’s a very fair offer for
-the thing as it stands.”
-
-“You are thinking of your ten per cent. commission, my boy,” said S.
-Gedge Antiques with a gleam of malice.
-
-“Well, Meester Gedge,” said M. Duponnet, “take it or leave it.” And the
-French gentleman began to fold up his cheque book.
-
-With a groan to rend a heart of stone, S. Gedge Antiques brought
-himself suddenly to accept the offer. Half suffocated by excitement,
-June watched M. Duponnet cross to the desk and proceed to write out a
-cheque for four thousand guineas. And as she did so her heart sank. She
-was quite sure that she was looking upon the picture for the last time.
-
-In jumping to this conclusion, however, she had not made full allowance
-for the business capacity of Uncle Si. When M. Duponnet had filled in
-the cheque and handed it to him, the Old Crocodile scrutinised it very
-carefully indeed, and then he said: “Thank you, Mussewer Duponny. The
-bank closes at three. But to-morrow morning I’ll take this round myself
-as soon as it opens. And if the manager says it’s all right, you can
-have the picture whenever you like.”
-
-“_Bien!_” The Frenchman bowed politely. “Meanwhile, take good care
-of the picture. There are many thieves about.” M. Duponnet laughed.
-“Mind you lock it up in a safe place.”
-
-“You can trust Mr. Gedge to do that, I think,” said Louis Quinze-legs
-dryly.
-
-“I hope so, I’m sure,” said the old man with a frosty smile.
-
-“_Soit!_” M. Duponnet smiled too. “I’ll call for it myself
-to-morrow morning at twelve.”
-
-“Thank you, Mussewer!”
-
-S. Gedge Antiques gave his visitors a bow as they went up to the shop
-door, and ushered them ceremoniously into the not particularly inviting
-air of New Cross Street.
-
-
-
-
-XXVII
-
-
-JUST at first June was unable to realise that M. Duponnet had
-not taken the picture away with him. The blood seemed to drum against
-her brain while she watched Uncle Si turn over the cheque in his
-long talon fingers and then transfer it to a leather case, which he
-returned to his breast pocket with a deep sigh. Afterwards he took up
-the picture from the table on which he had set it down and then June
-grasped the fact that the treasure was still there.
-
-The face which bent over it now was not that of a happy man. It was
-a complex of emotions, deep and stern. The price was huge for a
-thing that had cost him nothing, but--and there it was that the shoe
-pinched!--if it should prove to be a real Van Roon, he might be parting
-with it for a song.
-
-June could read his thoughts like an open book. He wanted to eat his
-cake and have it too. She would have been inclined to pity him had her
-hatred and her scorn been less. In his cunning and his greed he was a
-tragic figure, with a thing of incomparable beauty in his hand whose
-sole effect was to give him the look of an evil bird of prey. Utter
-rascal as she knew him to be now, she shivered to think how easy it
-would be for herself to grow just like him. Her very soul was fixed
-upon the recovery of this wonderful thing which, in the first place,
-she had obtained by a trick. And did she covet it for its beauty? Or
-was it for the reason which at this moment made Uncle Si a creature so
-ill to look upon? To such questions there could only be one answer.
-
-For the time being, however, these things were merged in the
-speculation far more momentous: What will the Old Crocodile do now?
-She was feeling so uncomfortable in her narrow hiding place, which
-prevented all movement, and almost forbade her to breathe, that she
-hoped devoutly the old wretch would lose no time in putting back the
-treasure.
-
-This, alas, was not to be. The picture was still in the hand of Uncle
-Si, who still pored over it like a moulting vulture, when a luxurious
-motor glided up to the shop door. Almost at once the shop was invaded
-by two persons, who in the sight of June had a look of notable
-importance.
-
-The first of these, whom June immediately recognised, was the tall,
-fashionable girl whose visit had caused her such heart-burning the week
-before. She was now accompanied by a gentleman who beyond a doubt was
-her distinguished father.
-
-“Good morning, Mr. Gedge!” It was twenty past three by the afternoon,
-but June was ready to take a Bible oath that Miss Blue Blood said “good
-morning.” “I’ve persuaded my father to come and look at this amazing
-vase.” And with her _en-tout-cas_ Miss Blue Blood pointed straight
-at the Hoodoo.
-
-Feeling herself to be a rat caught neatly in a trap, June at once
-crouched lower. The Hoodoo being fully six feet tall and her own stoop
-considerable, she was able to take comfort from the fact that just then
-no part of her own head was showing. But how long was she likely to
-remain invisible? That was a question for the gods. And it was further
-complicated by the knowledge that the Hoodoo’s mouth was open, and that
-the point of Miss Blue Blood’s green umbrella might easily find a way
-through.
-
-A-shiver with fear June tried to subdue her wild heart, while Miss
-Babraham, her father, Sir Arthur, and S. Gedge Antiques gathered round
-the Hoodoo. She hardly dared to breathe. The least sound would betray
-her. And in any case, one of the three had merely to stand on an
-adjacent coffin stool and peer over the top for the murder to be out.
-
-The tragedy which June so clearly foresaw was not permitted to take
-place at once. Plainly the fates were inclined to toy with their victim
-for a while. Miss Blue Blood’s laugh--how rich and deep it was!--rang
-in her ears and made them burn as she gave the Hoodoo a prod and cried
-out in her gay Miss-Banks-like manner, “Papa, I ask you, did you ever
-see anything quite like it?”
-
-“By George, no!” laughed that connoisseur.
-
-“It’s such a glorious monster,” said his enthusiastic daughter standing
-on tiptoe, “that one can’t even see over the top.”
-
-“Puts one in mind,” said Sir Arthur, “of the Arabian Nights and the
-Cave of the Forty Robbers.”
-
-“The long gallery at Homefield is the very place for it!”
-
-“I wonder!” The connoisseur tapped the Hoodoo with his walking stick
-and turned to S. Gedge Antiques. “Do you happen to know where it came
-from?” he asked.
-
-“From a Polynesian temple in the South Sea Islands, I believe, sir,”
-said Uncle Si, glibly.
-
-“What do you want for it?” And Sir Arthur tapped the Hoodoo again.
-
-“I’ll take thirty pounds, sir.” It was the voice of a man bringing
-himself to part with a valuable tooth. “Sixty was the sum I paid for it
-some years ago. But it isn’t everybody’s fancy, and it swallows a small
-place.”
-
-Sir Arthur observed with pleasant humour that such a monstrosity ought
-to be taken over by the nation. S. Gedge Antiques, with a humour that
-strove to be equally pleasant, concurred.
-
-At this point, to June’s mortal terror, Miss Babraham made a second
-attempt to look over the top.
-
-“Stand on this coffin stool, Miss,” said S. Gedge Antiques, politely
-producing that article from the collection of bric-à-brac around the
-Hoodoo.
-
-June’s heart stood still. The game was up. Sickly she closed her eyes.
-But Providence had one last card to play.
-
-“Thank you so much,” said Miss Babraham. “But it won’t bear my weight,
-I’m afraid. No, I don’t think I’ll risk it. There’s really nothing to
-see inside.”
-
-Uncle Si agreed that there was really nothing to see inside; and June
-breathed again.
-
-“Thirty pounds isn’t much, papa, for such a glorious monstrosity.” Miss
-Blue Blood had evidently set her heart on it.
-
-Sir Arthur, however, expressed a fear that a thing of that size, that
-hue, that contour would kill every object in the Long Gallery. Great
-argument ensued. And then to June’s relief, Miss Babraham, her father,
-Sir Arthur and S. Gedge Antiques, arguing still, moved away from the
-Hoodoo.
-
-The upshot was that Sir Arthur, overborne at last by the force of
-his daughter’s reasoning, agreed to buy the monster, for what in the
-opinion of the seller, was a ridiculously inadequate sum. It was
-to be carefully packed in a crate, and sent down to Homefield near
-Byfleet, Surrey. So much for the Hoodoo. And then the eye of a famous
-connoisseur lit on the picture that the old dealer had laid on the
-gate-legged table.
-
-“What have we here?” said Sir Arthur, fixing his eyeglass.
-
-Uncle Si became a sphinx. The connoisseur took the picture in his hand,
-and while he examined it with grave curiosity he too became a sphinx.
-So tense grew the silence to June’s ear that again she was troubled by
-the loud beating of her heart.
-
-At last the silence was broken by the light and charming note of Miss
-Babraham. “Why, surely,” she said, “that is the funny old picture I saw
-when I was here the other day.”
-
-“We have cleaned it up a bit since then, madam,” said Uncle Si in
-a voice so toneless that June could only marvel at the perfect
-self-command of this arch dissembler.
-
-Sir Arthur, it was clear, was tremendously interested. He turned the
-picture over and over, and used the microscope very much as M. Duponnet
-had done. Finally he said in a voice nearly as toneless as that of
-Uncle Si himself. “What do you ask for this, Mr. Gedge?”
-
-“Not for sale, sir,” was the decisive answer.
-
-The nod of Sir Arthur implied that it was the answer he expected.
-“Looks to me a fine example.” A true amateur, he could not repress a
-little sigh of pleasure. There was no concealing the fact that he was
-intrigued.
-
-“Van Roon at his best, sir,” said S. Gedge Antiques.
-
-“Ye-es,” said the connoisseur--in the tone of the connoisseur.
-“One would be rather inclined to say so. If the question is not
-impertinent,”--Sir Arthur fixed a steady eye upon the face of deep
-cunning which confronted his--“may I ask where it came from?”
-
-The old man was prepared for the question. His answer was pat. “I can’t
-tell you that, sir,” he said, in a tone of mystery.
-
-Again Sir Arthur nodded. That, too, was the answer he had expected. In
-the pause which followed Sir Arthur returned to a loving re-examination
-of the picture; and then said S. Gedge Antiques in a voice gravely and
-quietly confidential: “Strictly between ourselves, sir, I may say that
-I have just turned down an offer of five thousand guineas.”
-
-“Oh--indeed!”
-
-It was now the turn of the Old Crocodile to gaze into the impassive
-countenance of the famous connoisseur.
-
-
-
-
-XXVIII
-
-
-“FIVE thousand guineas, sir, I have just refused,” said Uncle
-Si, “for this little thing, as sure as God’s in the sky.”
-
-So shocked was June by this adding of blasphemy to his other crimes,
-that she shivered audibly. Miss Babraham cocked up her head at the
-sound. “You’ve a cat somewhere, haven’t you?” she said, looking around
-the shop.
-
-“No, madam,” said Uncle Si shortly. So like a woman to butt in at such
-a moment with such a remark!
-
-“In my humble opinion,” said Sir Arthur, gazing solemnly at the
-picture, “this is a finer example of Van Roon than the one--and the
-only one!--we have in the National Gallery.”
-
-“There, sir, I am with you,” said S. Gedge Antiques with unction.
-
-“One would like to know its history.”
-
-The old man became a sphinx once more. “I can only tell you, sir, I
-didn’t buy it as a Van Roon,” he said cautiously.
-
-“Really!” Sir Arthur grew more intrigued than ever. “Well, Mr. Gedge,
-whatever you bought it as, I think there can be no doubt that you’ve
-made a lucky purchase.”
-
-“I am wondering, sir,” said S. Gedge Antiques, “whether the National
-Gallery would care to acquire this fine example?” It was a sudden
-inspiration, but those measured tones and calculating eyes gave no
-indication of the fact.
-
-Sir Arthur Babraham, in his own capacity of a National Gallery trustee,
-began sensibly to moderate his transports. “More unlikely things, Mr.
-Gedge,” at last he brought himself reluctantly to say. “Van Roons are
-very scarce, and if this one is all that he appears to be at a first
-glance, it will be a pity to let him leave the country.”
-
-Piously, S. Gedge Antiques thought so, too.
-
-Sir Arthur turned to the picture again. Like M. Duponnet he seemed to
-have difficulty in keeping his expert gaze off that fascinating canvas.
-
-“Reminds one,” he said, “of that choice thing that was stolen from
-the Louvre about twenty-five years ago. The size is similar and, as I
-remember it, the whole composition is in some ways identical.”
-
-The old man was startled, but not visibly. “Was there one stolen from
-the Loov, sir?” he said, with a polite air of asking for information.
-
-“Why, yes! Don’t you remember? There was a great stir at the time. It
-was cut out of its frame. The French Government offered a big reward,
-but the work has never been recovered.”
-
-“Indeed, sir.” All at once the Old Crocodile began to gambol a little.
-“Let’s hope this ain’t the boy.” He gave a mild snigger. But as his
-next words proved there was more in that snigger than met the ear. “In
-the event of this little jool turning out to be stolen property, what,
-sir, do you suppose would be the position of the present owner?”
-
-“Difficult to say, Mr. Gedge.”
-
-“He’d receive compensation, wouldn’t he?”
-
-“Substantial compensation one would think--if he was able to prove his
-title.”
-
-If he was able to prove his title! Those blunt little words had a
-sinister sound for S. Gedge Antiques, but he did not turn a hair. “No
-difficulty about that, sir,” he said, robustly.
-
-“Quite!” Evidently Sir Arthur had no doubt upon the point. “But as the
-question might arise it may be well to have it settled before disposing
-of the picture.”
-
-S. Gedge agreed.
-
-“And in any case, before parting with it,” said Sir Arthur, “it will be
-wise, I think, to take advice.”
-
-Again S. Gedge agreed. “You mean, sir, it may be very valuable indeed?”
-
-“Yes, I quite think it may be. At a cursory glance it has the look of a
-fine example of a great master. I remember at the time that ‘L’Automne’
-disappeared from the Louvre, it was said to be worth at least two
-hundred and fifty thousand francs, and since then Van Roons have more
-than doubled in price.”
-
-“In that case, sir”--there was a tremor of real emotion in the voice of
-the old dealer--“this be-yew-ti-ful thing ought not to be allowed to
-leave the country.”
-
-“Unfortunately the French authorities may compel it to do so.” And the
-connoisseur sighed as he fingered the canvas lovingly.
-
-Affirmed S. Gedge Antiques: “I don’t believe, sir, for a moment that it
-is ‘L’Automne.’”
-
-“One wouldn’t like to say it is,” said the cautious Sir Arthur. “And
-one wouldn’t like to say it isn’t.”
-
-“It’ll be up to the Loov to prove it, anyhow.”
-
-“Quite. In the meantime, before you let it go, I hope you’ll give me
-an opportunity of looking at it again.”
-
-This modest request caused the old man to rub his nose. He was not in
-a position, he said mysteriously, to give a promise, but certainly he
-would do his best to meet the wishes of Sir Arthur.
-
-“Thank you, Mr. Gedge. If this picture is not claimed by other people,
-and of course one doesn’t for a moment suggest that it will be, steps
-might be taken to keep it here. We are so poor in Van Roons--there is
-only one, I believe--to our shame!--in this country at the present
-time--that we can’t afford to let a thing like this slip through our
-fingers. Therefore, as I say, before you decide to sell I hope you’ll
-take advice.”
-
-S. Gedge Antiques gravely thanked Sir Arthur Babraham. He would keep
-those wise words in mind. And in the meantime he would pack _That_
-in a crate--he pointed a finger straight at June’s eyes--and send it to
-Homefield.----
-
-“----near Byfleet, Surrey, I think you said, sir?”
-
-
-
-
-XXIX
-
-
-THE distinguished visitors were bowed into the street. And
-then S. Gedge Antiques, with the face of a man whose soul is in
-torment, returned to contemplation of the picture, and also of M.
-Duponnet’s cheque which he took out of his pocket book. It was clear
-that his mind was the prey of a deep problem. The bird in the hand was
-well enough so far as it went, but the bird in the bush was horribly
-tempting.
-
-At last with a heavy sigh the old man returned the cheque to his
-pocket, and then cautiously lifting up the loose board, put back the
-picture whence it came and drew the oak chest over the spot. He then
-shambled off to the room next door, which was full of odds and ends
-mingled with a powerful smell of oil and varnish.
-
-June at once made an attempt to get out of prison. But she now found
-her position to be as she had already surmised. To enter without help
-had been no mean feat, to escape in the same fashion was impossible.
-Wedged so tightly inside the Hoodoo, there was neither play nor
-purchase for her hands; and frantic as her efforts were, they were yet
-subordinated to the knowledge that it would be quite easy for the thing
-to topple over. Should that happen the consequence would certainly be
-alarming and possibly ghastly.
-
-Frantically wriggling in the jaws of the Hoodoo, it did not matter
-what she did, she was firmly held. And the fear of Uncle Si, who was
-pottering about quite close at hand, while imposing silence upon her,
-intensified the growing desperation of her case. She was a mouse in a
-trap.
-
-Too soon did she learn that only one course was open to her. She must
-wait for William’s return. Irksome and humiliating as the position was,
-it was clear that she could do nothing without help.
-
-Would William never come? The minutes ticked on and her durance grew
-exceedingly vile. She became conscious of pains in her shoulders and
-feet, she felt as if she could hardly draw breath, her head throbbing
-with excitement seemed as if it must burst. It was a horrible fix to be
-in.
-
-Suffering acutely now, she yielded as well as she could to the
-inevitable. There was simply nothing to be done. She must wait. It was
-imprisonment in a most unpleasant form and she was frightened by the
-knowledge that it might continue many hours. Even when William did
-return, and there was no saying when he would do so, he was quite as
-likely to enter by the back door as by the shop. So terrible was the
-thought that June felt ready to faint at the bare idea.
-
-This was a matter, however, in which fate was not so relentless after
-all. June was doing her best to bear up in the face of this new and
-paralysing fear when the shop door opened and lo! William came in.
-
-Great was her joy, and yet it had to be tempered by considerations of
-prudence. She contrived to raise her lips to the mouth of the Hoodoo,
-and to breathe his name in a tragic whisper.
-
-As he heard her and turned, she urged in the same odd fashion: “For
-Heaven’s sake--not a sound!”
-
-“Why--Miss June!” he gasped. “Where are you?”
-
-She checked him with wild whisperings that yet served to draw him to
-her prison.
-
-He was dumbfounded, quite as much as by her fiercely tragic voice as by
-the amazing predicament in which he found her.
-
-“Help me out!” she commanded him. “And don’t make the least sound.
-Uncle Si is next door, and if he finds me here, something terrible will
-happen.”
-
-Such force and such anxiety had one at least of the results so much to
-be desired. They forbade the asking of futile questions. Every moment
-was precious if she was to make good her escape.
-
-William in this crisis proved himself a right good fellow. His sense
-of the ludicrous was keen, but he stifled it. Moreover, a legitimate
-curiosity had been fully aroused, but he stifled that also as he
-proceeded to carry out these imperious orders. But even with such ready
-and stalwart help, June was to learn again that it was no easy matter
-to escape from the Hoodoo.
-
-Without venturing to speak again, William mounted the gate-legged table
-and offered both hands to the prisoner. But the trouble was that she
-was so tightly pinned that she could not raise hers to receive them.
-And it was soon fatally clear that so long as the Hoodoo kept the
-perpendicular it would be impossible for any external agent to secure a
-hold upon the body wedged within its jaws.
-
-After several attempts at dislodgement had miserably failed, June
-gasped in a kind of anguish: “Do you think you can tip this thing
-over--very gently--without making a sound?”
-
-This was trying William highly indeed, but it seemed the only thing to
-be done. Happily he was tall and strong; much was said, all the same,
-for his power of muscle and the infinite tact with which it was applied
-that he was able to tilt the Hoodoo on to its end. Keeping the vase
-firmly under control, he then managed to regulate its descent to the
-shop floor so skilfully as to avoid a crash.
-
-Such a feat was really a triumph of applied dynamics. June, however,
-was not in a position to render it all the homage it deserved, even
-if she was deeply grateful for the address that William brought to
-bear upon his task. Once the Hoodoo had been laid full length on the
-shop floor she was able to wriggle her body and her shoulders with
-what violence she pleased, without the fear of disaster. A series of
-convulsive twists and writhings and she was free!
-
-As soon as she knew that she was no longer pinned by the jaws of the
-monster, the action of a strong mind was needed to ward off a threat
-of hysteria. But she controlled herself sufficiently to help William
-restore the Hoodoo to the perpendicular; and then she said in a whisper
-of extreme urgency which was barely able to mask the sob of nerves
-overstrung: “Not one word now. But go straight into the kitchen--just
-as if you hadn’t seen me. And remember whatever happens”--the whisper
-grew fiercer, the sob more imminent--“if Uncle Si asks the question
-you _haven’t_ seen me. I’m supposed to be looking for a job. You
-understand?”
-
-To say that William did understand would have been to pay him a most
-fulsome compliment; yet the stout fellow behaved as if the whole of
-this amazing matter was as clear as daylight. Such was June’s fixity
-of will, the sheer force of her personality, that he left the shop at
-once like a man hypnotised. Excited questions trembled upon his lips,
-but in the face of this imperiousness he did not venture to give them
-play.
-
-He made one attempt--one half-hearted attempt.
-
-“But Miss June----!”
-
-The only answer of Miss June was to cram one hand over his mouth, and
-with the other to propel him towards the door which led to the back
-premises.
-
-
-
-
-XXX
-
-
-AS soon as William had passed out of the shop, June stood a
-moment to gather nerve and energy for the task before her. Feeling
-considerably tossed, above all she was devoured by a horrible form of
-excitement whose effect was like nothing so much as a bad dream. But
-this was not a time for dreams. The situation was full of peril; not a
-moment must be lost.
-
-The picture was her immediate concern. She set herself at once to the
-business of moving the oak chest aside. This presented no difficulty,
-for there was nothing in it; but the loose board beneath it did.
-Fingers unhelped could not prise it up; they must have a chisel. She
-knew that such an implement was to be found in one of the drawers of
-the desk, but she had stealthily to open three or four before she came
-upon the right one.
-
-While all this was going on, she could hear the voices of William and
-Uncle Si in the room next door. It seemed that no matter what her
-caution or her haste, she would almost certainly be interrupted before
-she was through with her task. But luck was with her. She was able to
-lift the board, take forth the picture, replace the chest and return
-the chisel to its drawer without the voices coming any nearer.
-
-Picture in hand, she tiptoed out of the shop as far as the stairs.
-Through the open door of the inner room the back of Uncle Si was
-visible as she crept by. It was taking a grave risk to attempt the
-stairs at such a moment, but she was wrought up to a point when to go
-back and wait was impossible. She must continue to chance her luck.
-
-Up the stairs she crept, expecting at every second one to hear a harsh
-voice recall her. To her unspeakable relief, however, she was able to
-gain sanctuary in her own room without hindrance. She bolted the door
-against the enemy, although so far as she was aware, he was still in
-the room below in total ignorance of what had happened.
-
-Shivering as if in the throes of fever, she sat on the edge of her
-narrow bed. The treasure was hers still. She held it to her bosom as
-a mother holds a child; yet the simple act gave rise at once to the
-problem of problems: What must be done with the thing now? There could
-be no security for it under that roof. And not to the picture alone
-did this apply, but also to herself. Anything might happen as soon
-as the old man found out that the Van Roon was not, after all, to be
-his. Meanwhile, the future hardly bore thinking about; it was like a
-precipice beyond whose edge she dare not look.
-
-One act, however, did not admit of a moment’s delay: there and then
-the treasure must be smuggled out of the house and put in a place of
-safety. Rowelled by this thought, June rose from the bed, took a piece
-of brown paper and some string from her box, and proceeded to transform
-the picture into a neat parcel. She then slipped off her dress, which
-was considerably the worse for contact with the dusty interior of the
-Hoodoo, performed a hasty toilette, put on her walking-out coat and
-skirt and changed her shoes. Finally, she put on the better of the only
-two hats she possessed, slipped her mother’s battered old leather purse
-into her coat pocket, and then, umbrella in one hand, parcel in the
-other, she turned to the hazard of stealing downstairs and making good
-her escape.
-
-In the middle of the twisty stairs, just before their sharpest bend
-would bring her into the view of persons below, she stopped to listen.
-The voices had ceased; she could not hear a sound. Two ways lay before
-her of reaching the street: one via the parlour to the kitchen and
-out along the side entry, the other through the front door of the
-shop. Either route might be commanded at the moment by the enemy. With
-nothing to guide her, June felt that the only safe course just then was
-to stay where she was. In the strategic position she had taken up on
-the stairs she could not be seen from below, yet a quick ear might hope
-to gain a clue to what was going on.
-
-She had not to wait long. From the inner room, whose door opposite the
-foot of the stairs was still half open, although its occupant was no
-more seen, there suddenly came the strident tones of Uncle Si. They
-were directed unmistakably kitchenward. “Boy, you’d better get the tea
-ready. Seemin’ly that gell ain’t home.”
-
-“Very good, sir,” came a prompt and cheerful response from the back
-premises.
-
-June decided at once that the signs were favourable. Now was her
-chance; the way through the front shop was evidently clear. Deftly as
-a cat she came down the remaining stairs and stole past the half-open
-door of what was known as “the lumber room,” where, however, old
-chairs were sometimes fitted with new legs and old chests with new
-panels.
-
-Uncle Si was undoubtedly there. June could hear him moving about as she
-passed the door; indeed she was hardly clear of it when she received a
-most unwelcome reminder of this fact. Either he chanced to turn round
-as she crept by, or he caught a glimpse of her passing in one of the
-numerous mirrors that surrounded him. For just as she reached the shop
-threshold she heard his irascible bark: “That you, niece?”
-
-The road clear ahead, June did not pause to weigh consequences. She
-simply bolted. Even if the old man was not likely to guess what her
-neat parcel contained, it would surely be the height of folly to give
-him the chance.
-
-Never in her life had she been quite so thankful as when she found
-herself in the street with the treasure safely under her arm.
-
-
-
-
-XXXI
-
-
-JUNE went swiftly down New Cross Street to the Strand. Until
-she reached that garish sea of traffic she dare not look back lest hot
-on her heels should be Uncle Si. Such a discovery was not at all likely
-she well knew; the feeling was therefore illogical, yet she could not
-rid herself of it until she was merged in the ever-flowing tide.
-
-Taking refuge at last in a jeweller’s doorway from the maelstrom of
-passers by, June had now another problem to face. The Van Roon must
-find a home. But the question of questions was--where?
-
-Apart from William and Uncle Si, and her chance acquaintance, Mr.
-Keller, she did not know a soul in London. Mr. Keller, however, sprang
-at once to her mind. Yet more than one reservation promptly arose
-in regard to him. She knew really nothing about him beyond the fact
-that he was a man of obviously good address, belonging to a class
-superior to her own. He was a man of the world, of a certain breeding
-and education, but whether it would be wise to trust a comparative
-stranger in such a matter seemed exceedingly doubtful to a girl of
-June’s horse sense. Still there was no one else to whom she could turn.
-And recalling the circumstances of their first meeting, if one could
-ignore the means by which it had come about, there was something oddly
-compelling, something oddly attractive, about this Mr. Keller.
-
-In the total absence of other alternatives, June found her mind drawn
-so far in the direction of this man of mystery that at last she took
-from her purse a slip of paper on which he had written his name and
-address: “Adolph Keller, No. 4, Haliburton Studios, Manning Square,
-Soho.”
-
-Could she trust him with the care of a Van Roon? Now that she had
-been a witness of its terrible effect on Uncle Si, she was forced to
-ask whether it would be right to trust any man with such a talisman.
-Luckily, the world was not peopled exclusively with Uncle Sis. She
-would have to trust somebody with her treasure, that was certain; and,
-after all, there was no reason to suspect that Mr. Keller was not an
-honest man.
-
-She was still in the jeweller’s doorway, wrestling with the pros and
-cons of the tough matter, when a passing bus displaying the name
-Victoria Station caught her eye. In a flash came the solution of the
-problem.
-
-Again she entered the sea of traffic, to be borne slowly along by the
-slow tide as far as Charing Cross. Here she waited for another bus to
-Victoria. The solving of the riddle was absurdly simple after all. What
-place for her treasure could be safer, more accessible than a railway
-station cloak room?
-
-She boarded Bus 23. But hardly had it turned the corner into Whitehall
-when a thin flicker of elation was dashed by the salutary thought
-that her brain was giving out. The cloak room at Charing Cross,
-from the precincts of whose station she had just driven away, was
-equally adapted to her need. Along the entire length of Whitehall and
-Victoria Street she was haunted by the idea that she was losing her
-wits. A prolonged scrutiny of her pale but now collected self in a
-confectioner’s window on the threshold of the London and Brighton
-terminus was called for to reassure her. And even then, for a girl
-so shrewd and so practical, there remained the scar of a distressing
-mental lapse.
-
-It did not take long to deposit the parcel in the cloak room on the
-main line down platform. But in the act of doing so, occurred a slight
-incident which was destined to have a bearing on certain events to
-follow. When a ticket was handed to her, she could only meet the charge
-of three pence with a ten shilling note.
-
-“Nothing smaller, Miss?” asked the clerk.
-
-“I’m afraid I haven’t,” said June, searching her purse, and then
-carefully placing the ticket in its middle compartment.
-
-“You’ll have to wait while I get change then.”
-
-“Sorry to trouble you,” June murmured, as the clerk went out through a
-door into an inner office. Ever observant and alert, she noticed that
-the clerk was a tallish young man, whose freely curling fair hair put
-her in mind of William, and that he wore a new suit of green corduroy.
-
-The likeness to William gave _bouquet_ to her politeness, when
-the young man returned with the change. “Sorry to give you so much
-trouble,” she said again.
-
-“No trouble, miss.” And Green Corduroy handed the change across the
-cloak room counter with a frank smile that was not unworthy of William
-himself.
-
-
-
-
-XXXII
-
-
-THE treasure in a safe place, June had to consider what to do
-next. One fact stood out clear in her mind. She must leave at once the
-sheltering roof of S. Gedge Antiques. There was no saying what would
-happen when the Old Crocodile discovered that the Van Roon was missing.
-
-The sooner she collected her box and her gear, and found another
-lodging the better. Her best plan would be to go back to New Cross
-Street and get them now. Uncle Si was hardly likely as yet to have
-made the discovery. It would be wise, therefore, to take advantage of
-this lull, for at the most it was only a matter of a few hours before
-the truth was known. And when known it was, Number Forty-six New Cross
-Street was the very last place in London in which she would choose to
-be.
-
-There was a chance, of course, that “the murder” was out already.
-But she would have to take the risk of that. All that she had in the
-world beyond the six paper pounds, nine shillings and ninepence in her
-purse, was in the box in the garret. Her entire resources were about
-seventeen pounds in money, a scanty wardrobe, and a few odds and ends
-of jewellery of little value, but if she could get hold of these they
-might suffice to tide her over a sorely anxious time.
-
-In the present state of her nerves, courage was needed to return to
-New Cross Street. But it had to be. And it was now or never. If her box
-was to be got away, she must go boldly back at once and claim it. How
-this was to be done without arousing suspicion she did not quite know,
-but the most hopeful method was to announce that she had been able
-to find a job, and also good lodgings, and that she did not care to
-lay the burden of her presence upon Uncle Si one hour longer than was
-necessary.
-
-She had been brought up with a strict regard for the truth, but fate
-was driving her so hard that she could not afford to have scruples.
-Hanging by a strap on the Underground to Charing Cross, which seemed
-the quickest route, and time was the essence of the matter, she
-rehearsed the part she had now to play. Certainly the playing itself
-would not lack gusto. Nothing life so far had given her would yield
-quite so much pleasure as saying good-bye to the Old Crocodile, and
-ironically thanking him for all his kindness. At the same time, the
-job and lodgings story must be pitched in just the right key, or his
-suspicions would be aroused, and then something horribly unpleasant
-might occur.
-
-By the time June had turned out of the Strand into New Cross Street, a
-heavy autumnal dusk had fallen upon that bleak thoroughfare. Somehow
-the dark pall struck at her heart. In a sense it was symbolical of
-the business upon which she was engaged. She felt like a thief whose
-instinct welcomes darkness, and whose conscience fears it.
-
-Never in her life had she needed such courage as to turn up that gloomy
-and dismal street and accost the forbidding threshold of S. Gedge
-Antiques. The shop was still open, for it was hardly more than six
-o’clock, and two gas jets lit the interior in a way that added to its
-dolour.
-
-She stood a moment with the knob of the shop door in her hand. All the
-nerve she could muster was wanted to venture within. But she did go in,
-and she felt a keen relief when a hasty glance told her that Uncle Si
-was not there.
-
-
-
-
-XXXIII
-
-
-JUNE had a further moment of indecision while she thought
-out what her line must be. She resolved to go direct to her room and
-pack her box. Afterwards she must find William and enlist his help in
-bringing it downstairs, and then she would get a taxi and drive off
-with her things before Uncle Si discovered his loss. Otherwise...!
-
-Her mind had not time to shape the grisly alternative, before the
-immediate course of events shaped it for her. Suddenly she was aware
-of a presence lurking in the dark shadows of the shop interior. It was
-couchant, vengeful, hostile. Almost before June could guess what was
-happening it had sprung upon her.
-
-With astounding force her right wrist was grasped and twisted behind
-her back. She gave a little yelp of pain. A second yelp followed, as
-she struggled to free herself, only to find that she was locked in a
-vice, and that to fight against it would be agony.
-
-“Now, where is it?” The low voice hissing in her ear was surely that of
-a maniac. “Where’s the picture?” The grip upon her had the strength of
-ten. “Where is it--eh?” As the question was put, her captor shook her
-fiercely. “Tell me.” He shook her again. “Oh, you won’t--won’t you?”
-And then she realized that there was something in his hand.
-
-She called wildly for William, but there was no response.
-
-“No use lifting up your voice. The boy’s out.”
-
-She fought to get free, but with a wrist still locked, she was at his
-mercy. “Now then, where’s that picture? Won’t tell me--eh?” There was
-madness in that depth of rage.
-
-Quite suddenly there came a sickening crash upon her shoulders. She
-let out with her heels and found the shin of the enemy, she fought and
-screamed, yet pinned like that, she felt her wrist must break and her
-arm be wrenched from its socket.
-
-“Where is it--you thief?” The stick crashed again, this time in a
-series of horrible blows. So severe was the pain that it seemed to
-drive through her whole being. She began to fear that he meant to kill
-her; and as the stick continued to descend she felt sure that he would.
-
-She was a strong, determined girl, but her captor had her at a hopeless
-disadvantage. His strength, besides, was that of one possessed. Her
-cries and struggles merely added to his savagery.
-
-“Tell me where it is or I’ll knock the life out of you.”
-
-Utterly desperate, she contrived at last to break away; and though
-with the force of a maniac he tried to prevent her escape, somehow
-she managed to get into the street. He followed her as far as the
-shop door, brandishing the stick, hurling imprecations upon her, and
-threatening what he would do if she didn’t bring the picture back at
-once.
-
-Bruised and gasping, June reeled into the darkness. Feeling more dead
-than alive, she lingered nearby after the old man had gone in, trying
-to pull her battered self together. She badly wanted her box, yet the
-only hope of getting it now was by means of the police. As things were,
-however, it would not be wise to ask their help. The old wretch was so
-clever he might be able to make her out a thief; besides, for the time
-being she had had more than enough of this horrible affair.
-
-Cruelly hurt she moved at last with slow pain towards the Strand.
-By now she had decided that her most imperative need was a night’s
-lodging. Before starting to look for one, however, the enticing doors
-of a teashop gave her a renewed sense of weakness. Gratefully she went
-in and sat down, ordering a pot of tea and a little bread and butter
-which she felt too ill to eat.
-
-Nearly half an hour she sat in the company of her thoughts. Hard,
-unhappy thoughts they were. Without one friend to whom in this crisis
-she could turn, the world which confronted her now was an abyss. The
-feeling of loneliness was desolating, yet, after all, far less so than
-it would have been were she not fortified by the memory of a certain
-slip of paper in her purse.
-
-A slow return of fighting power revived a spark of natural resolution
-within her. After all, a potent weapon was in her hands. She must think
-out a careful plan of turning it to full account. And at the worst she
-was now beyond the reach of Uncle Si. Even if he kept her box and all
-its contents, weighed in the scale of the picture’s fabulous worth, her
-modest possessions amounted to very little.
-
-Stimulated by this conclusion, she began to forget her aches. When a
-waitress came June asked for her bill. It was sixpence. She put her
-hand in the pocket of her coat. Her purse was not there.
-
-With a little thrill of fear, she felt in the pocket on the other side.
-The purse was not there either. She was stunned. This was a blow far
-worse than those she had just received. She grew so dazed that as she
-got up she swayed against the table, and had to hold on by it to save
-herself from falling.
-
-The waitress who had written out the bill caught a glimpse of scared
-eyes set in a face of chalk.
-
-“Aren’t you well?” she asked.
-
-“I--I’ve lost my purse,” June stammered. “It’s fallen out of my pocket,
-I think.” As with frantic futility she plunged her hand in again, she
-was raked by the true meaning of such a fact in all its horror. Unless
-her purse had been stolen on the Underground, and it was not very
-likely, it had almost certainly fallen out of her pocket in the course
-of the struggle with Uncle Si.
-
-It was lying now on the shop floor unless the old wretch had found it
-already. And if he had he would lose no time in examining its contents.
-He had only to do so for the cloak-room ticket to tell him where
-the Van Roon was deposited, and to provide him with a sure means of
-obtaining it.
-
-“You may have had your pocket picked.”
-
-June did not think so. Yet, being unable to take the girl into her
-confidence, she did not choose to disclose her doubts.
-
-“Perhaps I have,” she gasped. And then face to face with the extreme
-peril of the case, her overdriven nerves broke out in mutiny. She burst
-into tears. “I don’t know what I’ll do,” she sobbed.
-
-The waitress was full of sympathy. “Your bill is only sixpence. Come in
-and pay to-morrow.”
-
-Through her tears June thanked her.
-
-“’Tisn’t my bill, although it’s very kind of you. There was something
-very important in my purse.”
-
-“Where did you have it last?”
-
-“In the booking hall, when I took a ticket from Victoria to Charing
-Cross.”
-
-“Your pocket’s been picked,” said the waitress with conviction.
-“There’s a warning in all the Tubes.”
-
-The comfort was cold, yet comfort it was of a kind. June saw a wan ray
-of hope. After all, there was a bare possibility that inexorable Fate
-was not the thief.
-
-“I’d go to Scotland Yard if I were you,” said the waitress. “The
-police often get back stolen property. Last year my sister’s house was
-burgled, and they recovered nearly everything for her.”
-
-June began to pull herself together. It was not hope, however, that
-braced her faculties, but an effort of will. Hope there was none of
-recovering the purse, but she was now faced by the stern necessity
-of getting back the picture. In the light of this tragedy it was in
-most serious peril. Delay might be fatal, if indeed it had not already
-proved to be so. She must go at once and get possession of the treasure
-lest it be too late.
-
-The waitress was a good Samaritan. Not only could the bill wait until
-the next day, but she went even further: “Is your home far from here?”
-she asked.
-
-“My home--far?” said June, dazedly. For the moment she did not
-understand all that was implied by the question.
-
-“If you live on the District, and you haven’t a season, I don’t mind
-lending you a shilling to get you home.”
-
-June accepted a shilling with earnest thanks. In the circumstances, it
-might be worth untold gold: “You can give it me back any time you are
-passing,” said the waitress, as June thanked her again and made her
-way unsteadily out into the street.
-
-The chill air of the Strand revived her a little. She had decided
-already that she must go at once to Victoria. Every minute would count,
-and it now occurred to her that if she took the Underground, several
-might be saved.
-
-To the Underground in Trafalgar Square she went. It was the hour of the
-evening rush. Queues were lining up at all the booking office windows.
-And at the first window she came to, some three persons or so ahead
-of her, was a figure oddly familiar, which, however, in her present
-state of disintegration she did not recognize at once. It was clad in a
-sombre tail coat of prehistoric design, jemima boots, frayed shepherd’s
-plaid trousers braced high and a hard square felt hat which gave a
-crowning touch of oppressive respectability. Moreover, its progress was
-assisted by a heavy knotted walking stick, at the sight of which June
-gave an involuntary shiver.
-
-An instant later the shiver had developed into a long and paralyzing
-shudder. Uncle Si was just ahead of her; in fact she was near enough to
-hear a harsh voice demand almost with menace a ticket to Victoria.
-
-June’s worst fears were realized. The purse had fallen from her pocket
-to the shop floor in the struggle; the old wretch had found it,
-deciphered the precious ticket, put two and two together, and was now
-on his way to claim the parcel. All this was crystal clear to her swift
-mind. She felt a strong desire to faint, but she fought her weakness.
-She must go on. Everything was as good as lost--but she must go on.
-
-She took her ticket. And then in the long subway to the platform she
-raced on ahead of Uncle Si. He was so near-sighted that even had he
-been less absorbed in his own affairs he would not have been likely to
-notice her.
-
-June reached the platform well in front of the old man. But the train
-to Victoria was not in. It arrived two minutes later; by then, Uncle Si
-had appeared, and they boarded it together. She was careful, however,
-not to enter the same compartment as the enemy.
-
-Short as the journey was, June had ample time to appreciate that the
-odds were heavily against her. The mere fact that the cloak-room
-receipt for the parcel was in the custody of Uncle Si would confer
-possession upon him; it had only to be presented for the Van Roon to be
-handed over without a question.
-
-The one chance she had now was to get on well ahead of the old beast,
-and convince the clerk that in spite of the absence of the ticket the
-parcel was hers. She knew, however, only too well that the hope of
-being able to do this was frail indeed--at all events before the holder
-of the ticket arrived on the scene to claim it.
-
-At Victoria, June dashed out of the train even before it stopped.
-Running past the ticket collector at the barrier and along the subway
-she reached the escalator yards in front of Uncle Si, and, in spite
-of being unused to this trap for the unwary, for Blackhampton’s more
-primitive civilization knew escalators not, she ascended to the street
-at a pace far beyond the powers of the Old Crocodile. By this means,
-indeed, she counted on gaining an advantage of several minutes, since
-it was hardly likely that Uncle Si would trust himself to such a
-contrivance, and in ignorance of the fact that she was just ahead,
-would choose the dignified safety of the lift.
-
-So far as it went the thought was reassuring. Alas, it did not go far.
-As June ran through the long station to the cloak-room at its farthest
-end, she had but a very slender hope of being able to recover the
-parcel. She had no intention, however, of submitting tamely to fate. In
-this predicament, whatever the cost, she must make one last and final
-effort to get back her treasure.
-
-At the cloak-room counter she took her courage in both hands. A man
-sour and elderly had replaced the wearer of the green corduroy, who was
-nowhere to be seen. This was a piece of bad luck, for she had hoped
-that the nice-looking young man might remember her. Happily, no other
-passengers besieged the counter at the moment, so that without loss of
-time June was able to describe the parcel and to announce the fact that
-the ticket she had received for it was missing.
-
-Exactly as she had foreseen the clerk raised an objection. Without a
-ticket she couldn’t have the parcel. “But I simply must have it,” said
-June. And spurred by the knowledge that there was not one moment to
-lose in arguing the case, she boldly lifted the flap of the counter and
-entered the cloak-room itself.
-
-“No use coming in here,” said the Clerk, crustily. “You can’t take
-nothing away without a ticket.”
-
-“But my purse has been stolen, I tell you,” said June.
-
-“Then I should advise you to go and see the station-master.”
-
-“I can’t wait to do that.” And with the defiance of despair, expecting
-each moment to hear the voice of Uncle Si at her back, June ignored
-the Clerk, and proceeded to gaze up and down the numerous and heavily
-burdened luggage racks for her property.
-
-
-
-
-XXXIV
-
-
-“NOT a bit o’ use, don’t I tell you.” The Clerk was growing
-angry.
-
-June pretended not to hear. Her heart beating fast she went on with
-her search for the parcel; yet in the midst of it she grew aware that
-somebody was approaching the counter. She dare not pause to look who it
-was, for she knew only too well that it was almost bound to be Uncle Si.
-
-The Clerk uttered another snarl of protest as he turned away to attend
-to the new comer. As he did so, June breathed a prayer that her eye
-might fall on the parcel in that instant, for her only hope now was
-to seize it and fly. That, however, was not to be. She had omitted to
-notice the place in which it had been put, and do as she would she
-could not find it now.
-
-At this crucial moment, there emerged from the inner office her friend
-of the green corduroy. She simply leapt at what was now her one
-remaining chance.
-
-“Oh, I’m so glad you’ve come,” cried June, in a voice that was a little
-frantic: “You remember my bringing a brown paper parcel here, don’t
-you--about two hours ago?”
-
-The tone, tinged as it was with hysteria, caused Green Corduroy to look
-at June with mild astonishment. “I’ve lost the ticket you gave me for
-it, but I’m sure you remember my bringing it.” Her brain seemed on
-fire. “Don’t you remember my giving you a ten shilling note? And you
-had to go and get the change.”
-
-Green Corduroy was a slow-brained youth, but a knitting of the brow
-seemed to induce a hazy recollection of the incident. But while the
-process was going on, June gave a glance over her shoulder, and behold
-there was Uncle Si the other side of the counter. A second glance told
-her, moreover, that Crusty Sides already had the fatal ticket in his
-hand.
-
-What must she do? It was not a moment for half measures. While she was
-stirring the memory of Green Corduroy, the treasure would be gone. She
-did not hesitate. Observing Crusty Sides wheel, paper in hand, with
-the slow austerity of one of the Company’s oldest and most respected
-servants towards a luggage rack near by, June seized the clue. Of a
-sudden her eyes lit on the parcel at the top of the pile. Already the
-responsible fingers of Crusty Sides were straying upwards, yet before
-they could enclose the Van Roon, June made a dash for it, and managed
-to whisk it away from under his nose.
-
-Her brain was like quicksilver now. She had a mad impulse to rush off
-with the treasure without further explanation; all the same she was
-able to resist it, for she realized that such a course would be too
-full of peril.
-
-“Yes--this is it,” she said in an urgent whisper to Green Corduroy. And
-as she spoke, with a presence of mind, which in the circumstances was a
-little uncanny, she slipped behind a large pile of boxes out of view of
-Uncle Si.
-
-“Surely you remember my bringing it?”
-
-Green Corduroy seemed to think that he did remember. At this point
-Crusty Sides, with an air of outrage, sternly interposed. “But a pawty
-claims it. And here’s his ticket.”
-
-“The ticket’s mine,” said June, in a fierce whisper. “It’s been taken
-from my purse.”
-
-“Nothin’ to do with us, that ain’t,” said Crusty Sides.
-
-“But you _do_ remember my bringing it, don’t you?” Beseechingly
-June turned to Green Corduroy. And he, that nice-looking young man,
-with a frown of ever-deepening perplexity, slowly affirmed that he
-thought he did remember.
-
-“The ticket’s what we’ve got to go by,” said Crusty Sides, sternly.
-“Nothin’ else matters to us.”
-
-“If you’ll look at it,” said June to Green Corduroy, “you’ll see that
-it’s made out in your writing.”
-
-Green Corduroy looked and saw that it was. As far as he was concerned,
-that seemed to clinch the argument. And even Crusty Sides, a born
-bureaucrat, was rather impressed by it. “You say this here ticket’s
-been taken off on you?” he asked.
-
-“Yes,” said June in an excited whisper. “By my wicked thief of an
-uncle.”
-
-Instantly she regretted the imprudence of her words.
-
-“Uncle a thief, eh?” proclaimed Crusty Sides, in a voice of such
-carrying power that to June it seemed that the Old Crocodile could
-hardly fail to hear him.
-
-“Anyhow, this gentleman knows that it was I who brought the parcel,”
-she said, determinedly to Green Corduroy.
-
-That young man looked her straight in the eye, and then declared that
-he did know. Further, like many minds “slow in the uptake,” when once
-in motion they are prone to deep conclusions. “Seems to me, Nobby,” he
-weightily affirmed, under the stimulus no doubt of being addressed as
-a gentleman, in the Company’s time, by such a good-looking girl, “that
-as this lady has got the parcel, and we have got the ticket for it, she
-and Uncle had better fight it out between ’em.”
-
-“I don’t know about that,” growled Nobby.
-
-Green Corduroy, however, stimulated by the fiery anguish of June’s
-glance, and no doubt still in thrall to the fact that she considered
-him a gentleman, was not to be moved from the statesmanlike attitude he
-had taken up. “You let ’em fight it out, Nobby. This lady was the one
-as brought it here.”
-
-“I gave you a ten shilling note, didn’t I?” The voice of June was as
-honeyed as the state of her feelings would permit.
-
-“Yes, and I fetched the change for you, didn’t I?”
-
-Crusty Sides shook a head of confirmed misogyny. “Very irregular,
-that’s all I’ve got to say about it.”
-
-“Maybe it is, Nobby. But it’s nothing to do with you and me.”
-
-Green Corduroy, with almost the air of a knight errant, took the
-all-important slip of paper from his colleague. Flaunting it in gallant
-fingers, he moved up slowly to the counter.
-
-S. Gedge Antiques, buying spectacles on nose, knotted cudgel in hand,
-was impatiently waiting. “The parcel is claimed by the lady who brought
-it,” June heard Green Corduroy announce.
-
-She waited for no more. Following close behind Crusty Sides, who also
-moved up to the counter, she slipped quietly through an adjacent door
-to the main line platform before Uncle Si grew fully alive to the
-situation.
-
-Clasping the parcel to her bosom, she glided swiftly down the platform,
-and out by the booking hall, travelling as fast as her legs would take
-her, without breaking into a run, which would have looked like guilt,
-and might have attracted public notice. She did not dare to glance
-back, for she was possessed by a fear that the old man and his stick
-were at her heels.
-
-Once clear of the station itself, she yielded to the need of putting as
-much distance between Uncle Si and herself as a start so short would
-permit. There was now hope of throwing him off the track. Thus, as soon
-as she reached the Victoria Street corner, she scrambled on to a bus
-that was in the act of moving away.
-
-One seat only was vacant and, as in a state of imminent collapse she
-sank down upon it, she ventured for the first time to look behind her.
-She quite expected to find Uncle Si at her elbow already, but with a
-gasp of relief she learned that the old man was nowhere in sight.
-
-
-
-
-XXXV
-
-
-JUNE did not know in which direction the bus was going. And
-when the conductor came for her fare, which he did as soon as the
-vehicle began to move, she was quite at a loss for a destination. There
-was nothing for it but to draw a bow at a venture. She asked for Oxford
-Circus, the only nodal point of the metropolis, besides Charing Cross,
-with which she was familiar. By a rare piece of luck, Oxford Circus was
-included in its route, and what remained of the shilling the girl at
-the teashop had given her was sufficient to get her there, and leave
-four pence in hand.
-
-Alighting at Oxford Circus, she stood under a lamp to consider what she
-should do now. There was nowhere she could go, there was not one friend
-to whom she could turn. Battered and spent in body and spirit by all
-that had happened to her during the last few hours she was now in a
-flux of terror to which she dare not yield.
-
-At first she thought of seeking advice of a policeman, but it would
-have been extremely difficult just then to tell her strange story. Its
-complications were many and fantastic; besides, and she trembled at the
-idea, it was by no means clear that she would be able to establish her
-claim to the Van Roon in the eye of the law.
-
-Still, something would have to be done. She must find a home of some
-kind not only for her treasure, but for herself. Feeling desperately
-in need of help, she decided as a preliminary measure to spend three of
-her four remaining pence on a cup of tea. She had a vague hope that in
-that magic beverage inspiration might lurk.
-
-The hope, as it chanced, was not vain. Near by was an A.B.C. shop; and
-she had hardly sat down at one of its marble-topped tables when, by an
-association of ideas, her mysterious acquaintance, Mr. Adolph Keller,
-sprang again into her mind. He had given her his address. Alas, the
-slip of paper on which it was written was in her purse, but she had a
-particularly good memory, and by raking it fiercely she was able to
-recall the fact that his place of domicile was Haliburton Studios,
-Manning Square.
-
-She did not like trusting any man on an acquaintance so slight,
-especially as it had come about in so odd a fashion, but Mr. Keller
-had shown himself very friendly, and there was no one else to whom she
-could turn. Sipping her cup of tea, in slow and grateful weariness, she
-began to develop this idea. Horse sense, Mr. Boultby had always said,
-was her long suit; therefore she well understood the peril of taking a
-comparative stranger into her confidence. But very cogently she put to
-herself the question: What else could she do?
-
-Of sundry policemen, who were very obliging, June asked the way to
-Manning Square. It was in Soho, not so very far from Oxford Circus, as
-she remembered Mr. Keller saying, and, in spite of a local fog which
-had come on in the last twenty minutes, the police were so helpful that
-she had no great difficulty in getting there. During the short journey
-her mind was much engaged in settling just what she would and would
-not say to Mr. Keller. She decided that as far as might be practicable
-she would leave the picture out of the case. It might not be possible
-to exclude it, but at any rate she would begin by offering to sit to
-him as a model, in accordance with his suggestion; and with that the
-pretext of her visit she would see if she could get him to lend her a
-little money to tide over immediate needs.
-
-By the time she had come to Manning Square it was a few minutes past
-seven. Two complete circuits had to be made of this dingy, ill-smelling
-gap in the heart of Soho, before she came upon Haliburton Studios,
-which were not in the Square itself, but in a dismal by-street
-debouching from it. The tall block of buildings which comprised the
-studios was equally dismal, and as June entered a vestibule that shewed
-no light, she felt a sudden chill strike at her heart.
-
-This, however, was not a moment to quail. It was a case, if ever there
-was one, of any port in a storm. The hazard of her errand fell upon
-her like a pall, but the knowledge that she had only a penny left with
-which to obtain a night’s lodging was a veritable barb in the flesh.
-
-Try as she would she could not recall the number of Mr. Keller’s
-studio; nor was the information to be found upon the walls of the
-vestibule which she was not able to see. But while she stood at
-the foot of a winding flight of stone steps, striving to meet the
-difficulty which faced her now, she heard someone coming down. At the
-sound she went back to the door by which she had entered, where a lamp
-contending feebly against the fog, would enable her to see anyone who
-passed out of the flats.
-
-The person who did so proved to be one of June’s own sex, a youngish
-woman whose fur coat seemed to accentuate a note of tawdry and
-flamboyant finery. Even in the semi-darkness June could see that her
-face was rouged.
-
-She had no illusion as to the kind of person she addressed:
-
-“You want Mr. Keller’s studio?” The woman peered into June’s face in a
-manner which she felt to be decidedly objectionable. “It’s the second
-door on the first landing.” The tone, offhand, and more than a little
-contemptuous, was like a blow in the face.
-
-
-
-
-XXXVI
-
-
-IT was not until the woman had passed out of the vestibule
-into the street that June could find courage to mount the stone stairs.
-
-The knocker on the second door was so crazy that it threatened to break
-off in her hand. Tact and skill were called for to draw sound from
-it at all; bell there was none; but a faint light percolated through
-the fanlight and it was a glimpse of this which heartened June to
-persevere. By dint of application she was able to coax a few sounds out
-of the knocker, a feat which at last brought reward. The beam beyond
-the fanlight expanded; there was a shuffle of approaching slippers; and
-then the door came open.
-
-Mr. Keller, wearing a dressing gown in lieu of a coat, stood before her.
-
-“Hulloa!” he said.
-
-Before June could find words of her own she had been recognized:
-“Why--it’s you!” The gentlemanly voice sounded most agreeable. “Walk
-right in. You’re welcome as the flowers in May.”
-
-Tossed by the tempest as Mr. Keller’s visitor still was, she could not
-help contrasting such a welcome with the air and manner of Uncle Si.
-
-
-
-
-XXXVII
-
-
-THE geniality of Adolph Keller had a tonic effect upon June’s
-depression. She crossed his threshold with a sense of extreme relief,
-as one who finds a refuge from the storm. He closed the door of the
-flat, and then led the way into a spacious room with a high ceiling
-which was fixed up as a studio.
-
-It was not without an air of comfort. The main part had been screened
-off; within a small but seductive inner space a bright fire mingled
-pleasant gleams with the radiance of the electric lamp. Two low wicker
-chairs were set invitingly near the hearth, and a table piled with
-books and magazines was between them. Amid these, however, space had
-been found for a tobacco jar, a siphon, a glass and a bottle of whisky.
-On the floor was a French novel, which he had laid down open to let her
-in.
-
-Mr. Keller, evidently, was making himself comfortable for the night.
-The contrast between this snug and cheerful room and the rising fog,
-from which June had just escaped, struck her at once as delightful.
-With a little sigh of gratitude, she sank at the cordial invitation of
-her host into the first of the easy chairs.
-
-He remembered her quite well, of course, yet for the moment he had
-forgotten her name, and what to June was the more surprising, the
-appointment she had made with him for that very afternoon seemed to
-have passed right out of his mind. Yet she was quick to see, for her
-wits were now working at high pressure, that this strange forgetfulness
-was in her favour. At any rate, it was going to help her in the task of
-keeping, as far as possible, the Van Roon out of the case.
-
-“Lyons’, wasn’t it, we met at? One day last week? Your name’s----?”
-
-“I’m Miss Gedge.” June’s tone was a shade “stand off,” for that
-appeared to be correct in the circumstances.
-
-“Miss Gedge--yes--of course. Stupid of me to forget.” He fixed the eye
-of a man with a sense of humour upon this odd visitor. “I’ve a shocking
-memory for names. Very glad to see you, anyhow, Miss Gedge.” He took
-the low chair opposite with the calm and easy air of a model host. “And
-very nice of you to come on a damp and foggy night.”
-
-The tone, rather than the words, put it up to June to explain her
-coming. She did so rather awkwardly, with a touch of “nerves.” Yet
-before committing herself to any positive statement as to why she was
-there, she was careful to dispose the parcel she carried as far beyond
-the range of his eyes as was possible at the side of the wicker chair
-in which she sat.
-
-“You told me the other day”--She found it impossible to control the
-queer little tremble in her voice--“that you wanted an artist’s model,
-and that my hair was just the colour you were looking for.”
-
-“By Jove, yes,” he laughed. “Your hair’s topping.” The laugh deepened
-to enthusiasm. “It’s the colour I want, to a hayseed.” An eye of veiled
-appraisement passed slowly over her. “And what’s almost as important
-there’s stooks of it.”
-
-“Yes, there is,” said June, doing her best to pick up his light tone of
-intimacy. “It is important, I suppose, for an artist’s model to have
-hair long and thick.”
-
-“Ra-ther!” As he looked at her sideways, out of the corner of one eye,
-his tone seemed to change a little; and then he got up alertly from his
-chair, the mantle of the model host again upon him. “I’m afraid there’s
-not much to offer you in the way of refreshment. There’s only whisky.
-If you’ll excuse me a minute, I’ll fetch another glass.”
-
-“Oh, no, please, not for me,” said June quickly. She was very tired and
-horribly depressed, but she had been strictly brought up.
-
-The host seemed a little amused by her vehemence. He looked at her
-keenly with a pair of curious, small, near-set eyes, which June liked
-even less now than when she had noticed them first. “Well, have a
-cigarette, anyhow. These are like mother’s milk.” And he offered a box
-of Virginia.
-
-June also declined a cigarette, in the same odd, rather fluttered tone
-which caused him to smile in a way that added to her nervousness.
-
-“No? Well, make yourself comfy, anyhow. Draw your chair up to the fire.”
-
-She thanked him in a voice which, in spite of itself was a little prim,
-and which assured him that she was quite warm enough where she was. The
-attempted lightness and ease had gone; a subtle sense of fear, bred of
-hidden danger yet without any root in fact or logic, was rising in her.
-The position itself was embarrassing, yet so far Mr. Keller had shown
-no wish to presume upon it. Up till now he had been easy and charming;
-but June, in spite of worldly inexperience, had the intuitions of
-her sex to guide her; and she felt instinctively that there might be
-a great deal behind these graces. She was grateful all the same; they
-were much needed balm for many bruises.
-
-When Mr. Keller sat down again in the wicker chair, about two yards
-away from her, a sense of languor crept upon June. The warmth of the
-fire, the glow of the lamp, the notes of a singularly quiet voice were
-like a subtle drug. Alive to danger as she was, its caress was hard to
-resist. Such a position was one of acute peril, for she was literally
-throwing herself upon the mercy of a person who was very much an
-unknown quantity, yet what alternative was there?
-
-“Don’t mind a pipe, I hope?” The polite voice from the chair opposite
-was not really ironical; it was merely kind and friendly, yet feminine
-intuition shivering upon the dark threshold of a mighty adventure knew
-well enough how easily a tone of that kind could turn to something else.
-
-“Oh no, I don’t mind at all.” She tried again to get the right key,
-but a laugh she could not control, high-pitched and irrelevant, was
-horribly betraying.
-
-“That’s all right then.”
-
-For about a minute, Mr. Keller puffed away in a sort of whimsical
-silence. Then he said with a soft fall, whose mere sweetness had the
-power to alarm, “Your hair’s jolly. Very jolly indeed!”
-
-June nervously muttered that she was very glad he liked it.
-
-“So much of it, don’t you know. Awfully useful to me just now.
-Quantity’s almost as valuable as the colour. Does it reach your waist
-when you let it down?”
-
-June, not without a little pride, said that her hair when let down
-reached below her waist.
-
-“Capital!” said Mr. Keller, with a laugh. “The very thing I’m looking
-for just now. You’ll make a stunning Andromeda.”
-
-June had not heard of Andromeda. She had read some Dickens, and a
-little George Eliot, and she could remember bits of Shakespeare learned
-at school, but her tastes were not literary. She pretended to know all
-about Andromeda, yet the next words of Mr. Keller were a proof that he
-was not deceived. June did not know, however, that he had pierced clean
-through her ignorance.
-
-“She’s the altogether. A classical subject.”
-
-“I like classical subjects myself.” Abruptly June’s mind went back to
-Miss Preece, the revered head mistress of the Blackhampton High School
-where it had been her privilege to spend one term. Her voice rose a
-whole octave, in its involuntary desire to approximate as closely as
-possible to that of a real lady.
-
-“So do I.” Mr. Keller’s humorous purr was that of a man well pleased.
-“That’s capital.”
-
-“You can’t beat classical subjects, can you?” said June, making a wild
-attempt to achieve the conversational.
-
-Again Mr. Keller looked across at her out of those near-set eyes of
-which by now she was rather afraid. “No, you can’t,” he said. “So large
-and so simple, and yet they strike so deep. They are life itself. A
-sort of summing up, don’t you know, of all that has been, all that can
-be, all that will be.”
-
-June responded with more composure than she had yet shewn that she
-supposed it was so. It was nice to listen to talk of this kind from
-a man of Mr. Keller’s polish. The chair was most comfortable, and how
-good it was to be in front of the bright fire! Her nerves were being
-lulled more and more as if by a drug; the sense of her peril amid this
-sea of danger into which she had plunged began to grow less.
-
-“I expect,” said Mr. Keller, in a tone so friendly and so casual that
-it fed the new sense of peace which was now upon June, “I expect you
-are pretty well used to the altogether?”
-
-Even if she did not know in the least what was meant by “the
-altogether,” it did not seem to be quite wise to confess such
-ignorance. “Ye-es, I suppose I am.” And in a weak attempt to rise to
-his own agreeable plane of intimacy she laughed rather foolishly.
-
-“Capital!” said Adolph Keller. “You are a well built girl.” He sipped a
-little whisky. “Excellent shoulders. Figure’s full of fine lines. Bust
-well developed. Plenty of heart room. Everything just right.”
-
-She coloured at the literal way in which he catalogued her points; even
-if it was done in the manner of an artist and a gentleman, one was a
-little reminded of a dog or a horse.
-
-“I’ll fix you up a screen. And then you can get ready.” He sipped a
-little more whisky, and rose briskly and cheerfully. “Near the fire;
-it’s real chillsome to-night. And when you pose you can sit on top of
-it if you like.” He opened the lid of the coal box, and replenished the
-fire. “We must take care you don’t catch cold. If you feel a draught,
-you can have a rug round your knees. I only want to make a rough sketch
-of the lines of the figure, to begin with; the shoulders chiefly. It
-won’t take long. Quite sure you won’t have a finger?” He pointed to the
-whisky. “Buck you up a bit. You look rather down.”
-
-June was quite sure that she would not have a finger. Mr. Keller passed
-beyond the screen into the studio itself to procure a second screen.
-June felt this activity to be alarming. It brought her up against the
-fact that she was there in the capacity of an artist’s model. Suddenly
-it dawned upon her that she was expected to take off her clothes.
-
-
-
-
-XXXVIII
-
-
-MR. KELLER cleared a space near the fire, and elaborately
-arranged a second screen, which June did not fail to notice was
-decorated with nude figures.
-
-“There you are,” he said. “That’ll keep you snug. And if you sit on a
-stool by the fire with a rug over your knees, you’ll be as warm as a
-kitten.”
-
-June paled, but she did not speak.
-
-“Begin as soon as you like, the sooner the better. Are you quite sure
-you won’t have just a spot?” Again he pointed to the bottle on the
-table. “You look as if you want a drop of something.”
-
-Once more June declined the offer in a voice which in her own ear
-seemed absurdly small and faint.
-
-“Pity,” said Mr. Keller cheerfully, as he looked at her. “It’d put some
-life in you.” And then, as she was still inert, he went on in a tone
-which pleasantly mingled gentlemanliness and business, “I always pay a
-sovereign an hour, you know--for the altogether.”
-
-A light of fear came into June’s large eyes. “Does it mean,” she asked,
-shyly and awkwardly, as she looked away from him, “that I shall have to
-take off my clothes?”
-
-“Why, of course,” he said, matter-of-factly. Her obvious embarrassment
-was not lost upon him, but the knowledge did not appear in his manner.
-
-June shivered slightly. In that shiver a deep instinct spoke for her.
-“I couldn’t do that,” she said.
-
-“Why not?” He lit a cigarette. “Aren’t you well?”
-
-June was very far from well. She felt within an ace of being overcome
-by all that had happened to her. Besides her bruised shoulders were
-still aching horribly. Even without the deep instinct that governed
-her, it would not have been possible to expose them.
-
-“No-no,” she said, “I--I’m not well.”
-
-As she spoke, she had to fight a powerful desire to burst into tears.
-But her latent fear of this man had suddenly grown. Overdriven as she
-was, however, she was yet conscious of a stern need to keep a hold upon
-herself. She knew nothing, less than nothing of her host, beyond the
-fact that he was smooth of speech. On the surface he was a gentleman,
-but as he stood looking down at her now she glimpsed in his dark eyes
-that which seemed to countervail everything.
-
-Again she shivered. The sense of helplessness was paralyzing. It was
-as if a chasm had abruptly opened right under her feet. She was at his
-mercy. But she must not give one thought, so long as a spark of will
-remained with her, to the possibility of throwing herself upon it.
-
-He continued to stand looking at her while she fought against a welling
-weakness that must have been only too patent. Then, as if a little
-puzzled by her, he went and fetched a glass from another part of the
-studio. He poured out a small quantity of spirit and offered it neat.
-
-“Drink this. It’ll do you good.”
-
-His voice, for the first time, had the grip of authority. He held the
-glass to her lips, but as if containing deadly fumes they shrank from
-contact with it.
-
-“Don’t be a little fool.” The sharp tone was like the touch of a whip.
-“Why don’t you do as you are told?”
-
-She had not the strength to resent the command even if she was able to
-muster the power to resist it.
-
-“Look here,” he said, confronted by a limit to patience. “Why have you
-come? What’s the matter with you? Tell me.”
-
-She remained mute. There was nothing she could tell. A lodging for
-the night, food, advice, protection were what she sought. Dominated
-completely as she was by hard necessity, she yet dare not confide in
-Keller. The subtle change that had come upon him since he had fixed up
-the screen and poured out the whisky filled her with an intense longing
-to get away. In spite of a growing weakness, which now threatened dire
-collapse, the subtle feelers of her mind were on the track of danger.
-
-With a slow gathering of will that was a form of agony, she tried to
-collect the force to rise from the perilous comfort of the low wicker
-chair. But she was not able to rouse herself to action before the
-effort had been nipped by his next remark.
-
-“If you’ve no intention of sitting to me, you’d better say in two words
-why you’ve come here.”
-
-The voice was no longer smooth; there was a cutting edge to it,
-lacerating to June’s ear.
-
-“I wanted you to lend me a sovereign.”
-
-It was the literal truth. But the unguarded words slipped from her
-before she could shape or control them. Almost before they were uttered
-she realized their bitter unwisdom.
-
-“You can have a sovereign--if that’s all you want.” His tone grew
-light again. “But it’s only fair and reasonable that you should earn it
-first.”
-
-Strive as she would, she was not able to keep a faint dew of tears from
-filming her eyes.
-
-“No need to take off more than your bodice, if that’s what’s troubling
-you.”
-
-With her shoulders on fire, she could not take off her bodice, even had
-she wished to do so.
-
-She sat inert while he continued to stand before her. The thread of
-will she still had, fully concentrated though it was on getting away
-from him, was now unequal to the ugly challenge of his voice and eyes.
-
-“Let me go,” she half whimpered.
-
-Suddenly, in her own despite, her defences had begun palpably to fail.
-The blunder was fatal--if the cry of nature overdriven can be called a
-blunder. His eyes pinned hers. Trembling under the spell of their hard
-cunning she began to perceive that it was now a case of the serpent and
-the bird.
-
-A frown darkened his face as he cast back to the first meeting with
-this girl. He tried to recall their conversation in the teashop two
-days ago. At the time it had interested him considerably, but he had
-laughed over it since, and decided to dismiss it from his mind. She had
-told him a cock-and-bull story about a picture. He could not recall
-the details of an absurd yarn which had not seemed worth his while to
-remember. At the best it was a bald and unconvincing narrative. But it
-concerned a Rembrandt. No, not a Rembrandt. A Van Roon!
-
-With a heightening of curiosity, Adolph Keller gazed at the hunted
-creature now shrinking from his eyes. By Jove, she looked as if she had
-been through it! Something pretty bad must have happened to her quite
-recently. But why had she come to him?
-
-Thoughts of the picture set his active mind to work. She had come to
-him because she was in want of money. So much, at least, was clear.
-To judge by the look of her, she had probably, at a moment’s notice,
-been turned out of house and home. A domestic servant, no doubt, and
-no better than she should be, although a certain taste about her
-much-rumpled clothes and an attempt at refinement of manner suggested
-the wish to rise above her class.
-
-In the midst of this quick mind process, Adolph Keller saw the brown
-paper parcel. It was in the place where his visitor had laid it when
-she had first sat down. He noticed that she had cunningly reared it by
-the farther side of her chair, so that it might be beyond the immediate
-range of his eye.
-
-Keller’s pulse quickened, yet he allowed no hint of his intriguing
-discovery to shew in his manner. Once again it changed towards his
-guest. The tone of sharp authority vanished. Twisting a dark moustache
-round strong, yet delicate fingers, his air of extreme gentlemanliness
-verged upon the sugary, as he said: “I don’t like to see you like this.
-I don’t really.”
-
-The tone’s unexpectedness, perhaps even more than its kindness, moved
-June to further tears.
-
-“You had better tell me, hadn’t you, just what’s upset you?”
-
-She shook miserably. And then, thrown off her guard, by this new note
-of concern, she found the courage to venture again: “Please lend me a
-sovereign and let me go. I promise solemnly to pay it back.”
-
-He smiled in a way obviously to reassure. “What’s your hurry, my dear
-girl?” Soft, as were the words, they yet caused the design to fail.
-
-Their non-effect was clearly visible in the girl’s tragic eyes. She
-was caught in a trap; all his trimmings and posturings seemed only to
-emphasize the fact that she had no means of getting out.
-
-Like a powerful drug the brutal truth attacked her brain. It was as if
-its higher nerve centres could no longer act. She was completely in the
-power of this man. And only too well did she know that he knew it.
-
-Inevitably as fate, those slim fingers dipped towards the side of her
-chair. “What have we here?” The inflexion was lightly playful, yet it
-drove all the blood from her heart. “May I look?” His hand closed on
-the parcel before she could muster one futile finger to stay it.
-
-Galvanized, as if by electricity, she sprang up from her chair without
-knowing what she did. “Please--it’s mine!” Without conscious volition
-she tried weakly to defend her property.
-
-He put her off with the cheery playfulness of a teasing brother. “Just
-one little peep,” he said. The treasure was yielding its wrappings
-already to those deft fingers. Smiling all the time, he treated the
-thing as a mere joke. And he was able to give the joke full effect,
-because, not for an instant did he expect it to turn out anything else.
-
-
-
-
-XXXIX
-
-
-ADOLPH KELLER gave a low whistle. He took in his breath quickly.
-The treasure, in its rare incredible beauty, had declared
-itself to his eyes. And to the eyes of an artist, wholly unready
-for the revelation, it came in a single devastating flash.
-
-“My God!” he said, in a whisper, half rapture, half surprise.
-
-Aglow with excitement he removed the shade from the electric lamp.
-Holding the picture beneath the light, an arm’s length away from his
-eyes, he turned it over several times in that fashion of the expert
-which June had now learned to dread. And then humming softly, and with
-his fingers still enclosing it, he passed beyond the screen to a table
-on which lay a microscope.
-
-With a feeling of nausea, June watched everything he did. Only too well
-she knew that the microscope would simply feed his excitement. In a
-fresh spasm of weakness, she reeled against the chimneypiece. She had
-now the sensation of having fallen over a precipice into a bottomless
-pit. Already she was sinking down, down, down into night and damnation.
-
-Keller soon returned, microscope in hand; and while he plied it under
-the lamp she dare not glance at his face. Passively she waited for his
-next words. The power of action had left her.
-
-When, at last, he did speak, his voice was calmer and gentler than she
-looked for. “Tell me,” he said, “how did you come by this rather jolly
-old thing?”
-
-The tone of playfulness was almost silly. But she was not deceived, for
-striking through it was the oiliness of Uncle Si. And she knew that she
-had only to glance at that face shining pale under the lamp, which was
-a thing she dare not do, to carry the resemblance farther.
-
-“Tell me,” he repeated softly.
-
-A sense of destiny seemed to weigh her down.
-
-“It has been given to me.” Her voice was hardly audible.
-
-“Given to you.” He smiled a little, as his mind went off in search
-of the half forgotten fragments of their talk two days ago. “Let me
-see--your best boy, wasn’t it?--who made you a present of a picture--by
-a well known R. A.?”
-
-June did not know how to answer, yet she was able to realize that an
-answer of some kind was imperative.
-
-“That’s it,” she said. There was nothing else she could say.
-
-“I rather like this thing, do you know.” His voice was acquiring a
-sort of growing brightness which seemed quite to admit her to his
-confidence. “It might almost have been painted by the snuffy old
-Scotsman--one MacFarlane by name--who first shewed me how to draw.
-It’s just in his manner. By Jove!”--The voice of Adolph Keller seemed
-to glow with humour--“I can almost see that cantankerous whiskyfied
-old fool daubing that water and those trees. But in his day not a bad
-painter, you know, not a bad painter.” And the voice of the pupil
-tailed off in a note of reluctant affection of which he seemed half
-ashamed.
-
-It was June’s turn to say something, but her frozen lips could not
-utter.
-
-Keller, holding the picture in both hands, gave her a side look,
-which he tried, as far as he could, to conceal. In the midst of this
-scrutiny, he said: “To you, I expect, one picture is very much the same
-as another?”
-
-“I know what I like,” June was able to answer, perhaps for no better
-reason than that by now she understood only too well that it hardly
-mattered what she answered.
-
-“Well, anyhow, that’s something,” said Keller, with a forced laugh.
-“Great thing to know your mind in these little matters. Nice of your
-best boy--was your best boy, wasn’t it?--to give you this. Not that
-it’s worth much to the ordinary buyer. Pictures are like lovers, you
-know. Their beauty, sometimes, is in the eye of the beholder.”
-
-It sickened her to hear him lie in this way. The deadly sensation of
-falling, falling, falling came over her again. But she let him run on.
-For one thing she lacked the power to check him; and even had the power
-been hers it would have been worse than futile to try to do so.
-
-
-
-
-XL
-
-
-“LOOK here,” said Adolph Keller, in the midst of his prattle.
-“I’ve taken rather a fancy to this bit of a thing. Suppose you let me
-have it. I’ll give you a landscape in exchange; I’ve one or two that
-are not so bad, and you shall have your pick. Moreover,” and he fixed
-June with a steady eye, “you shall have your sovereign as well.”
-
-She shook her head tensely. Inclination now wished to tell him the
-fabulous worth of the picture; but prudence said no. The calculated way
-in which he had lied was proof enough that he knew its value already.
-She held out her hand. In a voice dry and choking she said: “Please
-give it to me. I ought to be going.”
-
-He gazed at her with the eye of a condor. “Much better take what you
-can get for it, hadn’t you? It’ll be a difficult thing to sell, you
-know. This is quite a fair offer.”
-
-“Give it me, please,” June gasped miserably.
-
-“Don’t be a little fool.”
-
-The tone was like the closing of a door. She knew at once that he had
-not the remotest intention of giving it back to her. And what followed
-immediately upon the words made the fact only too clear. He laid the
-picture on a table some little distance away, and then pouring out a
-quantity of spirit he drank it neat. His next act was to produce a case
-from which he took forth a pound note.
-
-“Here you are,” he said roughly. “Take this and be jolly thankful. And
-then make yourself scarce, as soon as you like.”
-
-It was an intimation that there was going to be no more pretence.
-The tone was that of a cynical bully who judged it to be best for
-both parties that the owner of the Van Roon should now be given an
-unmistakable perception of reality.
-
-Overdriven as June was, the knowledge that at the very last she was
-to be robbed of the fruits of her hard-won victory was more than she
-could bear. Faced by this man’s cool insolence and mean cunning, she
-was swept by a tide of rage. He knew that she could have no proof of
-ownership, and he was going to reap a full advantage from the fact. At
-that moment, of an unendurable bitterness, she was spurred and lashed
-by the same Devil which two hours ago had driven Uncle Si to frenzy.
-
-“The picture’s mine,” she cried hoarsely. And then, advancing towards
-the table. “Give it me ... you thief!”
-
-At the ugly word he recoiled a step, but the next instant he grabbed
-her by the wrists. In the struggle to get free, she felt his evil
-breath upon her face. Many a dram must have gone to so much foulness;
-as his powerful grip slowly fastened upon her there came swift
-knowledge of a new and more urgent peril.
-
- * * * * *
-
-She was alone with this man in his own flat. Utterly without a means
-of defence as she was, she had been mad enough to offer him a physical
-challenge. In a few seconds she would be at his mercy. And then,
-inflamed by drink, and being the kind of beast that he was he would
-insist upon the spoils of the victor.
-
-Before she was fully alive to what was taking place she found herself
-forced slowly backwards to the wall. She knew then that she was
-fighting for her life, and for that which in this unspeakable moment
-implied so much more.
-
-“I’ll teach you to come here, you----!” His face was that of a maniac.
-
-She gave a shriek of terror and lashed out wildly at his shins.
-Fighting like a tigress, at first she kept him at bay. The power of his
-hands was terrific, but she did not scruple to use the weapons nature
-had given her. After a long and horrible minute of claws, teeth and
-feet, in the course of which she bit him savagely, it grew reasonably
-clear to Adolph Keller that if only she cares to use it, the female of
-the species does not lack a means of defence.
-
-“You beauty!” he gasped, as he struggled to shift his grip upon her.
-
-Goaded by the furies he found his way at last to her throat. And then
-she felt that he was going to kill her. Moreover, as his madman’s grip
-began slowly to distil her life through its fingers, he perceived how
-simple a matter it was going to be.
-
-
-
-
-XLI
-
-
-KELLER’S own defences were almost down, but just in the nick
-of time was he able to realize this fact. And man of calculation that
-he was, even in this moment of madness, when each devil in his soul
-conspired for his final overthrow, he was able, by dint of underlying
-coolness of blood to make a powerful effort to save himself.
-
-He longed to kill this wretched girl, but as he pressed his fingers
-into the soft and delicate throat, he was stayed by thoughts of the
-price that would have to be paid for wreaking an insane passion upon
-her.
-
-For a wild instant he feared that the premonition had come too late;
-the primordial beast in his heart had slipped its chain. Already it
-had tasted blood. In this frenzy of revolt, the fetters imposed by
-centuries of civil life were hardly likely to be submitted to again.
-
-Gasping and helpless June felt that she was dying. The clutch upon her
-was that of the garotte. Her eyes began to darken. Clawing the air for
-the breath she could not draw, the end that seemed inevitable now was
-yet far off.
-
-At last, as if responding to her prayer, a kind of stupor came upon
-her. But how tardily! Brain, heart, soul, body contended no more
-against a power beyond their own; at last her slow life was ebbing. The
-end of torment indescribable would be akin to joy.
-
-Æons seemed to pass. A flicker of summer lightning, ages off, came
-and was not. So faint it was and so far that it could only be reckoned
-in terms of eternity. More light flickered which, of a sudden, grew
-miraculously near. The vivid sense of pain returned; she grew alive to
-the fact that the harsh glare of the electric bulb, which was still
-unshaded, was beating down upon her eyes.
-
-Powerful arms were about her, she was being supported. The fumes of
-raw spirit were in her nostrils, a glass was pressed against her lips.
-She fought again to get free, only feebly now, for this was but a last
-reaction of a dying will. Yet the final word of all was nature’s. When
-mind itself had ceased to count, the life-force grasped wildly at the
-proffered means of life.
-
-“Thank God!” she heard a thick voice mutter. “I felt sure you were a
-goner.”
-
-A livid face, whose eyes seemed to blind her own, materialized suddenly
-before her. “Drink it up, damn you!” said the voice hoarsely. “And then
-get out--you----!”
-
-It was insult for the sake of insult, and therefore the full measure of
-her victory. But it meant less than nothing to June now. She scarcely
-heard, or hearing did not comprehend. Beyond pain and suffering, beyond
-good and evil her torn spirit only craved release.
-
-As soon as the fire in the glass had kindled her veins this desire
-was met, less, however, by the operation of her own will than by the
-will of Keller. As if she had been a noisome reptile whom his flesh
-abhorred, and yet had a superstitious fear of killing, he dragged her
-out of the room, along the short passage as far as the door of the
-flat. Slipping back the catch, he flung her out on to the landing.
-
-As she fetched up against the iron railing opposite the door, which
-guarded the well of the staircase, she heard a low hiss: “Take yourself
-off as soon as you like, you----, or you’ll find the police on your
-track.”
-
-
-
-
-XLII
-
-
-JUNE had no idea of the time that she lay in a huddle against
-the railing. But it may not have been so long in fact as it was in
-experience. Shattered she might be, yet unknown to herself, there was
-still a reserve of fighting power to draw upon.
-
-Cold iron, moreover, and raw air had a magic of their own. Clear of
-that mephitic room and the foul presence of Keller, a fine human
-machine began slowly to renew itself. Except for a faint gleam from
-the room out of which she had just come, stealing through the fanlight
-of the door out of which she had been flung, there was not a sign of
-light upon the staircase. The entire building appeared to be deserted.
-Its stone-flagged steps were full of echoes as soon as she ventured to
-move upon them; and when clinging to the railing for support she had
-painfully descended two she entered a region of total darkness.
-
-It was like going down into a pit. Could she have only been sure that
-death awaited her below, she might have been tempted to fling herself
-into it headlong. But she knew that the ground was not far off.
-
-Three or four steps more brought her to the vestibule. At the end of it
-was a door, open to the street. Outside this door shone a faint lamp,
-round which weird shadows circled in a ghostly witch-dance. The night
-beyond was a wall of horrors, which she had lost the will to face.
-
-Met by this pitiless alternative, she recoiled against the wall of the
-vestibule, huddling in its darkest corner, behind the stairs. Crouching
-here, like a hunted thing at bay, she fought for the courage to go out
-and face her destiny.
-
-She fought in vain. Half collapsed as she now was, a spur was needed to
-drive her into the grim wilderness of the open street. One glance at
-the crypt outside sufficed to tell her that with no point to make for,
-it would be best to stay where she was and hope soon to die.
-
-Why had she not had the sense to throw herself down the stairs and kill
-herself? A means would have to be found before the night was out. She
-could bear no more. A terrible reaction was upon her. It was as if a
-private door in her mind had suddenly given way and a school of awful
-phantoms had rushed in and flooded it.
-
-She was living in a nightmare that was too bad to be true. But it was
-true and there lay its terror. Adrift in the dark canyons of that vast
-city, penniless and alone, with the marks of thieves and murderers upon
-her bruised body, and her treasure stolen, there was only one thing to
-look for now.
-
-Death, however, would not be easy to come by. As she huddled in cold
-darkness in the recess behind the stairs she felt that her will was
-going. To enter the night and make an end would need courage; but a
-miserable clapping together of the jaws was sign enough that the last
-hope of all was slipping away from her.
-
-
-
-
-XLIII
-
-
-COWERING in body and spirit in that dark corner, time, for
-June, became of no account. Perhaps, after all, she might be allowed to
-die where she was. As a kind of inertia crept upon her she was able to
-draw something of comfort from the thought. It would be better than the
-river or being run over in the street.
-
-She grew very cold; yet a lowering of the body’s temperature induced a
-heightened consciousness. Aches and pains sprang into life; the forces
-of her mind began to reassert themselves; the phantoms about her took
-on new powers of menace. Gradually it became clear to June, under the
-goad of this new and sharper phase of suffering, that mere passivity
-could not induce the death she longed for.
-
-No, it was not in that way the end would come. She would have to go
-into the shadow-land beyond the lamp, and seek some positive means of
-destroying herself. For that reason she must hold on to the fragment
-of will that now remained to her. It alone could release her from the
-awful pit in which she was now engulfed.
-
-She gathered herself for an effort to move towards the fog-encircled
-light at the entrance to the street. But the effort, when made,
-amounted to nothing. Her limbs were paper, all power of volition was
-gone.
-
-The October raw struck to her blood. She began to whimper miserably. To
-pain of mind was added pain of body, but the delicate apparatus from
-whose harmony sprang the fuse of action was out of gear. Something must
-be done; yet no matter how definite the task, any form of doing was
-beyond her now.
-
-At this dire moment, however, help came. It came, moreover, in an
-unlooked-for way. She heard a door slam over head. There was the sound
-of a match being struck, and then came a gingerly shuffle of feet on
-the stone stairs.
-
-Someone was coming down. June cowered still lower into the dark recess
-at the back of the stairway. A man was approaching. And by the flicker
-of the match which he threw away as he reached the floor of the
-vestibule she saw that the man was Keller.
-
-Faint and but momentary as was the glimpse afforded, June, with every
-sense strung again to the point of intensity, saw that under Keller’s
-arm was a brown paper parcel. The sight of it was like a charm. Some
-fabulous djinnee might have lurked in that neat package, who commanded
-a miraculous power of reaction upon the human will.
-
-Keller struck a second match and peered into the shadows. June knew
-that he was looking to see if she had lingered there, but the light
-could not pierce to the corner in which she crouched; and it burnt
-itself out, leaving him none the wiser.
-
-Without striking another match Keller moved away from her towards the
-doorway, and as he did so June felt a swift release of heart and brain.
-A thrill of new energy ran through her. No sooner had Keller passed out
-of the vestibule, beyond the lamp into the fog, than without conscious
-impulse or design she began to follow him.
-
-It may have been the reasoned act of a lucid being, but at first it
-did not appear to be so. Once, however, her limbs were moving, all her
-faculties, now intensely awake, seemed as if by magic to bear them
-company. As soon as she reached the open street, with Keller a clear
-ten yards ahead, the keen air on her face had an effect of strong wine.
-Her nerves felt again the sense of motion; the impulse of the natural
-fighter unfurled strong pinions within her. All the virile sense and
-the indomitable will of a sound inheritance rallied to her need.
-
-Growing sensibly stronger at every yard, she followed Keller round the
-corner into Manning Square. The mist was thick, the lamps poor and few,
-but as well as she could she kept on his track. Lurking pantherlike in
-the deep shadows of the house-walls, she had approached within five
-yards of him by the time he had turned the corner into a bye-street.
-He went a few yards along this, and then zigzagged into a squalid
-ill-smelling thoroughfare whose dismal length seemed unending.
-
-June had no difficulty in keeping up with these twists and winds, for
-Keller, impeded by the fog, moved slowly. For her, however, the fog had
-its own special problem, since there was a danger of losing him if he
-was allowed to get too far ahead; and yet if his steps were dogged too
-closely there was always the fear that he might turn round suddenly and
-see her.
-
-At last the interminable street seemed to be nearing its end. For
-June, whose every faculty was now strung up to an unnatural acuteness,
-saw but a short distance in front the brightly lit awning of the
-Underground looming through the fog.
-
-In a flash she realized the nature of the peril. Only too surely was
-this the bourn for which Keller was making. Once within its precincts
-and her last remaining hope would be gone.
-
-It must be now or never. The spur of occasion drove deep in her heart.
-She knew but too well that the hope was tragically small, but wholly
-desperate as she was, with the penalty of failure simply not to be met,
-she would put all to the touch.
-
-Closer and closer she crept up behind the quarry. But the entrance to
-the Tube loomed now so near that it began to seem certain that she
-must lose him before she could attempt what she had to do. Abruptly,
-however, within ten yards or so of his goal, Keller stopped. He began
-to search the pockets of his overcoat for a box of matches to relight
-his pipe which had gone out. While so doing, and in the preoccupation
-of the moment, he took the parcel from under his right arm, and set it
-rather carelessly beneath his left.
-
-Providence had given June her chance. Like a falcon, she swooped
-forward. Aim and timing incredibly true, at the instant Keller struck a
-match and bent over his pipe, her fingers closed on the Van Roon, and
-whisked it out of his unguarded grasp.
-
-
-
-
-XLIV
-
-
-AS June turned and ran she heard a wild and startled oath.
-Before her was the eternal fog-laden darkness of the narrow street. But
-now it struck her with a thrill of pure terror that the mist was not
-thick enough to conceal her flight. The swift surprise of the onset had
-gained for her a start of a few yards, but instantly she knew that it
-would not suffice.
-
-She ran, all the same, as if her heart would burst. But her legs seemed
-to wear the shackles that afflict one in a dream. Her most frantic
-efforts did not urge them on, and yet, in spite of that, they bore her
-better than she knew. Not a soul was in sight. She could hear Keller’s
-boots echo on the damp pavement as they pounded behind her. It could
-only be a matter of seconds before his fingers were again on her
-throat. But this time, before robbing her of the Van Roon and getting
-clear, he would have to kill her.
-
-The vow had hardly been made, when at the other side of the street
-she saw a thread of light. It came from a house whose door was open.
-Instinctively she turned and made one final dash for it. This was the
-last wild hope there was.
-
-A man, it seemed, was in the act of leaving the house. Wearing overcoat
-and hat, he stood just within the doorway peering into the murk before
-venturing out. June flung herself literally upon him.
-
-“Save me! Save me!” she was able to gasp. “A man! A man is after me!”
-
-The house was of the poverty-stricken kind whose living room opens on
-to the street. June had a confused vision of a glowing lamp, a bright
-fire, a dingy tablecloth and several people seated around it. Her wild
-impact upon the man who was about to put off from its threshold drove
-him backwards several paces into the room. At the same instant a female
-voice, loud and imperious, rose from the table.
-
-“Shut the door, Elbert, can’t yer? The fog’s comin’ in that thick it’ll
-put out the perishin’ fire.”
-
-The bewildered Elbert, raked fore and aft by fierce women,
-automatically obeyed the truculent voice at his back, even while he
-gave ground in a collision which seemed to rob him of any wit that he
-might possess. With a deft turn of the heel, he dealt the door a kick
-which effectually closed it in the murderous face of the halting and
-hesitating Keller.
-
-June, shuddering in every vein, clung to her protector.
-
-“Gawd-love-us-all!” Cries and commotion arose from the table, yet
-almost at once the imperious voice soared above the din. “Set her down,
-can’t yer, Elbert? Didn’t yer see that bloke?”
-
-“Ah--I did,” said Elbert, stolidly pressing his queer armful into a
-chair near the fire.
-
-“Better git after him lively,” said the voice at the table. “He’s the
-one as did in Kitty Lewis last week.”
-
-Elbert, a young man six feet tall and proportionately broad of
-shoulder, was not however a squire of dames. With a scared look on a
-face that even in circumstances entirely favourable could hardly rank
-as a thing of beauty, he moved to the door and slipped a bolt across.
-“Not goin’ near the----” he said, sullenly. “Not goin’ to be mixed up
-wiv it--not me.”
-
-The voice at the table, whose owner was addressed as Maw, proceeded “to
-tell off” Elbert. He was a skunk, he was no man, he was a mean swine.
-In the sight of Maw, who ran to words as well as flesh, Elbert was all
-this and more. She rose majestically, threatening to “dot him” if he
-didn’t “’op in,” and she came to June with an enormous bosom striving
-to burst from its anchorage, an apron that had once been white, and
-with her entire person exuding an odour peculiar to those of her sex
-who drink gin out of a teacup.
-
-Three other people were at the table, and they were engaged upon a meal
-of toasted cheese, raw onions and beer. Of these, two were girls about
-sixteen, scared, slatternly and anæmic; the third was a toothless hag
-who looked ninety; and as the whole family, headed by Maw, suddenly
-crowded round June, the terrified fugitive, shuddering in the chair by
-the fire, hardly knew which of her deliverers was the most repulsive.
-
-June fought with every bit of her strength against the threat of total
-collapse that assailed her now. In the desperate hope of warding off
-disaster, she gathered the last broken fragment of will. But nature
-had been driven too hard. For the second time within the space of one
-terrible hour, she lost the sense of where she was.
-
-
-
-
-XLV
-
-
-THE faces, with one exception, had receded into the background,
-when June returned slowly and painfully to a knowledge of what
-was happening. Maw was bending over her, and holding a cracked cup
-to her lips, and also “telling off” the others with a force and a
-scope of language that added not a little to June’s fear.
-
-Perhaps the smell of its contents had quite as much effect upon the
-sufferer as the cup’s restorative powers. It was so distasteful to one
-who had been taught to shun all forms of alcohol, that a sheer disgust
-helped to bring her round.
-
-At first, however, her mind was hardly more than a blank. But when,
-at last, a few links of recognition floated up into it out of the
-immediate past and hitched themselves to this strange present, a shock
-of new terror nearly overwhelmed her again. Recollection was like a
-knife stab. The Van Roon! The Van Roon! Where was it? Oh, God--if she
-had not got it after all!
-
-The thought was pain, pure and exquisite. But the case did not really
-call for it. She was clutching the Van Roon convulsively to her breast
-like a child holds a doll. As she wakened slowly to this fact her brain
-wonderfully cleared.
-
-The mind must be kept alive, if only to defend this talisman for whose
-sake she had already suffered so outrageously. She did not know where
-she was, and the evil presence holding the foul cup to her lips, and
-those other evil presences filling the background beyond gave her an
-intense apprehension.
-
-Maw, however, in spite of a general air of obscenity, meant well. It
-was not easy for this fact to declare itself through that loud voice
-and ruthless mien; but gradually it began to percolate to June’s
-violated nerves, and so gave her a fleck of courage to hold on to that
-sense of identity which still threatened at the first moment again to
-desert her.
-
-“Where was you goin’, deery?”
-
-Rude the tone, but when June’s ear disentangled the words, she was able
-to appreciate that they were spoken in the way of kindness. But if the
-knowledge brought a spark of comfort it was quickly dowsed. Where was
-she going? To that grim question there was no possible answer.
-
-“Scared out of her life, poor lamb!” said Maw. With furtive truculence
-she announced the fact to the rather awed spectators who gathered once
-more about the sufferer.
-
-“Where you come from?”
-
-June’s only answer was a shiver. The frozen silence was so full of the
-uncanny that Maw shook her own head dismally and tapped it with a grimy
-finger.
-
-In the view of Maw, for such a calamity there was only one remedy. Once
-more the cup was pressed to June’s lips; once more it was resisted,
-this time with a hint of fierceness reassuring to the onlookers,
-inasmuch that it implied a return of life.
-
-“Looks respectable,” said the cracked voice of the crone, who was now
-at Maw’s elbow.
-
-“Where was you goin’?” demanded Maw again.
-
-June was beyond tears, or she would have shed them. Now that the facts
-of the situation in all their hopelessness were streaming back to her,
-a feeling of sheer impotence kept her dumb.
-
-“Off her rocker,” said Elbert gloomily.
-
-
-
-
-XLVI
-
-
-AMID the silence which followed Elbert’s remark, June fought hard to
-cast her weakness off. She wanted no longer to die. The recovery of the
-talisman inhibited, at least for the time being, that desire. Acutely
-aware that the Van Roon was still miraculously hers, she felt that come
-what might she must go on.
-
-But her position was hopeless indeed. She dare not venture out of
-doors, with a murderous thief waiting to spring upon her. And if
-venture she did, there was nowhere she could go. Besides, had there
-been any place of refuge for such a weary bundle of frightened misery,
-without money and with a sorry ignorance of the fog-bound maze of
-bricks and mortar in which she was now lost, there would have been no
-means of getting to her destination.
-
-At the same time, she had no wish to stay with these uncouth,
-ill-looking, evil-smelling people one moment longer than was necessary.
-In a curiously intimate way she was reminded of that grim story Oliver
-Twist, which had so powerfully haunted her youth. To her distorted
-mind, this squalid interior was a veritable thieves’ kitchen, the crone
-a female Fagin, the angel of the cup, a counterpart of Bill Sikes, and
-the gloomy, beetle-browed Elbert a kind of Artful Dodger grown up. She
-and her treasure could never be safe in such a place, yet at the other
-side of the door nameless horrors awaited her.
-
-In June’s present state it was far beyond her power to cope with so
-dire a problem. Keeping a stony silence as those faces, devoured by
-curiosity, pressed ever closer upon her, she half surrendered to her
-weakness again.
-
-Amid the new waves of misery which threatened to submerge her, she
-was wrenched fiercely back to sensibility. The Van Roon was torn by
-a strong hand from her grasp. As if a spring had been pressed in her
-heart she rose with a little cry. Maw was in the act of handing the
-picture to Elbert. “There’s a label on it, ain’t there?” she said.
-
-Still half stupefied, June clung to the table for support, while
-Elbert, who was evidently the family scholar, read out slowly the name
-and address that was written upon the parcel: “Miss Babraham, 39b Park
-Lane, W.”
-
-June was hardly in a state just then to grasp the significance of the
-words. Her mind was wholly given up to concern for the treasure which
-had passed to alien hands. And yet the words had significance, even for
-her, as the mind-process they induced soon began to reveal.
-
-A locked door of memory, of which she had lost the key, seemed to glide
-back. Thoughts of William, of his friend, the tall, beautiful and
-distinguished wearer of the blue crepe de chine, and of Sir Arthur, her
-father, came crowding into her brain. And with them came a perceptible
-easing of spirit, as if they had been sped by the kindly hand of that
-Providence, of whom she had never been so much in need.
-
-The recognition of this acted upon her like a charm. Girt by the
-knowledge that she was not alone in the world after all, and that
-friends might be at hand if only she could reach out to them, her mind
-began once more to function.
-
-Even while Maw and Elbert were occupying themselves with the parcel’s
-address and its specific importance, June was fain to inquire of an
-awaking self how such magic words came to be there at such a moment.
-Casting back to recent events, over which oblivion had swept, she was
-able to recall certain strands in the subtle woof of Fate. Days ago,
-years they seemed now, Miss Babraham had sent to William a picture
-frame to be restored. The stout brown paper in which it had been
-wrapped appealed to June’s thrifty soul, and she had stowed it away in
-her box for use on a future occasion. Her mind’s new, almost dangerous
-clarity, enabled her to remember that upon the paper’s inner side was
-an old Sotheran, Bookseller, Piccadilly label which bore the name and
-address of Miss Babraham.
-
-The piecing together of this slender chain gave June the thing she
-needed most. At this signal manifestation of what Providence could do,
-hope revived in her. If only she could get to Park Lane--wherever Park
-Lane might be!--to Miss Babraham.
-
-As if in answer to the half-formed wish, Maw’s dominant voice took up
-the parable. “Elbert, you’d better see this lidy as fur as Park Lane.”
-
-
-
-
-XLVII
-
-
-ELBERT did not welcome the prospect with open arms. Nature had
-not designed him for such a task. All the same, Maw was imaged clearly
-in his mind as one whose word was law.
-
-At the best of times, Elbert’s obedience to that word was apt to be
-grudging. And to-night, with murder lurking outside in the darkness, he
-was full of a disgusted reluctance at having to face such a prospect.
-Even in circumstances wholly favourable to it, the countenance of
-Elbert was not attractive; to June at this moment it was very much the
-reverse. She felt that its owner was not to be trusted an inch.
-
-Meanwhile her mind was growing very active. Miss Babraham’s name and
-address, that magic omen, was like an elixir; it quickened the blood,
-it strengthened the soul. If only she could bear her treasure to Park
-Lane all might yet be well!
-
-Urged by this spur, native wit sprang to her aid. The first thing to be
-done was to get clear of present company. She was haunted still by the
-likeness to Fagin’s kitchen; but also there was a recollection of the
-fact that a Tube Station was only a few yards along the street. That
-was the haven wherein salvation lay.
-
-Pressing hard upon the hope, however, was the dismal knowledge that
-only one penny remained in her pocket. This sum could not take her to
-Park Lane, unless that Elysium was close at hand. Alas, it was not at
-all likely. Her ignorance of London was so great, moreover, that she
-would need help to find her way there; and in the process of obtaining
-it in her present state of weakness she might be caught by new perils.
-For it was only too likely that Keller was lurking outside in the fog,
-waiting to spring upon her and tear the Van Roon from her grasp at the
-first chance that arose.
-
-Beset by such problems, June felt that she was between the devil and
-the deep sea. Perhaps the best thing she could do was to dash along the
-street to the Tube, and then put herself in the hands of the nearest
-policeman. But even to attempt such a feat was to run a grave risk.
-
-Elbert, in the meantime, scowling and disgruntled, was bracing himself
-under further pressure from Maw to brave the perils of the night. June
-felt, however, that it would be wise not to saddle herself with this
-reluctant champion if it could be avoided. To this end, she was now
-able to pluck up the spirit to ask what was the best means of getting
-to Park Lane.
-
-Maw did not know, but Elbert when appealed to said that she could take
-the Tube to Marble Arch, or she might turn the corner at the end of the
-street and pick up a bus in Tottenham Court Road.
-
-How much was the fare? Twopence, Elbert thought. Alas, June had only
-a penny. She was painfully shy about confessing this difficulty, but
-there was no help for it.
-
-“Don’t you worry, Miss. Elbert is goin’ to see you all the way.” And
-Maw fixed a savage eye upon her son.
-
-Much as June would have preferred to forego the services of this
-paladin, Maw’s ferocious glance settled the matter finally.
-
-“And you’ll carry the pawcel for the lidy,” said Maw, as Elbert,
-scowling more darkly than ever turned up the collar of his overcoat.
-
-
-
-
-XLVIII
-
-
-THE Van Roon, at that moment, was in the hand of Maw. And
-although June was on fire to get it back, her natural faculties had the
-authority to tell her that undue eagerness would be most unwise. She
-must be content to await her chance, yet there was no saying when that
-chance would come; for Maw was careful to hand personally the parcel to
-Elbert.
-
-Before June set out on her journey one of the girls pressed a cup of
-tea from the family brew upon her. It was lukewarm and thrice-stewed,
-but June was able to drink a little and to feel the better for it. She
-was in a high state of tension, all the same, when Elbert opened the
-street door, her treasure under his arm, and she followed close behind
-him into the darkness.
-
-Surely Keller must be out there in the fog, waiting to attack them. Her
-heart beat wildly as she marched side by side with Elbert along the
-street towards the Tube. Distrust of her cavalier was great. Should he
-guess the value of the thing he bore, as likely as not he would play
-her a trick. But for the moment, at any rate, this fear was merged in
-the sharper one of what was concealed by the fantastic shadow shapes
-of that dark thoroughfare. Less than a hundred yards away, however,
-was the Tube Station. And to June’s unspeakable relief they gained
-its light and publicity without misadventure. Here, moreover, was her
-chance. While Elbert searched his pockets for fourpence to purchase
-two tickets for Marble Arch, she insisted on relieving him of the
-parcel. Once restored to her care, she clung to it so tenaciously that
-the puzzled Elbert had reluctantly to give up the hope of getting it
-back again.
-
-Going down in the lift to the trains, with the surge of fellow
-passengers guaranteeing a measure of safety, June allowed herself to
-conclude that Elbert, after all, might be less of a ruffian than he
-looked. If he had no graces of mind or mansion, he was yet not without
-a sort of rude care for her welfare. By no wish of his own was he
-seeing a distressed damsel to her home, yet the process of doing so,
-once he grew involved in it, seemed to minister in some degree to a
-latent sense of chivalry. At all events he had a scowl for anyone whose
-elbows came too near his charge.
-
-Arriving at Marble Arch in due course, the heroic Elbert piloted the
-fugitive out of the station and across the road into Park Lane. Here,
-under a street lamp, they paused a moment to examine the label on
-the parcel for the number of the house they sought. Thirty-nine was
-the number, and it proved to be not the least imposing home in that
-plutocratic thoroughfare.
-
-Elbert accompanied June as far as its doorstep. Before ringing the
-bell she said good-bye to her escort with all the gratitude she could
-muster, begging him to give her his name and address, so that she might
-at least restore to him the price of her fare. Yet the squire of dames
-saw no necessity for this. His scowl was softened a little by her
-thanks, but his only answer was to press the electric button and then,
-without a word, to slink abruptly away into the fog.
-
-
-
-
-XLIX
-
-
-JUNE felt a wild excitement, as she stood waiting for the
-answer to her ring. The stress of events had buoyed her up, but
-with Elbert no longer at her side and the door of a strange house
-confronting her, trolls were loose once more in her brain. A fresh wave
-of panic surged through her, and again she feared that she was going to
-faint.
-
-The prompt opening of the door by a gravely dignified manservant acted
-as a strong restorative. June mustered the force of will to ask if she
-could see Miss Babraham. Such a request, made in a nervous and excited
-manner, gave pause to the footman, who at first could not bring himself
-to invite her into the large dimly lighted hall. Finally he did so;
-closed the door against the fog, and then asked her name with an air of
-profound disapproval, which at any other time must have proved highly
-embarrassing.
-
-“I’m Miss Gedge,” said June. “From the second-hand shop in New Cross
-Street. Miss Babraham’ll remember me.”
-
-The servant slowly repeated the fragmentary words in a low voice of
-cutting emphasis. “I’m afraid,” he said, while his eye descended to
-June’s shoes and up again, “Miss Babraham will not be able to see you
-to-night. However, I’ll inquire.”
-
-Superciliously the footman crossed the hall, to discuss the matter
-with an unseen presence in its farthest shadows. The conference was
-brief but unsatisfactory, for a moment later the unseen presence slowly
-materialized into the august shape of a butler, who seemed at once to
-diminish the footman into a relative nothingness.
-
-“Perhaps you’ll let me know your business,” said the butler, in a tone
-which implied that she could have no business, at any rate with Miss
-Babraham, at such an hour.
-
-June, alas, could not explain the nature of her errand. These two men
-were so imposing, so unsympathetic, so harsh, so frightening that had
-life itself depended upon her answers, and in quite a special degree
-she now felt that it did, she was yet unequal to the task of making
-them effective.
-
-“Miss Babraham cannot see you now,” said the slow-voiced butler, with
-an air of terrible finality.
-
-“But I must see her. I simply must,” wildly persisted June.
-
-“It’s impossible to see her now,” said the butler.
-
-The words caused June to stagger back against the wall. In answer to
-her tragic eyes, the butler said reluctantly: “You had better call
-again some time to-morrow, and I’ll send in your name.”
-
-“I--I must see her now,” June gasped wildly.
-
-The butler was adamant. “You can’t possibly see her to-night.”
-
-“Why can’t I?” said June, desperately.
-
-“She is going to a ball.”
-
-The words were like a blow. A vista of the fog outside and of
-herself wandering with her precious burden all night long in it
-homeless, penniless, desolate, came upon her with unnerving force.
-“But--please!--I must see her to-night,” she said, with a shudder of
-misery.
-
-Faced by the butler’s pitiless air, June felt her slender hope to be
-ebbing away. She would be turned adrift in the night. And what would
-happen to her then? She could not walk the streets till daybreak with
-the Van Roon under her arm. Already she had reached the limit of
-endurance. The dark haze before her eyes bore witness to the fact that
-her strength was almost gone. No matter what the attitude of the butler
-towards her she must not think of quitting this place of refuge unless
-she was flung out bodily, for her trials here were nought by comparison
-with those awaiting her outside.
-
-June’s defiance was very puzzling to the stern functionary who quite
-plainly was at a loss how to deal with it. But in the midst of these
-uncertainties the problem was unexpectedly solved for him. A glamour
-of white satin, jewels and fur appeared on the broad staircase. Miss
-Babraham descended slowly.
-
-Once more was June upheld by a sense of Providence. Hope flickered
-again, a painful, fluctuating gleam. She sprang forward to intercept
-this vision of pure beauty, wildly calling the name “Miss Babraham!
-Miss Babraham!”
-
-The dazzling creature was startled out of her glowing self-possession:
-“Why, who _are_ you?” she cried.
-
-In a gush of strange words, June strove to make clear that she was the
-girl from the antique shop in New Cross Street, and that her uncle,
-its proprietor, was a very wicked old man who was trying to steal a
-valuable picture that had been given to her. She pressed the Van Roon
-upon the astonished Miss Babraham and besought her to take care of it.
-
-After that, June had only a very dim idea of what happened. She found
-herself in a sort of anteroom without knowing how she got there, with
-faces of a surprised curiosity around her. Foremost of these was the
-lovely Miss Babraham, a thing of sheer beauty in her ball-dress, who
-asked questions to which June could only give confused replies, and
-issued orders that she was not able to follow.
-
-Everything began to grow more and more like a wild and terrible dream.
-Other people appeared on the scene, among whom June was just able to
-recognize the tall form of Sir Arthur Babraham. By then, however she no
-longer knew what she was doing or saying, for deep blanks were invading
-her consciousness; even the treasure in which her very soul was merged
-had somehow slipped from her mental grasp, and like everything else had
-ceased to have significance.
-
-
-
-
-L
-
-
-AT eleven o’clock the next morning, Sir Arthur Babraham,
-looking worried and distrait, was pretending to read the “Times.” If
-ever a man could be said to have “been born with a silver spoon in his
-mouth” it was this soft-voiced, easy-mannered, kindly gentleman. The
-rubs of a hard world had hardly touched his unflawed surfaces. He sat
-on committees, it was true, and played Providence at third or fourth
-hand to less happily situated mortals; yet scarcely, if at all, had he
-been brought face to face with the stark realities of life.
-
-It is never too late, however, for some new thing to occur. The
-previous evening an experience had happened to this worthy man; and
-he could not rid his mind of the fact that it was disconcerting. On a
-table at his elbow was a picture without a frame, and more than once
-his eyes strayed from the newspaper to this object, which at a first
-glance was so insignificant, and yet as if cursed with an “obi” it had
-the power to dominate him completely.
-
-In the midst of this preoccupation, Laura Babraham entered the room.
-She had returned late from the dance, and this was her first appearance
-that morning. Hardly had she saluted her father when her eye also fell
-on the picture, and a look of deep anxiety came into her eyes.
-
-“Have you heard anything from the hospital?” she asked eagerly.
-
-“I rang them up half an hour ago,” said Sir Arthur. “The girl is very
-ill indeed. I gather from the tone of the person with whom I talked
-that the case is pretty serious.”
-
-“Yes,” said Laura Babraham, in a low voice. “One felt sure of that.
-Never again do I want to see a human creature in the state that poor
-thing was in last night. I’ve been haunted by her ever since.”
-
-“Pretty bad, I must say.” Sir Arthur plucked sharply at his moustache.
-“According to the Hospital, she’s been knocked about and generally
-ill-used. There are marks on her throat, and they want my opinion as to
-whether they should communicate with the police.”
-
-“What do you advise, papa?” said Laura, with a growing concern.
-
-“One doesn’t know what to advise.” Sir Arthur’s moustache continued to
-receive harsh treatment. “We are faced with rather a problem, it seems
-to me.”
-
-“You mean that it will be a matter for the police if she doesn’t get
-better?”
-
-“Yes, certainly that. And it may be a matter for the police if she does
-get better.”
-
-Laura Babraham agreed; yet even then she did not see the problem in
-its full complexity. Sir Arthur, taking the first step towards her
-enlightenment, pointed to the Van Roon: “My dear, beyond any doubt
-that is a most precious thing. And, ignoring for the moment the state
-in which this young woman turned up last night, the question we have
-to ask ourselves is: What is she doing with it at all? And why was she
-ranging the streets alone, in the fog, at that hour?”
-
-“From what one gathered,” said Laura, “the picture is hers, and her
-uncle, the old curio man in New Cross Street, with whom she lives, is
-determined to steal it.”
-
-“Quite. That’s her story, as far as one can get at it. But I put it to
-you, isn’t it far more likely--prima facie at any rate--that the girl
-is trying to steal it from the old dealer?”
-
-“I believe the poor thing is speaking the truth,” said Woman in the
-person of Miss Laura Babraham.
-
-“You mean, my dear,” said her logical parent, with a sad little smile,
-“that you _hope_ she is speaking the truth. With all my heart I
-hope so, too, even if it proves this old man--Gedge you say his name
-is--to be a terrible scoundrel. One of them certainly is not playing
-straight--but prima facie, as I say--if we call in the police, it is
-almost certain that it is this wretched girl who will find herself in
-prison.”
-
-“There I don’t agree, papa,” said Woman staunchly. “The poor thing
-says that William the assistant gave her the picture; and in all the
-dealings I have had with William in the course of the past year, he has
-been honesty itself.”
-
-Her father shook his head gently. “All very well, but Master William is
-the part of the story I like least. Is it probable, in the first place,
-that a young man who almost certainly has no money of his own, would
-be able to get possession of such a thing; and, again, assuming him to
-be clever enough to do so, is he going to be such a fool as to give it
-away to this girl? Let us look all the facts in the face. To my mind,
-the more one thinks of it the more inevitable the plain solution is.”
-
-“I’m absolutely convinced that William, at any rate, is honest.”
-
-Sir Arthur frowned and opened his cigar case. “And I for my part am
-convinced,” he said, with a sigh as he cut off the end of a Corona,
-“that our friend William is a cunning scoundrel, who has been deep
-enough to get this young woman to do the dirty work and run all the
-risks, because he must know as well as anybody that a great deal of
-money is at stake.”
-
-Laura Babraham had a considerable respect for her father’s judgment,
-yet she knew the value of her own. She did not think it was possible to
-be so deceived; her dealings with William had left her with the highest
-regard for his straightforwardness; if he proved to be the despicable
-creature Sir Arthur’s fancy painted him, never again would she be able
-to hold an opinion about anyone. Yet her father’s analysis of the case,
-as it presented itself to her clear mind, left her on the horns of a
-dilemma. Either this young man was a fool, or he was a rogue. Beset by
-two evils, she chose without hesitation that which to the feminine mind
-appeared the less.
-
-“He’s always struck one as rather simple in some ways and too much
-under the thumb of the old dealer, yet he’s really very clever.”
-
-Sir Arthur drew mental energy from his Corona. “Not clever enough to
-keep honest, my dear.”
-
-“Please don’t prejudge him. That wicked old man is at the back of all.”
-
-“Well, that is just what we have now to find out.”
-
-Laura assented; yet then arose the question as to the means by which
-the truth could be won. It was likely to resolve itself into an affair
-of William’s word against the word of his master. Whoever could tell
-the more plausible tale would be believed; and William’s friend saw
-from the outset that Circumstance had already weighted the scales
-heavily against him. On the face of it, the story as disclosed by the
-poor girl who was now in the Hospital, was frankly incredible.
-
-Recollection of the pitiful scene of the previous night brought to
-Laura Babraham’s mind her own urgent duty in the matter. The girl had
-begged her not on any account to give up the picture. So long as sense
-and coherence remained the unlucky creature had declared it to be her
-own lawful property. Laura had solemnly promised to see justice done,
-and it behooved her now to be as good as her word.
-
-“I suppose, papa, you have telephoned already to Mr. Gedge?”
-
-“The Hospital has, I believe,” said Sir Arthur. “I particularly asked
-them to do so. The old fellow must be very anxious about the girl, and
-perhaps even more anxious about his Van Roon.”
-
-“Please don’t say ‘his Van Roon’ before he’s proved the ownership.”
-
-“That won’t be difficult, I fear.”
-
-“We must make it as difficult for him as we can,” said the tenacious
-Laura.
-
-Sir Arthur shook his head. As a man of the world, he had but scant hope
-that the mystery would be cleared up in the way Laura desired.
-
-
-
-
-LI
-
-
-AT Number Forty-six, New Cross Street, the bottom seemed to
-have fallen out of the world. June’s flight with the picture, as soon
-as it became known to William, caused him not only intense pain, but
-also deep concern. The news was a tragic shock for which he was quite
-unprepared; and the behaviour of his master seemed, if possible, to
-make it worse. The old man was distraught. Now that it was no longer
-necessary to mask his intentions, prudence slipped from him like a
-veil. On his return, baffled and furious, from Victoria he at once
-accused William of being in the plot against him.
-
-William, hurt and astonished, was at a loss. He did not know all that
-had happened; he had only the broad facts to go upon that June had run
-off with the picture at an instant’s notice, without a word as to her
-plans and leaving no address; and the bitter reproaches of his master
-appeared to him the outpourings of a mind not quite sane.
-
-Such indeed they were. The truth was that upon one subject S. Gedge
-Antiques was a little unhinged. The love of money, an infirmity which
-had crept upon him year by year had begun to affect reason itself; and
-now that, as it seemed, he had thrown away, by his own carelessness,
-the one really big prize of his career, this dark fact came out.
-
-William, who found it very difficult indeed to think ill of anyone,
-could only accept the broad fact that the picture had meant even more
-to the old man than he had supposed; therefore this good fellow was
-inclined to pity his master. It was not for a mind such as his, which
-took things on trust, to fill in the details of a tragic episode. He
-did not look for the wherefore and the why, yet he was very deeply
-grieved by what had occurred.
-
-The old man could not rid his brain of the illusion that William had
-connived with June. Under the lash of an unreasoning rage he did not
-pause to consider the improbability of this, nor did he try to attain
-a broad view of the whole matter; it was almost as if his resentment,
-craving an outlet, must wreak itself upon the thing near at hand. Yet
-in the course of a few hours this dangerous obsession was to bring its
-own nemesis.
-
-About twelve o’clock the next day, M. Duponnet came to fetch the
-picture. It had been arranged that Mr. Gedge should present the cheque
-at the Bank in the meantime, and if duly approved, as there was every
-reason to expect that it would be, the Van Roon should be handed over
-at once.
-
-To the Frenchman’s surprise, he was now greeted by his own cheque,
-backed by a livid countenance of tragic exasperation. The treasure had
-been stolen.
-
-“Stolen!”
-
-The face of S. Gedge Antiques forbade all scepticism.
-
-“When? By whom?”
-
-Mussewer Duponny might well ask by whom! It had been stolen by the girl
-who did the housework--the old man could not bring himself, in such
-circumstances, to speak of her as his niece--and he had not the least
-doubt in his own mind that the youth who helped him in the business
-who, at that moment, was in the next room polishing chairs, had put her
-wise in the matter, and was standing in with her.
-
-S. Gedge Antiques, still in a frenzy of frustration, was hardly able
-to realize the gravity of this charge. Had he been in full command of
-himself, he must have weighed such a statement very carefully indeed
-before it was made. But remorselessly driven by his greed, he threw
-discretion to the wind.
-
-The disgruntled purchaser was quick to seize upon the accusation.
-To his mind, at least, its import was clear. Even if the seller did
-not perceive its full implication, the buyer of the Van Roon had no
-difficulty in doing so.
-
-“We must call in ze police, hein?”
-
-The words brought the old man up short. He proceeded to take his
-bearings; to find out, as well as his rage would let him, just where he
-stood in the matter. Certainly the police did not appeal to him at all.
-It was not a case for publicity, because the picture was not his: that
-was to say, having now reached a point where the law of _meum_ and
-_tuum_ had become curiously involved, it might prove exceedingly
-difficult and even more inconvenient to establish a title to the Van
-Roon. No, he preferred to do without the police.
-
-M. Duponnet, however, unfettered by a sense of restraint, argued
-volubly that the police be called in. The assistant was guilty or he
-was not guilty; and in any event it would surely be wise to enlist the
-help of those who knew best how to deal with thieves. Nothing could
-have exceeded the buyer’s conviction that this should be done, yet to
-his chagrin he quite failed to communicate it to S. Gedge Antiques.
-
-From that moment, a suspicion began to grow up in the Frenchman’s mind
-that the seller was not laying all his cards on the table. Could it be
-that he was telling a cock and bull story? According to Mr. Thornton,
-who was acting as a go-between, this old man had long had the name of a
-shifty customer. Undoubtedly he looked one this morning. Jules Duponnet
-had seldom seen a frontispiece he liked less; and the theory now gained
-a footing in his mind that the old fox wanted to go back on his bargain.
-
-There were two drawbacks, all the same, to M. Duponnet’s theory. In the
-first place, as no money had yet changed hands, it would be quite easy
-for S. Gedge Antiques to undo the bargain by a straightforward means;
-and further, beyond any shadow of doubt, the old man was horribly upset
-by his loss.
-
-“Let us go to ze bureau, Meester Gedge,” he said, as conviction renewed
-itself in the light of these facts.
-
-“No, no, no,” cried the old man, whose brain, capable at times of a
-surprising vigour, was now furiously at work.
-
-“But why not?”
-
-S. Gedge Antiques did not reply immediately, but at last a dark light
-broke over the vulpine face. “Why not, Mussewer Duponny? I’ll tell you.
-Because I think there may be a better way of dealing with that damned
-young scoundrel yonder.” William’s master pointed towards the inner
-room. “Happen the police’ll need all sorts of information we don’t want
-to give them; and my experience is, Mussewer, their methods are slow
-and clumsy, and out of date. They may take weeks over this job, and
-long before they are through with it, the picture will be in America.”
-
-“You may be right, Meester Gedge. But where’s the ’arm in seeing what
-they can do?”
-
-With the air of one whose faculties have been braced by a mental tonic,
-the old man shook his head decisively. “Mussewer Duponny,” he said, in
-a slow voice which gave weight and value to each word, “I’m thinking
-with a little help from yourself and Mr. Thornton I can deal with
-this--this scoundrel much better than the police.”
-
-“At your sairvice, Meester Gedge,” said Jules Duponnet, with a
-dry smile. He could not have been the man he was, had he remained
-insensitive to the depth of cunning which now transfigured the face of
-the old dealer. “But for Meester Thornton of course I cannot spick.”
-
-“You can’t, of course,” said the old fox, briskly. “But we’ll go right
-now, and have a word with Mr. Thornton on the subject.”
-
-Like one in whom a change sudden and mysterious has been wrought, S.
-Gedge Antiques stepped through the house door into the passage, took
-his hat and coat from the peg, and his heavy knotted walking stick out
-of the rickety umbrella stand, put his head into the room next door and
-said, in a harsh tone to the polisher of chairs, “Boy, I’m going along
-as far as Mr. Thornton’s, so you’d better keep an eye on the shop.”
-
-
-
-
-LII
-
-
-THE old man, contrary to his practice, was a little late for
-the midday meal, and he had a poor appetite for it. As he tried to eat
-the cold mutton and the potato William had baked for him, his thoughts
-seemed a long way from his plate. William himself, who was too full
-of trouble to give much attention to food, now saw that the old man’s
-earlier ferocity, which had hurt him even more than it had puzzled him,
-had yielded to a depth of melancholy that was hardly less disturbing.
-But the master’s manner, on his return from the visit to Mr. Thornton,
-was far more in accordance with his nature, at least as William
-understood that nature; indeed, his voice had recaptured the note of
-pathos which seemed natural to it whenever the Van Roon was mentioned.
-
-“I ought to tell you, boy,” he said, in a husky tone, towards the end
-of the meal, “that it looks as if there’ll be the dickens to pay over
-this job. A French detective from Paris has been here, and he’s coming
-again this afternoon to have a word with you.”
-
-“With me, sir?”
-
-The old man, whose eyes were furtively devouring the face of William,
-was quick to observe its startled look. “Yes, boy, you’re the one he
-wants to see. The Loov authorities have managed to get wind of this Van
-Roon of ours, and they say it’s the feller they’ve been looking for
-since 1898.”
-
-Easy to gull William in some respects was, yet, he could not help
-thinking that the French Government took a little too much for granted.
-
-“I think so, too--but there it is,” said the old man. “They have to
-prove the Van Roon is theirs, and that won’t be easy, as I told the
-detective this morning. But I understand that the question of identity
-turns upon certain marks, as well as upon similarity of subject.”
-
-William allowed that the subject had an undoubted similarity with that
-of the picture stolen from the Louvre, but then, as he explained,
-every known Van Roon had a strong family likeness. In size they varied
-little, and they always depicted trees, water, clouds, and in some
-cases a windmill.
-
-“Ours, I believe, had no windmill.”
-
-“No, sir, only water and trees, and a wonderful bit of cloud.”
-
-“I understand,” said the old man mournfully, “that the one that was
-stolen from the Loov had no windmill.”
-
-“The other one in the Louvre has no windmill; there are two at
-Amsterdam that have no windmill; and there’s one at The Hague, I
-believe, that hasn’t a windmill.”
-
-“May be. These are all points in our favour. But, as I say, the whole
-question will turn upon certain identification marks, and this French
-detective is coming here this afternoon to examine it. So it seems to
-me that the best thing you can do is to go off at once, and get it back
-from that hussy, because you can take it from me, boy, that we are
-going to be held responsible for the picture’s safety by the French
-police; and if when the detective calls again all we have to say is
-that it has vanished like magic, and we are unable to produce it, we
-may easily find ourselves in the lock-up.”
-
-This speech, worded with care and uttered with weight, had the
-effect of increasing William’s distress. Underlying it was the clear
-assumption that he was in league with June, and this was intolerable
-to him, less because of her strangely misguided action, than for the
-reason that the master to whom he had been so long devoted found it
-impossible to believe his word.
-
-“If only I knew where Miss June was, sir--” he said, miserably.
-
-The old man, with the fragment of caution still left to him, was able
-to refrain from giving William the lie. It wasn’t easy to forbear,
-since he was quite unable to accept the open and palpable fact that his
-assistant was in complete ignorance of June’s whereabouts. So true it
-is that the gods first tamper with the reason of those whom they would
-destroy!
-
-S. Gedge Antiques was in the toils of a powerful and dangerous
-obsession. He saw William in terms of himself; indeed, he was overtaken
-by the nemesis which dogs the crooked mind. For the old man was now
-incapable of seeing things as they were; the monstrous shadow of his
-own wickedness and folly enshrouded others like a pall. One so shrewd
-as William’s master, who had had such opportunities, moreover, of
-gauging the young man’s worth, should have been the last person in the
-world to hold him guilty of this elaborate and futile deceit; but the
-old man was in thrall to the Frankenstein his own evil thoughts had
-created.
-
-He was sure that William was lying. Just as in the first instance
-the young man had given the picture to “the hussy”, he was now in
-collusion with her in an audacious attempt to dispose of it. S. Gedge
-Antiques was not in a frame of mind to sift, to analyze, to ask
-questions; it seemed natural and convenient to embrace such a theory
-and, urged by the demon within, he was now building blindly upon it.
-
-About three o’clock William was engaged in the lumber room putting
-derelict pieces of furniture to rights, when his master came with a
-long and serious face, and said that the French detective wanted to see
-him. William put on his coat and followed the old man into the shop
-where he found two persons awaiting him. With only one of these was
-William acquainted. Mr. Thornton was well known to him by sight, but he
-had not seen before the French dealer, M. Duponnet.
-
-With a nice sense of drama on the part of S. Gedge Antiques the
-Frenchman was now made known to William as M. Duplay of the Paris
-police. Midway between a snuffle and a groan, the old man, raising
-his eyes in the direction of heaven, besought his assistant to tell
-Mussewer all that he knew as to the picture’s whereabouts.
-
-William, alas, knew no more than his master; and he found no difficulty
-in saying so. He was not believed, since the old man had had no scruple
-in the blackening of his character, and the Frenchman, with a skilful
-assumption of the manner of an official, which the others solemnly
-played up to, proceeded to threaten the assistant with the terrors of
-the law.
-
-The French Government was convinced from the description, which had
-been given of the Van Roon by those who had seen it, that there could
-be little doubt it was their long missing property. Such being the
-case, the police were only willing to allow the young man another
-twenty-four hours in which to produce it for examination. If he failed
-to do that within the time specified, a warrant would be applied for,
-and he might find himself in prison.
-
-In the face of this intimidation, William stuck to his story. He knew
-no more than the dead where the picture was; Miss June, to whom it had
-been given, had suddenly disappeared with it the previous night.
-
-“Who is Mees June?” said the Frenchman sharply.
-
-Miss June was the niece of Mr. Gedge.
-
-“And he gave the picture to her?” The disappointed buyer, who felt that
-his suspicions in the matter were being confirmed, looked keenly from
-the young man to the old.
-
-“No, sir,” said William, with the utmost simplicity. “I gave it to her
-myself.”
-
-There was a pause, in which astonishment played its part, and then Mr.
-Thornton gravely interposed: “How do you mean you gave her the picture?
-It isn’t yours to give. It is the property of your master.”
-
-“You are forgetting, boy,” said the old man in a voice in which oil
-and vinegar were wonderfully mingled, “that I would not allow my niece
-to have such a valuable thing, and that you then made it over to me to
-dispose of to the best advantage.”
-
-“I gave it to Miss June,” persisted the young man simply, “but I told
-her that, as you had set your heart upon it, I hoped very much she
-would let you have it.”
-
-While this odd conversation went on, the two dealers exchanged
-glances. Both were greatly puzzled. They were as one in being a little
-suspicious of the absolute bona fides of S. Gedge Antiques. Either
-this was a very clumsy method of establishing them, or there was more
-behind the picture’s disappearance than met the eye.
-
-S. Gedge Antiques, whose brain was working at high pressure, was not
-slow to read their minds. He closed the discussion with a brevity which
-yet was not lacking altogether in persuasion. “There’s no time, boy,
-to go into all that,” he said. “The girl’s gone off with the picture,
-and wherever she’s to be found, you must go right away, and get it back
-from her, and bring it here to me, or we may both find ourselves in the
-lock-up. That is so, Mussewer Duplay--what?” And with a lively gesture
-the old fox turned to the Frenchman.
-
-Puzzled that gentleman certainly was, yet he heartily agreed. If the
-Van Roon was not produced within the next four and twenty hours, a
-warrant would be issued.
-
-“Where is the hussy? That’s what we want to know,” said the old man.
-“Tell us what has become of her.”
-
-Frankly William did not know. He was not believed, at any rate, by
-his master who by now was deeper than ever in the coil of his own
-crookedness. As for the two dealers who, between them, had contrived,
-as they thought, to acquire one of the world’s treasures for an absurd
-sum, they did not know what to think. The comedy they were performing
-at the instance of S. Gedge Antiques was designed to bemuse the
-assistant, yet both men had an uneasy feeling at the back of their
-minds that master and man were engaged in a piece of flapdoodle for
-their private benefit. If so, the old man was a fool as well as a
-rogue, and the young one was a rogue as well as a fool. Scant was the
-comfort to be got out of this reflection. They seemed very far from the
-goal on which their hearts were set; and impatience of such methods was
-just beginning to show itself in the bearing of Messrs. Duponnet and
-Thornton when the affair took a new and remarkable turn.
-
-
-
-
-LIII
-
-
-A TALL man, quietly dressed, yet wearing a silk hat and an
-eyeglass, with a pleasant air of authority, came into the shop. For a
-moment he stood by the door, a rather cool gazed fixed upon the group
-of four; and then, an odd mingling of alertness and caution in his
-manner, he advanced to the proprietor.
-
-“May I have a word with you,” said the visitor, with an air of apology
-for the benefit of the others whom he included in a smile which
-expressed little.
-
-“Certainly you may, Sir Arthur,” said S. Gedge Antiques, an odd change
-coming into his tone. Taken by surprise, the old man had been slow to
-reckon up the situation. He was not able to detach himself from the
-group, and lead the rather unwelcome visitor out of earshot before that
-gentleman had divulged the business which had brought him there.
-
-“You must be anxious about your niece, Mr. Gedge,” said Sir Arthur, who
-saw no need for secrecy.
-
-The old man was very anxious indeed.
-
-“You’ve heard from the Hospital, of course?”
-
-It seemed that the old man had heard nothing; and Sir Arthur was
-proceeding to deplore this oversight on the part of those whom he had
-asked over the telephone to communicate with Number Forty-six, New
-Cross Street, when William, whose ear had caught the sinister word
-‘Hospital’ could no longer restrain a painful curiosity.
-
-The young man sprang forward with clasped hands and shining eyes. “Oh,
-sir, what has happened to Miss June?” he cried. “Tell me--please!”
-
-Sir Arthur, his mission concrete in his mind, brought a steady eye
-to bear upon the young man before he slowly replied: “She has had a
-mental breakdown, and we were able to arrange for her to be taken late
-last night to St. Jude’s Hospital.” He then turned to the old man, who
-had either grasped the news more slowly, or was less affected by it,
-and said: “It’s a case for careful treatment, in the opinion of the
-doctor who saw her soon after she arrived at my house, and upon whose
-advice she was sent to the Hospital. I am very sorry now that I did not
-communicate with you myself!”
-
-It was the young man, however, as Sir Arthur did not fail to notice,
-who seemed really to be troubled by what had befallen this unfortunate
-girl. S. Gedge Antiques, for his part, soon shewed that his inmost
-thoughts were centered upon something else.
-
-“Can you tell me, sir,” he said, with an excitement he did not try to
-conceal, “whether the picture she took away with her is quite safe?”
-
-Sir Arthur looked hard at the old man before he answered: “Mr. Gedge,
-the picture is perfectly safe.”
-
-“Thank God!” The exclamation of S. Gedge Antiques was not the less
-heartfelt for being involuntary.
-
-“And Miss June?” interposed William huskily. “Is she?... Is she...?” He
-was too upset to frame his question.
-
-“She is very ill indeed, I’m afraid,” said Sir Arthur, in a kind tone,
-“but she is in the best possible hands. Anything that can be done for
-her will be done--I am sure you can count upon that.”
-
-“Is she going to die?”
-
-Sir Arthur shook his head. “When I last rang up the Hospital, I asked
-that question, but they will not give an opinion. They prefer not to go
-beyond the fact that she is critically ill.”
-
-Tears gathered slowly in William’s eyes. Conscience was pricking him
-sharply. Had he not brought this unlucky picture into the house, such a
-terrible thing would not have occurred.
-
-William’s brief talk with the visitor, whose unheralded appearance upon
-the scene was by no means welcome to S. Gedge Antiques, gave his master
-a much needed opportunity to decide upon the course of action. The two
-dealers knew now that the Van Roon was safe, but as far as William and
-Sir Arthur were concerned, the situation was full of complexity. Much
-cunning would be needed to smooth out the tangle; and to this end, as
-the old man promptly realized, the first thing to be done was to induce
-the Frenchman and his agent to quit the shop.
-
-“You hear, Mussewer, that the picture is safe,” he said to the buyer,
-soapily. “I will go at once and get it from this gentleman. If you will
-come in again to-morrow morning, it shall be ready for you.”
-
-M. Duponnet seemed inclined to await further developments, but S. Gedge
-Antiques had no scruples about dismissing his fellow conspirators.
-Without more ado, he ushered both dealers gently but firmly to the
-door. This new turn in the game had made them keenly curious to learn
-more of the affair, yet they realized that they were on thin ice
-themselves, and the peremptory manner of S. Gedge Antiques enforced
-that view. “To-morrow morning, gentlemen--come and see me then!”
-he said, opening the shop door determinedly, and waiting for these
-inconvenient visitors to pass out.
-
-This task accomplished, the old man had to deal with one more delicate.
-He had to remove from the minds of William and Sir Arthur Babraham
-all suspicion in regard to himself. He came to them with his most
-sanctimonious air: “I can’t tell you, sir,” he assured Sir Arthur,
-“what a relief it is to know that my niece is in good hands. But I am
-afraid she is a very wicked girl.” Then he turned abruptly to William,
-and said in a low tone that he wished to have a private conversation
-with Sir Arthur.
-
-For once, however, the young man shewed less than his usual docility.
-He was most eager to learn all that had happened to June, and to gain a
-clue, if possible, to her strange conduct; besides the painful change
-in his master now filled him with distrust.
-
-The shrewd judge of the world and its ways upon whom the duty had
-fallen of holding the balance true was quick to note the reluctance of
-the younger man; and even if the nature of the case would compel him in
-the end to take the word of the proprietor against that of the servant,
-he was influenced already, in spite of himself, by that open simplicity
-which had had such an effect upon his daughter.
-
-“Is there anything, Mr. Gedge, we have to say to one another, which
-this young man may not hear?” said Sir Arthur quietly, and then, as
-the old dealer did not immediately reply, he added coolly, “I think
-not.” Turning to William he said: “Please stay with us. There are one
-or two questions I have to put which I hope you will be good enough to
-answer.”
-
-This did not suit the book of S. Gedge Antiques, but he decided to play
-a bold game. “I’m very much obliged to you for your kindness in taking
-care of the picture,” he said, with a smirk to his visitor. “As you
-know, it is a thing of great value. Had anything happened to it, the
-loss would have been terrible. Perhaps you will allow me to go at once
-and fetch it, for I don’t mind telling you, sir, that until I get it
-back again my mind will not be easy.”
-
-Sir Arthur looked narrowly at the face of unpleasant cunning before
-him, and then he said very quietly: “I am sorry to have to tell you,
-Mr. Gedge, that your niece claims the picture as her property.”
-
-The old man was prepared for a development which he had been able to
-foresee. “I am afraid she is a very wicked girl,” he said, in the tone
-of a known good man whose feelings are deeply wounded. “I ask you, sir,
-is it likely that a thing of such immense value would belong to her?”
-
-Sir Arthur had to agree that it was not, yet remembering his daughter’s
-deep conviction on the subject, he was careful to assert June’s claim.
-
-“Moonshine, I assure you, sir.”
-
-Sir Arthur, however, did not regard this as conclusive. In the light of
-what had happened he felt it to be his duty to seek a clear proof of
-the picture’s ownership; therefore he now turned to William and told
-him that the girl in the Hospital declared that he had given her the
-Van Roon. A plain statement of fact was demanded, and in the face of so
-direct an appeal the young man did not hesitate to give one. Originally
-the picture was his property, but a week ago he had given it to his
-master’s niece.
-
-“What have you to say to that, Mr. Gedge?” asked Sir Arthur.
-
-The heart of William seemed to miss a beat while he waited painfully
-for the answer to this question. To one of his primitive nature, his
-whole life, past, present and future seemed to turn upon the old man’s
-next words; and a kind of slow agony overcame him, as he realized what
-these words were in all their cynical wickedness.
-
-“The Van Roon is mine, sir,” said S. Gedge Antiques, in a voice,
-strong, definite and calm. “It was bought with my money.”
-
-Sir Arthur fixed upon the stupefied William an interrogating eye. In
-his own mind he felt sure that this must be the fact of the matter,
-yet it was hard to believe that a young man who seemed to be openness
-itself was deliberately lying. “What do _you_ say?” he asked
-gently.
-
-William was too shocked to say anything. His master took a full
-advantage of the pause which followed. “Come, boy,” he said, in a tone
-of kindly expostulation, “you know as well as I do that you were given
-the money to buy a few things down in Suffolk in the ordinary way of
-business on your week’s holiday and that this little thing was one of
-your purchases.”
-
-Sadly the young man shook his head. The cold falsehood was heavier upon
-him than a blow from the old man’s fist would have been, yet it roused
-him to the point of blunt denial. Quite simply he set forth the true
-facts.
-
-“The master gave me twenty pounds to attend a sale by auction at Loseby
-Grange, Saxmundham, and I bought things to the value of twenty pounds
-one and ninepence.”
-
-In a voice which was a nice mingling of humour and pathos the old man
-interposed. “This picture, which I admit was bought for a song as the
-saying is, was among them.”
-
-“No, sir,” said William, “I bought this picture with my own money from
-an old woman in a shop at Crowdham Market.”
-
-So much for the issue, which now was quite clearly defined. Sir Arthur,
-however, could only regret that the supremely difficult task of keeping
-the scales of justice true had developed upon him.
-
-“What did you pay for the picture, may I ask?”
-
-“Five shillings,” said William, unhesitatingly.
-
-“Five shillings!”
-
-“It was as black as night when I bought it, sir, with a still life,
-which must have been at least two hundred years old daubed over it.”
-
-“Black enough, I allow,” said the old man, “but it can’t alter the fact
-that the picture’s mine.”
-
-“Let me be quite clear on one point,” said Sir Arthur. “You maintain,
-Mr. Gedge, that the picture was bought at a sale with your money, and
-this young man declares it was bought at a shop with his.”
-
-“That is so,” said the old man.
-
-“Do you happen to have kept a list of the things that were bought at
-the sale?”
-
-“No, sir, I’m afraid I haven’t one.”
-
-Here, however, the old man’s memory was at fault, and this material
-fact William went on to prove. Under the counter was a file containing
-a mass of receipted bills, and from among these the young man was able
-to produce a document which told heavily in his favour. It was a list
-of his purchases at Loseby Grange, carefully written out, with the sum
-paid opposite each item, and at the foot of it, immediately beneath the
-figures “£20.1.9” was written in a rather shaky but businesslike hand,
-“Audited and found correct. S. Gedge.”
-
-This lucky discovery went some way towards establishing William’s
-case. The paper contained no mention of a picture, other than a print
-after P. Bartolozzi, which William took at once from the shop window.
-Finished dissembler as he was, the old man could not conceal the fact
-that he was shaken, but like a desperate gambler with a fortune at
-stake, he hastily changed his tactics. He began now to pooh-pooh the
-receipt, and declared that even if his unfortunate memory had played
-him a trick as to where the picture had been actually bought, it did
-not affect the contention that it had been purchased with his money.
-
-Sir Arthur Babraham, in his search for the truth, could not help
-contrasting the bearing of the claimants. Avarice was engraved deeply
-upon the yellow parchment countenance of S. Gedge Antiques, whereas so
-open was the face of William that it went against the grain to accuse
-its owner of baseness. In spite, of this, however, Sir Arthur could not
-help asking himself how it had come about that a young man so poor, who
-was yet clever enough to pick up such a treasure for a few shillings
-had parted with it so lightly.
-
-Upon the answer to that question he felt much would depend.
-
-“I suppose when you gave this picture away you did not realize its
-great value?”
-
-“As a matter of fact, sir, I hardly thought about it at all in that
-way. I only saw that it was a very lovely thing, and Miss June saw that
-it was a very lovely thing. She admired it so much that she begged me
-to let her buy it.”
-
-“Did you take her money?”
-
-“No, sir. She accepted it as a gift. I asked her not to let us think of
-it as money.”
-
-“Could you afford to do that?” Involuntarily the questioner looked
-at the young man’s threadbare coat and shabby trousers, and at once
-decided that he, of all people, certainly could not.
-
-William’s answer, accompanied by a baffling smile, gave pause to the
-man of the world. “I hope, sir, I shall always afford the luxury of not
-setting a price on beauty.”
-
-The dark saying brought a frown to the face of Mr. Worldly Wiseman, who
-said in his slow voice: “But surely you would not give away a Van Roon
-to the first person who asks for it?”
-
-“Why not, sir--if you happen to--to----”
-
-“If you happen to what?”
-
-“To like the person.”
-
-Although the young man blushed when he made this confession, such an
-ingenuousness did his cause no harm. Sir Arthur Babraham, all the
-same, was puzzled more than a little by such an attitude of mind.
-This indifference to money was almost uncanny; and yet as he compared
-the face of the assistant with that of the master, the difference was
-tragic. One suffused with the light that never was on sea or land, the
-other dark as the image of Baal whose shadow was cast half across the
-shop.
-
-
-
-
-LIV
-
-
-DOUBT was melting in the mind of Sir Arthur Babraham. He was
-coming now to a perception of the truth. To one who lived in the world,
-who saw men and things at an obtuse angle, the story as told by this
-young man verged upon the incredible and yet he felt sure it was true.
-The fellow was an Original, an unkind critic might even say that he was
-a trifle “cracked,” but if this visionary who adored beauty for its
-own sake could enact such a piece of deceit it would be unwise ever to
-trust one’s judgment again in regard to one’s fellow creatures. And the
-reverse of the medal was shewn just as plainly in the face of the old
-dealer.
-
-Man of affairs as Sir Arthur was, however, he knew better than to
-take a hasty decision upon what, after all, might prove to be wrong
-premises. It was his clear duty to see justice done in a strange
-matter, but he would leave to others the task of enforcing it. Thus
-when the old man renewed his demand to be allowed to go at once to Park
-Lane and get the picture, he was met by a refusal which if very polite
-was also final.
-
-“Mr. Gedge, my daughter holds this picture in trust for your niece, who
-I am informed by the Hospital, has been most cruelly used by somebody.
-She accepts--we both accept--the story told by your niece as to how in
-the first instance she came to possess this most valuable thing, which
-by the way this young man has been able to confirm. If you persist in
-trying to establish your claim I am afraid you must apply to the law.”
-
-This speech, delivered with judicial weight, was a bomb-shell. With
-a gasp the old man realized that the game was up; yet as soon as the
-first shock had passed he could hardly mask his fury. By his own folly
-the chance of a lifetime had been thrown away.
-
-As he was now to find, he was bereft of more than the Van Roon. He had
-lost the trust and affection of William. In the first agony of defeat,
-S. Gedge Antiques was far from realizing what the fact would mean, but
-it was brought home to him poignantly two days later.
-
-William’s first act, when Sir Arthur had left the shop, was to go to
-the Hospital. Here he was received by a member of its staff who told
-him that the patient was too ill to see anyone, and that even if she
-recovered, her mind might be permanently affected. The doctor who
-discussed the case with the young man allowed himself this frankness,
-because he was very anxious for light to be thrown on it. The girl had
-been cruelly knocked about, there were heavy bruises on her body and
-marks on her throat which suggested that she had had to fight for her
-life; and this was borne out by the delirium through which she was
-passing. In the main it seemed to be inspired by terror of a man whom
-she spoke of continually as Uncle Si.
-
-The visitor was questioned closely as to the identity of the mysterious
-Uncle Si. He was pressed to say all that he knew about him, for the
-Hospital had to consider whether this was not a matter for the police.
-
-William was shocked and rather terrified by the turn things had taken.
-The scales had been torn from his eyes with a force that left him
-bewildered. He had trusted his master in the way he trusted all the
-world, and now disillusion had come in a series of flashes which left
-him half blind, he felt life could never be the same. His own world of
-the higher reality was after all no more than the paradise of a fool.
-Perversely he had shut his eyes to the wickedness of men and their weak
-folly and in consequence he now found himself poised on the lip of a
-chasm.
-
-Two days after the terrible discovery which had changed his attitude
-to life, he told his master that he was going to leave him. It was a
-heavy blow. Not for a moment had such a thing entered the old man’s
-calculations. He had got into the habit of regarding this good simple
-fellow as having so little mind of his own that for all practical
-purposes he was now a part of himself.
-
-So inconceivable was it to S. Gedge Antiques that one wedded to him by
-years of faithful service could take such a step, that it was hard to
-believe the young man meant what he said. He must be joking. But the
-wish was the anxious parent of the thought, for even if the old man’s
-sight was failing, he was yet able to see the disdain in the eyes of
-William.
-
-“I can’t part with you, boy,” he said bleakly.
-
-That, indeed, was the open truth. To part with this absolutely honest
-and dependable fellow who had grown used to his ways, for whom no day’s
-work was too long, for whom no task was too exacting, who was always
-obliging and cheerful, whose keen young sight and almost uncanny “nose”
-for a good thing had become quite indispensable to one who was no
-longer the man he had been; for S. Gedge Antiques to lose this paragon
-was simply not to be thought of.
-
-“Boy don’t talk foolishly. I’ll raise your wages five shillings a week
-from the first of the New Year.”
-
-The old man could not see the look of slow horror that crept into the
-eyes of William; yet in spite of his other infirmity, he did not fail
-to catch the note of grim pain in the stifled, “I’ll have to leave you,
-sir. I can’t stay here.”
-
-Obtuse the old man was, yet he now perceived the finality of these
-broken words. As he realized all they meant to him, the sharp pain was
-like the stab of a knife. William was not merely indispensable. His
-master loved him. And he had killed the thing he loved.
-
-“Boy, I can’t let you go.” Human weakness fell upon the old man like a
-shadow; this second blow was even more terrible than the loss of the
-Van Roon which was still a nightmare in his thoughts. “I’m old. I’m
-getting deaf and my eyes are going.” He who had had no spark of pity
-for others did not scruple to ask it for himself.
-
-William was a rock. Primitive as he was, now that he could respect his
-master no more, he must cease to serve him. The revelation of that
-master’s baseness had stricken him to the heart; for the time being it
-had taken the savour out of life itself.
-
-One hope, one frail hope remained to S. Gedge Antiques, even when he
-knew at last that his assistant was “through” with him. In times so
-difficult the young man might not be able to get another job; yet he
-had only to mention it to discover it was not a staff on which he would
-be able to lean.
-
-William, it seemed, had got another job already.
-
-“At how much a week?” Habit was so strong, there was no concealing the
-sneer in the tone of surprised inquiry.
-
-Three pounds a week was to be William’s salary. The old man could
-only gasp. It brought home to him, as perhaps nothing else could have
-done, the real worth of the treasure he was about to lose. It was four
-times the rate at which he had thought well to reward these priceless
-services.
-
-“Who is being fool enough to give you that money?” he sneered, the
-ruling passion still strong in him.
-
-“Mr. Hutton, sir, at the top of the street,” was the mournful answer.
-
-S. Gedge Antiques dug a savage tooth in his lower lip. Joseph Hutton
-was a young and “pushful” rival whom on instinct he hated. “Fellow’s a
-fool to go spoiling the market,” he snarled.
-
-Alas, the old man knew but too well that as far as William was
-concerned, it was not at all a question of spoiling the market. That
-aspect of the matter would never arise in his mind.
-
-
-
-
-LV
-
-
-EVERY day for a fortnight William went to the Hospital, only
-to be denied a sight of the patient. June was fighting for life. And
-even when the crisis was passed and it began to appear that the fight
-would be successful, she had to face an issue just as critical and yet
-more terrible, for the fear remained that she would lose her reason.
-
-In this time of darkness William was most unhappy. But as far as he
-was concerned, events moved quickly. He said good-bye to his master,
-removed his belongings from Number Forty-six, New Cross Street, and
-entered the employ of a neighbouring dealer, a man of far more liberal
-mind than S. Gedge Antiques; one who, moreover, well understood the
-value of such a servant.
-
-For William, it was a terrible wrench. He was like a plant whose roots
-have been torn from the soil. With the ardour of a simple character he
-had loved his master, trusting and believing in him to an extent only
-possible to those endowed with rare felicity of nature. In spite of
-himself he was now forced to accept the hard and bitter truth that the
-old man upon whom he had lavished affection was not only a miser, but
-something worse. When the passion which ruled his life was fully roused
-he was tempted to anything.
-
-Life, felt William, could never be the same again. There was still the
-beauty of the visible universe, the pageantry of the seasons to adore;
-the harmony and colour of the world’s design might still entrance the
-senses of an artist, but not again must he surrender his being entire
-to the joy of abounding in these wonders. It was the duty of every man
-who dwelt upon the earth, however humbly, to learn something of the
-hearts of others. One could only live apart, it seemed, at one’s peril.
-
-While in the lower depths and beginning to despair of seeing June
-again, he called as usual at the Hospital one afternoon, to be greeted
-by the long-hoped-for news that the patient had taken a turn for the
-better. Moreover she had begged to be allowed to see him; and this
-permission was now given.
-
-Carrying the daily bunch of flowers, by means of which June had already
-recognized his care for her, he was led along the ward to the bed
-in which she lay. The change in her appearance startled him. Little
-remained of the whimsical yet high-spirited and practical girl who
-had mocked his inefficiency in regard to the world and its ways. To
-see those great eyes with the horror still in them and that meagre
-face, dead white amid the snow of its pillows, was to feel a tragic
-tightening of the heart.
-
-Tears ran down June’s cheeks at the sight of the flowers. “I don’t
-deserve your goodness,” she said. “You can’t guess how wicked I am.”
-
-As she extended to him her thin arms he found it hard to rein back his
-own tears. What suffering he had unwittingly brought upon this poor
-thing. But it was impossible to keep track of her mind which even now
-was in the thrall of an awful nightmare. God knew in what darkness it
-was still plunged.
-
-Shuddering convulsively at the memories his voice and his presence
-brought to her, the words that came to her lips tore his heart. “Am I
-struck? Am I like the Hoodoo? Am I like Uncle Si?”
-
-To him, just then, this wildness was hardly more than a symptom of
-a mind deranged. His great distress did not allow him to pursue its
-implication, nor could he understand the nadir of the soul from which
-it sprang. Yet many times in the days to follow he was haunted by those
-words. They came to him in his waking hours and often in lieu of sleep
-at night.
-
-Returning from this short and unhappy interview to his new home at
-Number 116, New Cross Street, he found a surprise in store. A visitor
-had called to see him and, at the moment of his arrival, was on the
-point of going away.
-
-His late master, looking very grey and frail, had come to beg him to
-return. He declared that he was now too old to carry on alone. Sight
-and hearing were growing worse. He had another quarrel with the char
-and had been obliged to send her permanently away, although the truth
-of the matter was that an oppressed female had risen at last against
-his tyranny and had found a better place.
-
-S. Gedge Antiques was now a figure for pity, but William, fresh from
-the lacerating presence of the niece whom he had so cruelly thrown out
-of doors, had none to give.
-
-The whine and snuffle of their last meeting, at whose remembrance rose
-the gorge of an honest man, were no more. Instead of the crocodile
-tricks were now the slow tears of a soul in agony. The truth was, this
-childless and friendless old man, who in the grip of the passion that
-had eaten away his life, had never been able to spare a thought for his
-kind, simply could not do without the one human being he had learned to
-love.
-
-Their relations, as the old miser had discovered, were much closer than
-those of servant and master. William stood for youth, for the seeing
-mind, for cheerful, selfless giving, for life itself. The tones of his
-voice, his kindly readiness, his tolerance for an old man’s megrims;
-even the sound of this good fellow moving furniture in the next room
-and the sense of him about the place had grown to mean so much that,
-now they were withdrawn, all other things grew null.
-
-The old man felt now that he could not go on, and at any other moment,
-the force of his appeal might have touched the gentle nature to whom
-it was made. But the stars in their courses fought against S. Gedge
-Antiques. He was a figure to move the heart, as he stood in the shop of
-a rival dealer, the slow tears staining his thin cheeks, but William
-had the shadow of that other figure upon him. The wreck of youth, of
-reason itself, seemed infinitely more tragic than the falling of the
-temple upon the priest of Baal whose wickedness had brought the thing
-to pass.
-
-William denied his master. And yet hearing him out to the bitter end,
-he was unable to withhold a little pity. All feeling for the old man
-was dead; the bedside from which he had just come had finally destroyed
-the last spark of his affection, yet being the creature he was, he
-could not sit in judgment.
-
-“I’ll pay you twice what you are getting now if you’ll return to me,”
-said the old man. “As I say, I can’t go on.” He peered into that face
-of ever-deepening distress. “What do you say, boy?” He took the hand
-of the young man in his own, as a father might take that of a beloved
-son. “I’ll give you anything--if you’ll come back. I haven’t long to
-live. Return to-night and I’ll leave you the business. Now what do you
-say?”
-
-Had it been human to forgive at such a moment, S. Gedge Antiques would
-have been forgiven. But William could only stand dumb and unresponsive
-before the master he had loved.
-
-“I’m a warm man.” The voice of the old dealer who had made money his
-god, sank to a whisper becoming a theme so sacred. “My investments have
-turned out well. There’s no saying what I _am_ worth--but this
-I’ll tell you in strict confidence--I own property.” The hushed tone
-was barely audible. “In fact I own nearly half my own side of this
-street. Now what do you say? Promise to come back to me to-night and
-I’ll go right now and see my lawyer.”
-
-The young man stood the image of unhappiness.
-
-“Only speak the word and you shall inherit every stick and stone.”
-
-It was a moment to rend the heart of both, but the word was not spoken.
-For the second time that afternoon William was hard set to rein back
-his tears; but he had not the power to yield to this appeal.
-
-Overborne by the knowledge that the hand of Fate was upon him, S. Gedge
-Antiques, leaning heavily on his knotted stick, moved feebly towards
-the dark street.
-
-
-
-
-LVI
-
-
-WILLIAM continued his daily visits to the Hospital, but he was
-not allowed to see June. Life itself was no longer in immediate danger,
-but she had had a relapse and the doctors were still afraid that the
-mental injury would be permanent. Time alone could prove if such was
-the case or no, but the mood induced by the interview with William, and
-the strange words she had used to him, which seemed to belong to some
-fixed and secret obsession, were not a good sign.
-
-Following his visit there had been a rise of temperature. And this
-meant further weakening of a terror-haunted mind. Even if the need for
-anxiety was less acute, full recovery at best would be slow and more
-than ever doubtful.
-
-June was still menaced by the shadow when an event occurred which
-intensified William’s distress. One morning, about a week after he had
-rejected his master’s last appeal, an inspector of police came to see
-him. Neighbours of S. Gedge Antiques had called attention to the fact
-that the shop had remained closed for several days, and as it was known
-that the old man had lately been living alone, the circumstance had
-given rise to a certain amount of suspicion. William’s name had been
-mentioned as lately in his employ and he was asked to throw what light
-he could on the mystery.
-
-“The neighbours think we ought to enter the shop and see if anything
-has happened,” said the police inspector.
-
-William thought so too. Remembering the last meeting with his master,
-which had left a scar he would carry to the grave, a kind of prophetic
-foreknowledge came to him now of a new development to this tragedy.
-
-It was not convenient just then to leave the shop as he happened to
-be in sole charge of it, therefore he was unable to accompany the
-inspector down the street. But half an hour later, on the return of his
-new employer, curiosity forced him to put on his hat and go forth to
-see if the thing he feared had come to pass.
-
-The police, already, had made an entry of Number Forty-six. Moreover a
-knot of people was assembled about the familiar door, which was half
-open. Its shutters were still up, but two constables were guarding the
-precincts. William caught the words “Murder--Suicide--Robbery” as he
-came up with the throng.
-
-In a state of painful excitement, he made his way to the door.
-
-S. Gedge Antiques, it seemed, had been found lying dead on the shop
-floor. The young man wished to pass in, but the police had instructions
-to allow no one to enter. A doctor summoned by telephone, had not yet
-come.
-
-William was still discussing the matter, when the inspector whose
-acquaintance he had made already, hearing voices at the door, came from
-the shop interior to see if it was the doctor who had at last arrived.
-He recognized William at once and invited him in.
-
-Outside was a murky November day, but with the windows still shuttered,
-it was necessary for three rather ineffectual gas-jets to be lit in the
-shop. The light they gave was weird and fitful, but it sufficed to
-enable the young man to see what had occurred.
-
-As yet the body had not been touched. In accordance with custom in such
-cases, it had to lie just as it was until viewed by a doctor, for if
-moved by unskilful hands, some possible clue as to the cause of death
-might be obliterated.
-
-The old man was lying supine, before the Hoodoo. One glance at that
-face, so drawn, so thwarted, and yet so pitiful in its ghastliness, was
-enough to convince William that death had come directly from the hand
-of God. With a shiver he recalled the words of a strange and terrible
-clairvoyance, of late so often in his ears. “Am I struck? Am I like
-Uncle Si? Am I like the Hoodoo?”
-
-As the old man lay now, in all the starkness of his soul, with only
-the essence shewing in that tragic face, William was overcome by his
-likeness to the image. It was as if, at the last, his very nature had
-gone out to some false god who had perverted him. That splay-footed
-monster, so large of maw, an emblem of bestial greed, was too plainly a
-symbol of the mammon of unrighteousness to which the master had devoted
-his life.
-
-Consumed by pity, William turned away from a sight which he was no
-longer able to bear.
-
-
-
-
-LVII
-
-
-SPRING came, and June who had had to fight for life and then
-for reason, won slowly to a final sense of victory. This came to her on
-a delicious April day, when the earth waking from its long sleep, was
-renewed with the joy of procreation. Her own nature, which had passed
-through so many months of darkness, was quickened to response in this
-magic hour.
-
-The force of the emotion owed much, no doubt, to the spirit of
-environment. Life had begun again for June under conditions different
-from any she had known. Powerful friends had been gained for her by
-a singularly romantic story. Of certain things that had happened she
-could not bring herself to tell; but when as much of the truth came out
-as could be derived from facts precariously pieced together, she became
-a real heroine in the sight of Sir Arthur Babraham and his daughter.
-
-But for her courage and keen wit a great work of art might have passed
-out of the country without anyone being the wiser. These staunch
-friends were determined that justice should be done in the matter, and
-kindly folk that they were, did not spare themselves in the long and
-difficult task of restoring her to health.
-
-The middle of April saw her installed in the gardener’s cottage at
-Homefield in the care of a motherly and genial housewife. Here she
-almost dared to be happy. The phantoms of the long night were being
-dispersed at last in an atmosphere of sunny and cordial well-being.
-
-Miss Babraham, who walked across the park from the house every morning
-to see her, had become a sort of fairy godmother whose mission was to
-see that she did not worry about anything. She must give her days and
-nights to the duty of getting well. And she was going to be rich.
-
-Riches, alas, for June, had the fairy godmother but known, were the fly
-in the ointment. They could only arise from one source, and around it
-must always hover the black storm clouds. She had no real right to the
-money which was coming to her, and although she had no means apart from
-it, she felt that she must never accept a single penny. It was morbidly
-unpractical perhaps, but there the feeling was.
-
-When June had been at Homefield about a week, Miss Babraham found her
-one morning in the sunny embrasure of the pleasant little sitting
-room improving her mind by a happy return to her favourite “Mill on
-the Floss.” In passing out of its mental eclipse, the angle of June’s
-vision had shifted a little; her approach to new phases of experience
-was rather more sympathetic than it had been. Before “that” had
-happened, she had been inclined, as became a self-respecting member of
-the Democracy which is apt to deride what it does not comprehend, to
-be a little contemptuous of “Miss Blue Blood,” a creature born to more
-than a fair share of life’s good things. But now that she knew more
-about this happy-natured girl, she felt a tolerance of which, at first,
-she was just a little ashamed. Envy was giving place to something else.
-Her graces and her air of fine breeding, which June’s own caste was
-inclined to resent, were not the obvious fruits of expensive clothes;
-in fact, they owed far less than June had supposed to the length of the
-purse behind them.
-
-The kindness, the charm, the sympathy were more than skin deep. In
-the first place, no doubt their possessor had been born under a lucky
-star; much of her quality was rooted inevitably in the fact that she
-was her father’s daughter yet the invalid could not gainsay that “Miss
-Blue Blood” had manners of the heart. Now that June saw her in her own
-setting among her own people this golden truth shone clear. And in the
-many talks June had with her good hostess, Mrs. Chrystal, the wife of
-Sir Arthur’s head gardener, one radiant fact rose bright and free:
-there was none like Miss Babraham. Her peer was not to be found on the
-wide earth.
-
-No doubt there were spots on this sun as there are spots on other
-suns, but June agreed that as far as Miss Babraham was concerned these
-blemishes were hidden from mortal eye. And each day gave cogency to
-such a view. This morning, for example, the distinguished visitor was
-brimming with kindliness. She talked simply and sincerely, without
-patronage or frills upon the subjects in which June was now interested.
-She had read _all_ George Eliot and gave as the sum of her
-experience that the “Mill on the Floss” was the story she liked best,
-although her father preferred “Adam Bede” or “Silas Marner.”
-
-“Before my illness,” said June, “I was getting to think that all novels
-were silly and a waste of time. But I see now that you can learn a lot
-about life from a good one.”
-
-She was in a very serious mood. Like most people who have not the
-gift of “taking things in their stride” new orientations were a heavy
-business. At school, as a little girl, she had shed many tears over her
-arithmetic. The process of mind improvement was not to be undertaken
-lightly. She could never be a Miss Babraham, but her ambition, in the
-words of her favourite song, was to be as like her as she was able to
-be.
-
-Like true poets, however, Miss Babrahams were born. Such graces came
-from an inner harmony of nature. All the best fairies must have
-flocked to her christening. One minor gift she had which June allowed
-herself to covet, since it might fall within the scope of common
-mortals; it was the way in which her maid arranged her hair. June’s
-own famous mane, which indirectly had brought such suffering upon her,
-had mercifully been spared; it had not even been “bobbed,” and with
-careful tendence might again achieve its old magnificence. As shyly
-she confessed this ambition, which sprang less from vanity than simple
-pride in her one “asset,” Miss Babraham assured her that nothing could
-be nicer than her own way of doing it.
-
-From hair and the art of treating it they passed to other intimate
-topics; frocks and the hang of them; the knack of putting things on, in
-which Miss Babraham’s gift of style filled June with envy since that,
-alas, she would never be able to copy; and above all, her friend’s
-wonderful faculty of looking her best on all occasions.
-
-As the good fairy, after a stay of a full hour, rose to go, she said,
-“If to-morrow morning is as fine as this morning, do you think you
-could come over to us? You know the way. It’s an easy walk of less
-than half a mile.”
-
-June was sure she could.
-
-“Please do, if you won’t find it trying. Come about eleven. And I
-hope,” said the good fairy, casting back her charming smile as she was
-about to pass out of the sitting-room door, “there may be a pleasant
-little surprise for you.”
-
-During the last few weeks June had known in abundance the agreeably
-unexpected. And though at intervals during the rest of the fair spring
-day, her mind toyed with this new “surprise,” she was not able to guess
-what it was going to be.
-
-
-
-
-LVIII
-
-
-ELEVEN o’clock the next morning saw June, dressed very carefully
-indeed, before the portals of the House. She had come well. Excitement
-had made her feel quite strong again; moreover she had been promised
-a reward for the effort she was making. Apart from that besides, it
-was the biggest feat of her social life, so far, to press the bell
-of such a noble door.
-
-The servant who answered it was not too proud to shew by his air of
-prompt courtesy that her coming was anticipated. She was led across a
-glorious hall--all black oak, family portraits, heads of deer and suits
-of armour, with an open gallery running round the top, like a scene on
-the movies--up a wide staircase, laid with a carpet thick and subtle
-to the tread, along a corridor into a room of great length whose glass
-roof gave a wonderful light. Many pictures hung upon its walls. June
-was thrilled at the moment she found herself in it, for this she felt
-sure, was the famous Long Gallery.
-
-The thrill was not confined, however, to the room. When she entered,
-June thought it was empty, but a look round disclosed at the far end
-a tall young man in a familiar attitude of rapt absorption. Only one
-person since the world began could have been so lost to the present in
-sheer force of contemplating a mere relic of the past.
-
-It was a rare bit of contrivance, all the same, on the part of Miss
-Babraham. Here, before June, was the Sawney, raised to his highest
-power. The fairy godmother had made a pass with her magic wand and
-William the amazing stood before her in the flesh.
-
-He was too far from the door and too rapt in adoration of the
-masterpiece at which he was gazing, to have heard June come in. And so,
-before he saw her, she had time to grow nervous and this was a pity.
-For so effectively had the mine been sprung that she had need just now
-of all her courage.
-
-A good deal of water had recently flowed under the bridge. It was as if
-a hundred years had passed since she had dared to label him a Sawney.
-He had grown up and she had grown down. So far away was the time of
-their equality, if such a time had ever really been, that she was just
-a shade in awe of him now.
-
-Many hours had he spent by her bed. It was perhaps due to him that
-she had emerged at last from the chasm which so long and so grimly
-threatened to engulf her. His royal yet gentle nature had a true power
-of healing. The look in his eyes, the music of his voice, the poetry of
-his thoughts, the charm of his mere presence, had borne him to a plane
-far above that of common people like herself. If Miss Babraham was a
-fairy godmother, this young man was surely the true prince.
-
-Beyond anyone she had ever known he had a perception of those large and
-deep things of sky and earth, which alone, as it seemed to her now,
-made life worth while. He was the prophet of the beautiful in deed as
-in word. During the long night through which she had passed, the sense
-of her inferiority had been not the least of her sorrows.
-
-That sense returned upon her now as she stood timidly by the door
-through which she had come, watching the beams of an April sun, almost
-as shy as herself, weave an aureole for him. Here was the god of her
-dreams; she who lately had known no god and who long ago had taught
-herself to despise all forms of dreaming.
-
-At last he turned and saw her.
-
-“You!” He sprang towards her with an eager cry.
-
-Brilliant stage management. But by fate’s perversity, the players,
-somehow, were not quite equal to their parts. June’s shy timidity
-communicated itself at once to this sensitive plant. There was not a
-ghost of a reason why he should not have taken her in his arms, for
-he had come to love her tenderly. The act had been devised for him,
-the deed expected, but this young man was less wise in some things
-than in others. Deep as he could look into hidden mysteries, there was
-certainly one mystery whose heart he could not read.
-
-June’s odd confusion summoned a mistaken chivalry. Broken in spirit,
-poor soul, by what she had been through, she could no longer defend
-herself; he must be, therefore, very gentle. It would have been easier
-to tackle the Miss June of New Cross Street, the rather imperious
-and sharp-tongued niece of his late employer, than this quivering
-storm-beaten flower.
-
-With all his genius it was to be feared he would always be a Sawney.
-
-“How are you getting on Miss June?” he said lamely. “You look very
-thin, but you’ve got quite a colour.”
-
-Something of the gawklike New Cross Street manner, which compared ill
-with Miss Babraham’s tact and finesse was in this greeting. Phœbus
-Apollo took a sudden nose-dive. He came, in fact, within an ace of a
-crash.
-
-June’s cheeks grew flame-colour. An idiot less divine would have
-given her a kiss and have had done with it, but in some ways he was a
-shocking dunce.
-
-“I expect you are surprised to see me here, aren’t you?”
-
-She could but stammer that she was very much surprised.
-
-“Sir Arthur has asked me to re-hang some of these.” A rather proud
-wave of the hand towards those august walls shewed that he was human.
-“And he has commissioned me”--She heard again that dying fall which
-always touched her ear with ecstasy--“to go over this Jan Vermeer most
-carefully with warm water and cotton wool.”
-
-June knitted her brow in order to accompany his finger in its mystical
-course.
-
-“A Jan what?” she said, achieving a frown. Had it been possible at
-this early stage of convalescence to achieve a note of reproof, that
-authentic touch would not have been lacking.
-
-William’s the blame for a lost opportunity. But life is full of
-_gaffes_ on the part of those who ought to know better. The
-ability of William was beyond dispute. Miss Babraham had acclaimed it,
-whereby she was no more than the mouthpiece of her father, that famous
-connoisseur who said openly that the discoverer of the Van Roon was a
-genius. To Sir Arthur it was miraculous that a tiro should expose the
-treasure to the view in a fashion so accomplished. It hardly seemed
-possible to remove the burdens of overgrowth laid by time and the
-vandal fingers of inferior artists upon that delicate surface without
-damage to the fabric. Yet experts had declared the thing to be not a
-penny the worse for all the processes it had been through; and on the
-strength of this amazing skill, the owner of Homefield had decided to
-entrust to those inspired hands, one of his cherished Vermeers.
-
-
-
-
-LIX
-
-
-TOGETHER they went round the Long Gallery, gazing at the
-treasure on its walls, which to him meant so much, to her so little.
-She tried to see it with his eyes or if this could not be, at least get
-some clue to the quality which made quite ordinary looking objects the
-things they were.
-
-Who could have believed that an old and dirty thing which she had heard
-even Uncle Si describe as a daub, would turn out to be a fortune? Other
-fortunes were here to gaze upon, but why they were so precious would
-always be for June a mystery of mysteries. Even with William’s help it
-was a subject on which she could never be really wise. She had now a
-great desire to reach out after Culture; the “Mill on the Floss” was
-most stimulating to the mind; but just now she felt, in Blackhampton
-phrase, that already “she had bitten off more than she could chew.”
-
-Perhaps it was the presence of William which had induced a mood of
-great complexity. Old unhappy things were flooding back. And as they
-walked slowly round the Gallery, an object at its extreme end suddenly
-sprang into view, which brought her up with an icy gasp. The Hoodoo was
-grinning at her.
-
-In its new setting the monster was merely grotesque. Retrieved from
-the morose interior of Number Forty-six, New Cross Street, which it
-had darkened so long with its malice, it was no longer an active
-embodiment of evil. The force of its ugliness was less, yet for June,
-in a subtle way, the implication of its presence was more.
-
-It was as if the Fates were saying to her: “We are watching you, my
-girl. This young man, whom now you dare to love, have you not tricked
-him out of his patrimony by your pretended worship of beauty? Share
-his ecstasy, if you please, of his Peter This and his Mathew That, but
-don’t forget that Our eye is still upon you. What you have already
-received you will long remember, but you may get another dose if you
-are not careful.”
-
-Hearing words to this sinister effect in the secret places of her soul,
-June could only shiver. William, now as conscious of the invalid’s
-frailty as of the imperious challenge of beauty, led her at once to a
-seat without seeking the cause of her distress.
-
-He saw she was still very weak and hastened therefore to set her down
-on a chair of the Empire, heedless of the fact that she was almost
-cheek by jowl with the Hoodoo.
-
-“Mustn’t tire yourself,” he said in a voice of rare sympathy which
-did but add to the feeling of misery that crept upon her. “I’m afraid
-you’ve walked a bit too far.”
-
-Again June shivered. The old unhappy things were threatening once
-more to submerge her. “How I wish That had not come here,” she said
-dismally. There was no need to point at the Image; she was sure that he
-knew what she meant.
-
-But amazing young man that he was, this was trying him a little too
-highly.
-
-“Oh, you mean the James,” he said pointing to a windmill opposite.
-“He isn’t a Mathew, is he? I’m so glad, Miss June, you think that too,
-because with you to back me, I may be able to break it to Sir Arthur,
-that this isn’t quite the place for him.”
-
-Divine humility! Mad confusion! Had she but felt a little stronger, a
-little less unhappy, she really could have shaken him.
-
-“I mean the Hoodoo,” she said woefully.
-
-Her wild bird’s heart went quick and high as she saw him turn casually
-and enfold That with a slow smile. “Right again,” he said, his head a
-little to one side in pure connoisseurship, a trick she had learned to
-watch for. “I quite agree with you--the old fool swallows more than his
-share of this beautiful light.”
-
-June was not thinking of the beautiful light. She was trembling in
-spirit; but one of his nature could not be expected to know what demons
-from the abyss were invading her. “How I wish it was somewhere else.”
-
-His laugh of gay agreement was suddenly checked as he caught the look
-in her eyes and in the next instant he saw the old man lying dead at
-the foot of the Hoodoo.
-
-It was like the passing of a cloud across the sun. Life for him, also,
-had found another notation in these terrible months. He had been
-through a hard school. Certain lines in his face were deeper and there
-were hollows under his eyes. Never again must he allow the ideal to run
-so far ahead of the real. Yet in this harsh moment the power of his
-nature kept him up.
-
-He was able to pierce to the true reason for June’s deadly pallor. It
-was not wholly due to the fact that she was still weak or that she had
-walked too far. Trolls even now were in her brain. With his instinct
-for healing he must do his utmost to cast them out.
-
-“We’ll try to persuade Miss Babraham to have him put in the garden.”
-
-Scarcely had he spoken the words when the fairy godmother, accompanied
-by Sir Arthur Babraham, entered the Long Gallery.
-
-
-
-
-LX
-
-
-“SO here you are!”
-
-But the light note of Miss Babraham’s greeting changed to a quick
-concern as a feminine eye saw at a glance that June was looking “done.”
-
-“Now don’t get up, please. I am going to be quite angry with myself if
-your walk has made you over-tired.”
-
-June, a new shyness upon her, which the presence of Sir Arthur made
-much worse, found it very difficult to speak.
-
-“I hope you are cultivating a taste for chicken and new laid
-eggs,” said the kindly gentleman. “And for a glass of wine to your
-meals--which I always say is what has made Old England the country she
-is.” Finding his jolly laugh was less effective than usual, he pointed
-to the Hoodoo in the tactful hope of putting an embarrassed girl at her
-ease. “There’s an old friend I’m sure you recognize.” June’s distress,
-however, grew rapidly worse and Sir Arthur made a fresh cast. “I’m not
-sure all the same,” he said to William in a laughing aside, “that the
-old fellow can be allowed to stay here. Tell me, what is your candid
-opinion?”
-
-“We’ve been wondering, sir, if he wouldn’t look better in the garden.”
-
-Miss Babraham caught gaily at the suggestion. “The very place for the
-jar of Knossos. And perhaps Miss June and Mr. William will plant a
-myrtle in it.”
-
-“A myrtle,” said Sir Arthur. “In that chap--a myrtle?” He plucked at
-his moustache and looked at the laughing Laura. “Why--pray--a myrtle?”
-
-“Papa, how dense you are!”
-
-A hit clean and fair, which after a very little thought Sir Arthur
-was man enough to own. His one excuse, and a poor one, was that in
-certain things the sex to which he had the misfortune to belong, was
-notoriously “slow in the uptake.”
-
-It was now William’s turn to acclaim the idea. Blushing deeply said
-that quaint and whimsical young man: “Yes, Miss Babraham, with your
-permission we will plant a myrtle in the jar of Knossos.”
-
-In the laugh which followed June did not share; just now her feeling
-was that she would never be able to laugh again.
-
-Sir Arthur, still tactful, now conceived it to be his duty to cheer the
-poor girl up. “By the way,” he said, “has my daughter told you what we
-propose to do with your Van Roon? Of course with your permission.”
-
-June simply longed for the power to say that it was not for her to give
-the permission as the Van Roon was not hers. But she was living just
-now in a kind of dream in which action and speech had no part. The only
-thing she could do was to listen passively to the voice of Sir Arthur,
-while it leisurely unfolded a tale of fairyland.
-
-“I must tell you,” he said, “subject to your approval--always, of
-course, subject to _that_--we have formed a sort of committee to
-deal with this picture of yours. It has given rise to a rather curious
-position. We think--three or four of us--that it ought to be acquired
-for the nation; but of course there’s the question of price. If the
-work is put up at auction, it may fetch more than we should feel
-justified in paying. Sentiment of course; but nowadays sentiment plays
-a big part in these matters. On the other hand, having regard to the
-obscurity of its origin, it might be knocked down for considerably less
-than it is intrinsically worth. All the same we are quite convinced
-that it is a very choice example of a great master, and that the place
-for it is the National Gallery, where another Van Roon is badly needed.
-Now I hope you see the dilemma. If the nation enters the market a
-definite buyer, the thing may soar to a preposterous sum. At the same
-time, we don’t want the nation to acquire it for less than its real
-value. So the question in a nutshell is, will you accept a private
-arbitration or do you prefer to run the risk of getting comparatively
-little in the hope of obtaining an extra ten thousand pounds or so?”
-
-June followed the argument as closely as she could, and at the end of
-it burst into wild tears.
-
-“The picture is not mine,” she sobbed. “It doesn’t belong to me.”
-
-It was a moment of keen embarrassment. Sir Arthur, who had doubted from
-the first, was hardly to be blamed for beginning to doubt again. Such
-an outburst was the oddest confirmation of his first suspicion, which
-conspiring Circumstance had enabled him perhaps too easily to forget.
-But Laura’s faith was quite unshaken. For her the question of ownership
-had been settled once and for all. The poor thing was overwrought,
-overdriven; it was so like the tactless father of hers, to worry the
-girl with all kinds of tiresome details when he should have known that
-she was not strong enough to grapple with them.
-
-“Come, papa,” said Laura Babraham with reproof in a clear grey eye.
-“If we don’t go at once and look at that herbaceous border we shall
-certainly be late for luncheon.”
-
-
-
-
-LXI
-
-
-LEFT to themselves once more, it became William’s task to
-comfort June’s distress. Like Sir Arthur, he too, it seemed, could be
-tactful. Instead of discussing the question of the Van Roon’s ownership
-or the unlucky presence of the Hoodoo, he began gently to discourse of
-Mathew Maris.
-
-As far as June was concerned he might as well have discoursed of the
-moon. In the first place she had never heard of Mathew Maris; and in
-the second she was consumed by a desire to settle forever the question
-of the Van Roon which was now tormenting her like a fire. This was
-a dynamic moment, when great decisions are reached with startling
-abruptness and half a lifetime may be lived in half a minute.
-
-Mathew Maris was not for June just now. Suddenly she broke again into
-wild sobs.
-
-“I cheated you, I tricked you over that picture.”
-
-Again, good honest fellow, he tried to change the current of this mind
-distraught. But it was not to be.
-
-“You gave it me, didn’t you, because I made you think I had fallen in
-love with it? But I hadn’t. It meant nothing to me--not in that way.”
-
-He stood an image of dismay, but he had to listen.
-
-“Why do you suppose I did that? I’ll tell you. I overheard Uncle Si
-talking to a dealer. You remember, don’t you, the funny crooked little
-man in the knitted comforter and the brown billycock whom I used to
-call Foxy Face? One morning when you were out he offered Uncle Si five
-pounds for it and Uncle Si said it might be worth a good deal more.
-That’s why I decided to get hold of it if I could, before Uncle Si got
-it from you. And that’s why I cracked it up and made you think I could
-see all sorts of wonders in it, when all the time I saw no more beauty
-in it than there is in That.” And she pointed to the Hoodoo.
-
-William gave a little gasp. June heard the gasp. And in the mad
-unhappiness of that moment she determined to spare herself nothing. She
-would strip herself bare so that the whip might be better laid on.
-
-“Beauty means no more to me than it does to that Thing there. All your
-talk about Hobbemas and Marises and Vermeers and Cromes are to me just
-sloppy. They bore me stiff every time. I hate the sight of all these
-things.” The wave of a wildly tragic hand included all the masterpieces
-in the Long Gallery. “I hate them! I hate them! So now you know the
-mean and dirty liar that I am.”
-
-No longer able to bear the sound of her strange and terrible words
-he turned sickly away. It was almost as if they had opened a vein in
-his heart. He remembered again the cry that had haunted him after his
-seeing her first at the Hospital. “Am I struck? Am I like Uncle Si? Am
-I like the Hoodoo?”
-
-Poor soul! It was not for him to judge her. He could only think of her
-sufferings. And it was cruel indeed to realize what they must be now.
-
-“That’s why I don’t want the money. And that’s why I don’t mean to have
-it. I burn when I think of it. Now you know how low down I am. I hope
-you like the way I’ve cheated you.”
-
-He sought to take her hand, but she withdrew it fiercely. His very
-goodness almost made her hate him.
-
-
-
-
-LXII
-
-
-BY the advice of Miss Babraham they planted a myrtle in the
-jar of Knossos. Some days later the Hoodoo was haled into a convenient
-corner of the Italian garden. Here, by the marge of a tiny rock-strewn
-lake, the momentous rite was performed with a high solemnity. Much
-displacement of mould and a considerable wheelbarrowing of the same was
-necessary and Mr. Chrystal, the head gardener, had to advise in the use
-of the trowel, an art in which neither June nor William was quite so
-adept as they might have been. But at last, after some honest digging
-and shovelling on the part of William who was not afraid to take off
-his coat to the job, and timely help from Mr. Chrystal’s George who was
-uncannily wise, although to be sure he had the experience of a lifetime
-and a fairly long one to bring to bear on such matters, the thing was
-done.
-
-June and William then retired to the fragrant shade of a budding lime,
-feeling rather hot, yet not dissatisfied with their labours. It was a
-perfect morning. Larks were hovering in the bright air. Blackbirds and
-thrushes were trying out their grace-notes, and once June thought she
-heard a nightingale.
-
-For a little they reclined in poetic comfort in two wicker chairs.
-Fauns in marble, and Cupid, complete with bow and arrows lurked hard
-by. At last June broke a delicious silence.
-
-“You must put your coat on,” she said suddenly.
-
-“But----” said William who really had delved and shovelled to some
-purpose.
-
-June was not to be Butted--not this golden day.
-
-“If you don’t you might get a bad chill,” she said severely.
-
-William rose and did her bidding. And in the midst of that simple act,
-a certain piece of confidential information, which Sir Arthur and Miss
-Laura had been kind enough to supply at frequent intervals during the
-last few days, recurred forcibly to his mind. It was to the effect
-that “Miss Gedge was so practical she would make an ideal wife for an
-artist.”
-
-As far as the major premise was concerned it was less irrelevant than
-at first it might seem, for William had recently decided that an artist
-was what he was going to be. In the very act of putting on his coat he
-now recalled the high and sacred mystery to which his life was vowed.
-And further he recalled that before entering the garden he had taken
-the precaution of slipping a neat little sketching book and pencil into
-his coat pocket. Thus, upon sitting down, in solemn silence he took
-them forth and proceeded to draw.
-
-June it was who broke the silence, after some little while.
-
-“If you are drawing that myrtle,” she said, “it looks a bit potty to me
-stuck up there. There’s nothing to it.”
-
-She was more her true self this happy morning than for many a tragic
-month.
-
-“It’ll grow,” said the artist.
-
-“Won’t seem much if it doesn’t in that great jar. It was Miss
-Babraham’s idea to stick it there, so it’s all right of course. She
-said it was an emblem of what was it?”
-
-“Of marriage,” said the artist with an air of innocent abstraction.
-
-“Then she ought to have planted it herself--if she _is_ going to
-be married.”
-
-“On the first of July. They’ve fixed the day.”
-
-“Oh,” said June. “Have you seen her young man?”
-
-“He came to lunch yesterday.”
-
-“Who is he?”
-
-“The Honourable Barrington, a gentleman in the Blues.”
-
-June frowned portentously. “I hope he’ll be good enough for her.” But
-she didn’t sound very hopeful.
-
-“He’s a very nice gentleman.”
-
-“Ought to be if he’s going to marry _her_. But what I should like
-to know is, why was she so set on you and me planting that myrtle when
-she ought to have planted it herself.”
-
-“Don’t know, I’m sure, Miss June,” said the artist, not so much as
-glancing up from his work.
-
-Once a Sawney always a Sawney. Perennially, it seemed, was she up
-against the relentless workings of that natural law. Marriage, money,
-commonsense, the really big things of life, meant so little to him
-compared with windmills and myrtles, and things of that kind. Like her
-beloved Miss Babraham, this dear and charming fellow was almost too
-good to be true, but day by day the conviction was growing upon her
-that he really did need somebody practical to look after him. And she
-was not alone in thinking so. Miss Babraham, who knew so much about
-everything, had already expressed that opinion to her quite strongly.
-
-Here he was, in the middle of a perfect morning, with all sorts of
-really beautiful things about him, and larks and blackbirds quiring,
-and the sun on the water and the Surrey hills, wasting his time
-seemingly, by drawing that rather paltry looking little plant stuck up
-there on the top of the Hoodoo. Even if it was the emblem of marriage
-she could not help a subtle feeling of annoyance that he should not use
-his precious time a bit better.
-
-However, the cream of the joke was to follow.
-
-The artist it was who quaintly burst this fresh bubble of silence.
-“Talk as much as you like, Miss June,” he said with something a little
-odd, a little unexpected in his manner, “but I hope you’ll keep your
-hands in your lap just as they are now, and if you don’t mind will you
-please bring your chin round a bit--on to a level with my finger.”
-
-“Please get on with that myrtle.” Before, however, the fiat was really
-pronounced, she abruptly stopped. Could such a thing be? Was it
-possible that he was not drawing the myrtle at all?
-
-It was more than possible.
-
-And that was the cream of the whole matter!
-
-
-
-
-LXIII
-
-
-“I’M not half as good looking as that,” said June.
-
-“All depends, don’t you know, on the angle at which one happens to get
-you,” said William.
-
-It was the tone of a gentleman in the Blues speaking to Miss Babraham.
-Yet it came so pat and so natural from the lips of an artist, that in
-spite of herself, June could not help being a little awed by it. She
-didn’t agree, yet she didn’t disagree; that is to say, as Miss Babraham
-would have done, she agreed to disagree without contradicting the
-artist flatly.
-
-Besides it is the whole duty of an artist to know just how people look
-in all circumstances. Everybody looks better at some moments than at
-others. June had no pretensions to be considered an artist herself,
-but at that moment she knew just how William looked. In his new suit,
-neat rather than smart and smart rather than neat--all depends don’t
-you know on the angle at which one happened to get it!--with his mop
-of fair hair brushed away from his fine forehead, and his yellow tie,
-and the curves of that sensitive mouth, and those wonderful eyes and
-those slim fingers, he looked fitted by nature to marry a real lady.
-Indeed, in the course of the last few days, a suspicion had crossed
-June’s mind that Miss Babraham thought so too; thus the apparition of
-the Honourable Barrington and the definite fixing of the day had taken
-a load off her mind.
-
-For all that other loads were still upon it. Since her nerve-storm in
-the Long Gallery a week had passed. She was feeling much better now,
-day by day she was growing stronger; nevertheless she was troubled
-about many things.
-
-Foremost of these was the question so vital to a practical mind, of
-ways and means. They both had to live. And if William had really made
-up his mind to be an artist, he would need money and plenty of it for
-leisure and study and foreign travel. She was rather glad, if only for
-this reason, that he had been able to take such a bold decision. He
-would be the more likely to accept that which really belonged to him:
-the price of the Van Roon.
-
-Sir Arthur had now informed her that the sum the committee proposed to
-offer for the Van Roon could be invested to produce a thousand a year
-free of tax, and he strongly urged its acceptance, as she would be
-relieved of all money difficulties for the rest of her life. To June it
-sounded fabulous. She knew in her heart, besides, that she would never
-be able to take this income for her own use. Every penny was William’s
-and the task now before her was to bring home to him this fact.
-
-It did not take long to prove to her this morning that she was
-attempting the impossible. The thousand a year, he declared, was hers
-and nothing would induce him to touch a penny. Yielding in some ways,
-in others as she had discovered already, for all his gentleness he was
-a rock.
-
-Desperation now drove June to confess that she had never intended to
-take the money. Even at the moment she had filched the Van Roon from
-him with her wicked pretences, at the back of her mind had been the
-wish to save him from himself. Always she had regarded herself as the
-Van Roon’s trustee, so that he should not be victimized by the cunning
-of Uncle Si, just as Sir Arthur was its trustee now, so that neither of
-them should be robbed by the cunning of the world.
-
-She found all too soon, however, that it was vain to argue with him.
-What he had given, he had given. As far as he was concerned, that was
-the end of the whole matter.
-
-“Very well then,” said June vexedly, “if you won’t, you won’t. And I
-shall present that picture to the nation in your name, and then you
-won’t have a penny to live on and you’ll have to go on working in a
-shop all your life for a small wage to make other people rich, instead
-of being able to study and travel and make yourself a great artist.”
-
-She felt sure the half nelson was on him now. Even he, dreamer that he
-was, must really bend to the force of pure reasoning! Beyond a doubt
-she had got him. But he was not playing quite fair it seemed. With one
-of his little dancing blushes that would have been deadly in a girl, he
-was forced to own that he had not put all his cards on the table.
-
-To June’s sheer amazement he was keeping a little matter of twelve
-hundred a year or so up his sleeve.
-
-“Didn’t know you had a rich aunt,” said June amazedly.
-
-“Not my rich aunt. Your rich uncle.” The odd creature grew tawnier,
-more girl-like than ever.
-
-June lacking a clue as yet could only frown. “Come again. I don’t get
-you.” It was not the Miss Babraham idiom, but with her patience giving
-out and a new strength and sanity in her veins, she was in danger of
-forgetting, just for a moment, that she was an honoured guest in the
-most famous Italian garden in Surrey.
-
-Nevertheless in the very height of the eclipse a light shone. One of
-the advantages of a mind really practical is, that when it turns to
-financial matters, it works automatically at very high pressure. June’s
-brow was cleft with the harrow of thought. “Do you mean to say,” she
-figured slowly out, “that Uncle Si has left you all his property?”
-
-“His lawyers say so.” The voice of William had a slight tremor.
-
-“If his lawyers say so it is so,” said June with imperious finality.
-
-A pause of which a thrush, a blackbird and an entire orchestra of
-skylarks took great advantage, came upon these inheritors in spite of
-themselves; and then June pensively remarked, a little in the manner of
-“Mr. Leopold” asking the Head Cashier what Consols had opened at this
-morning, “he must have bought some property very lucky.”
-
-Quite simply William stated that such was the fact. “The lawyers say
-that in 1895 he bought what they call a block in New Cross Street,
-including Number 46, and that it’s been going up and up ever since, so
-that now it’s worth about eight times what he gave for it.”
-
-In sheer incredulity June stared at him. She must be living in
-fairyland. And then the sun flamed out from the merest apology for a
-cloud which was all the April sky could boast at that moment and there
-came an answering gleam from the burnished image before her eyes in
-which they had lately planted a myrtle.
-
-“Much good it did him,” she said with a heavy sigh.
-
-William never told June the story of the old man lying dead before the
-Hoodoo, nor had he disclosed his own indirect share in that tragic end.
-He did not do so now, for this was not the time to enter into such an
-unhappy matter. Yet without coming to details, June seemed with that
-power of clairvoyance she had lately acquired, to divine the whole
-pitiful business. “Miserable old miser,” she said in a voice the birds
-could not hear. “He must have died like a dog.”
-
-William’s tragic eyes could only be interpreted by his own heart.
-
-A look so forlorn led June to notice the new lines in his face and his
-smouldering depth of eye. “I believe you were the only living thing he
-ever cared for, and yet it used to make my blood boil the way he----”
-The anguish in his eyes brought her up short.
-
-In went the sun, as quickly as it had come out. _La Signora Aprile e
-volubile_, in England at any rate, whatever her mood in more genial
-climes. June shivered slightly as if a chill breath in the gentle wind
-had touched her. She glanced at the new wrist watch, whose acceptance
-William had craved two days before she left the Hospital. Nearly one
-o’clock already and it would never do to shew disrespect to Mrs.
-Chrystal’s famous chicken-broth.
-
-They got up together, yet as they did so they felt that the best of the
-spring day was fled. Now that the sun had gone in, the Hoodoo yonder
-was monarch once more of all he looked upon.
-
-What a thing life was! Yet by now both were wise enough not to think
-too much about it. God knew it could be ugly, but dwelling upon its
-complexities only made them seem worse.
-
-Besides there was no time for deep thoughts. It was six minutes to one.
-Luncheon at the House, where William, as became a man of acknowledged
-genius, was an honoured guest, was sharp at the hour. The honoured
-guest would only just have time to wash his hands and brush his hair.
-And so he was not able to accompany June along the rectangular path
-which led from the main avenue direct to Mrs. Chrystal’s.
-
-Moreover she didn’t want him to. She understood his hurry. Also he
-understood hers. Besides each craved a moment, after all, to consider
-life and just where they stood in it.
-
-“I have to rest this afternoon,” said June. “And I suppose you have to
-get on with the cleaning of the Mathew Thingamy. But if it’s as fine
-to-morrow morning as it has been to-day, let us meet under this tree
-about eleven. And then you can put in the last touches while I read
-“Pride and Prejudice” by Jane Austen that Miss Babraham’s lent me.
-Seems a bit old-fashioned, but it’s classic of course. I dare say it’ll
-improve as it gets better.”
-
-Whereon June took the bypath abruptly, and William, his six minutes
-reduced to four, stepped out towards the House. Life and its
-complexities did not get therefore, much of a show at the moment, yet
-both of them must have been giving these high matters some little
-thought, for as June reached the eucalyptus tree she halted and
-half-turned and looked just for one instant back. And she found that
-William, now on a level with the second Cupid on the main gravel, and
-his four minutes reduced to three and a quarter, had also halted, and
-half-turned to follow her example.
-
-
-
-
-LXIV
-
-
-JUNE always maintained that the Idea was William’s. He, on the
-other hand, always maintained that the Idea was hers. But whatever the
-truth of the matter in its centrality, there was really no doubt that
-it was Miss Babraham who thought of the car. To her alone belonged that
-minor yet still substantial glory. As for the luncheon basket, although
-that honour was claimed for her as well, it may have owed something
-to Sir Arthur, for June and William were agreed that the weighty and
-practical genius of that man of the world was visible in this important
-detail.
-
-It was just after nine on as promising a morning of early May as the
-much and justly derided climate of Britain was able to produce for a
-signal occasion, when Mr. Mitchell the chauffeur in his livery of Robin
-Hood green, with buff collar and cuffs, arrived at Mrs. Chrystal’s
-door with Sir Arthur’s touring car. Inside, as if to the manner
-born, sat William in a fleecy grey ulster which June had no idea he
-possessed--and for that matter it was Sir Arthur who possessed it--and
-almost the last word in hats, which if you happened to catch its wearer
-in profile, as June chanced to do at the moment the car drew up, made
-him look uncommonly distinguished.
-
-But so much depends, don’t you know, in these little matters upon the
-angle--etc.
-
-“What time do you expect to be back, Mr. Mitchell?” asked Mrs.
-Chrystal from her doorstep, as that hero, a wisdom-bitten veteran of
-the Great War, which had ended before William began--that is to say
-Class 1920 was never called up--ushered June into the chariot with rare
-solemnity.
-
-“Back did you say, ma’am?” said Mr. Mitchell closing the door gently
-upon the travellers. “There you have me. We’ve to go as fur as the
-heart o’ Suffolk and back again.”
-
-Mrs. Chrystal knew that. Hence the question.
-
-“Accordin’ to this map,” Mr. Mitchell pointed to the canvas back of
-Road Guide Number 6, Series 14, which was on the vacant seat beside his
-own, “Crowdham Market may take a bit o’ findin’. Still if the roads are
-all right, I dessay we’ll be home by the risin’ o’ the moon.”
-
-“My reason for asking is that I’m wondering about the young lady’s
-supper. However, I’ll expect you when I see you, because as you say
-Crowdham Market may be a funny place to get at.”
-
-In the opinion of June, who heard this conversation, Mrs. Chrystal was
-fully justified in thinking so. They were about to start on a journey
-to Cloud Cuckoo Land.
-
-A very romantic journey it was. Up hill and down dale they went, by
-devious lanes and unsuspected ways across a noble sweep of country.
-Zephyrs played gently upon their faces; the sun shone, the birds sang;
-the smooth-gliding car made little dust and less noise; they sat side
-by side; it was a royal progress.
-
-The Idea itself was William’s, June always maintained, that they
-should go to Crowdham Market and find the poor old woman who kept the
-tumbledown shop, where perhaps as much out of pity as anything, he had
-given five shillings for the Van Roon. They could well afford to make
-her comfortable for life with an annuity, the precise amount of which
-Sir Arthur might be asked to fix if they could not themselves agree
-upon it. Indeed the whole question of the Van Roon’s fabulous proceeds
-was still vexed. Neither would move an inch. June still vowed she would
-not touch the money. William vowed that he would not touch it either,
-but he had gone so far as to suggest that he should buy the thing back
-from her with a part of the property her uncle had left him. To this
-property he somehow felt he had no lawful claim; yet by means of it he
-would be able to add, free gratis and for nothing, one masterpiece the
-more to “his treasure house” in Trafalgar Square.
-
-June, with the frankness for which she was famous, did not hesitate
-to denounce the scheme as crazy. Even the Sir Arthur Babrahams of the
-world, who were simply rolling in money, thought twice about giving
-fortunes away. What did he suppose was going to become of his career as
-an artist if he stripped himself of the means of pursuing it?
-
-That, of course, was where she had him. And as they sat side by side on
-this golden journey to East Anglia, they divided the forenoon between
-admiring the scenery and discussing the problem in all its aspects.
-
-“You talk of France and Spain and Italy.” The note of scorn was
-mellowed considerably by the romance of the occasion. “You talk of
-studying the pictures in the Louvre and the Prado and the Uffizi
-Gallery.” She had really got to grips with Culture now. With an
-indomitable will, an inflexible ambition and a brand new course of
-memory training to help her; she was not only learning to remember
-outlandish words, but how and when and in what order to use them.
-“You talk of Rembrandt and Titian and Velasky, but I’m thinking those
-foreign landladies’ll get your size before you can say Knife. My
-opinion is you’ll need somebody _always_ with you to see that they
-don’t take it off you.”
-
-“Take what off me, Miss June?” inquired His Innocence.
-
-There was a question!
-
-“Your pram, of course, your teddy bear, and your feeding bottle.” She
-added the opprobrious term “You Gaby!” not however for the ear of this
-Dreamer, but for the benefit of the pleasant town of Malden, on whose
-outskirts they were already.
-
-“When you get to Paris and find yourself in the Prado studying Paul
-Very-uneasy, you’ll be lucky if you get away with as much as a
-bootlace. Mr. Boultby used to say French landladies were awful.”
-
-“Did he,” said the Dreamer; and then with a sudden animation: “Do you
-see that water wagtail on the lip of that pool?”
-
-June pointedly ignored the water wagtail.
-
-“You ought to have somebody to look after you when you go to
-Paris--somebody who understands the value of money.”
-
-“The less value money has for an artist the better,” said William the
-sententious.
-
-“Mr. Boultby would call that poppycock,” said June, equally sententious.
-
-What William really meant to say was that the less an artist thought
-about money the better for his art, that an artist painted better for
-love than for filthy lucre and so on, that the great masters were born
-poor as a rule and often died poor and that nothing was so likely as
-money to distract the mind from the quest of beauty.
-
-These, to be sure, were not his exact words. His thoughts were clothed
-more neatly in the William way. But such was the sum and substance of
-what they came down to, and June was so pained by his line of argument
-that the contents of the luncheon basket on the opposite seat were
-needed to sustain her.
-
-After patiently reasoning with such wrong-headedness, she looked at
-her watch and found it was one o’clock. As there was never a sign at
-present of Crowdham Market, they decided to begin on what the gods had
-provided. Egg and tomato sandwiches were at the top of the basket with
-a layer of ham underneath, and below that a most authentic cake with
-almonds in it; all of which were delicious.
-
-The meal, if anything, was even better than the conversation, though
-that also was on an extremely high level. They were very honourable in
-their dealings with the luncheon basket. Share and share alike was the
-order of the day, with a third share of everything religiously laid by
-for Mr. Mitchell whenever he might feel justified in slowing up to eat
-it. Even a full third of the basket’s crowning glory was laid by for
-Mr. Mitchell--to wit, a large vacuum flask of coffee, piping hot.
-
-It was a few minutes after two when they reached Crowdham Market and
-drew up at the Unicorn Inn. Here, six months ago, William had discussed
-the great drought with Miss Ferris, the landlady’s daughter, one of
-those high-coloured girls who June could see at a glance was a minx.
-
-Promising to be back in an hour, which was all that Mr. Mitchell could
-allow if they were to be home before the rising of the moon, June and
-William, feeling more romantic than ever before in their lives, set out
-on a pilgrimage up the High Street. It was the only street in the town
-which aspired to a sense of importance; the point in fact towards which
-all meaner streets converged. One of these it was they had now to find.
-
-Alas, from the outset there was a grave doubt in the mind of William
-in the matter of his bearings. To the best of his recollection the old
-woman’s shop was either the second or third turning up, then to the
-left, then across, and then to the left again into an obscure alley of
-which he had forgotten the name. That was like him. In June’s private
-opinion, it was also like him, although _lèse-majesté_ of course,
-to let him know it, to take her to look for a serendipity shop in a
-bottle of hay.
-
-William knew neither the name of the old woman, nor the byway that had
-contained her, and in the course of half an hour’s meandering it grew
-clear to the practical mind of June that she was in serious danger
-of having to go without her annuity. Having come so far it would be
-humiliating to return with a tale of total defeat; yet up till now
-these emotions had been held in check by the romance of the case.
-
-Mr. Mitchell’s hour was all but sped, when William stopped abruptly.
-Light had come. He had hit the trail.
-
-At the corner of the lane into which for the third time they had
-penetrated, was an enticing little shop called Middleton’s Dairy. The
-sight of it brought back to William’s mind a recollection. Immediately
-the picture had been acquired, he went into that shop to get a bun
-and a glass of milk. Pausing a moment to wrestle with his sense of
-locality, he gazed down the street. The old woman’s store would be just
-opposite.
-
-Only a glance was needed to show that the old woman’s store was not
-just opposite. The housebreakers had been recently at work and the
-decrepit block of which her premises formed a part was razed to the
-ground.
-
-Faced by the problem of what had happened to the old woman the only
-thing now was to enter Middleton’s Dairy and enquire. They were
-cordially received by a girl who in June’s opinion showed too many
-teeth when she smiled to be really good looking; who, also, in June’s
-opinion, wore corsets that didn’t suit her figure, and whose hair would
-have looked better had it been bobbed.
-
-Like Miss Ferris, the landlady’s daughter, this girl seemed to remember
-William quite well, which was rather odd June felt, since he had only
-been once in the town previously and then for but a few hours. The
-inference to be drawn from the fact was that William was William, and
-that in an outlandish one-horse place like Crowdham Market, young men
-of his quality were necessarily at a premium.
-
-But at the moment that was neither here nor there. And with equal truth
-the formula applied to the old woman. However, in regard to her it
-seemed, they were now in the way of getting information.
-
-After William, with a certain particularity had described the old
-creature and her shop to the girl who kept on showing her teeth while
-he did so, he was informed that she was known among the neighbours as
-Mother Stark. And the poor old thing, the girl understood, had been
-turned out of house and home because she could no longer pay her rates
-and taxes.
-
-“Half her side of the Lane’s pulled down,” said June, who now came into
-the conversation on a note of slight asperity.
-
-“Oh, yes,” said Miss Smiler, to William rather than to June, “the site
-has been bought by a company.”
-
-“Putting a museum on it I suppose,” said June.
-
-“No, not a museum,” said Miss Smiler in a level voice ignoring June’s
-irony either because she did not see it, or because she did, which in
-any case perhaps was just as well for her.
-
-“A chicken run?” June surmised with a disdainful eye upon a nice basket
-of new laid eggs, five for a shilling.
-
-No, the site had not been acquired for a chicken run. Miss Smiler
-understood they were going to build a picture house.
-
-June gazed solemnly at William. And her gaze was frankly and faithfully
-returned. A picture house on the spot where a Van Roon had lain hidden
-and unknown for who knew how many years!
-
-What a world it was! Could Mother Stark but have guessed she would not
-have needed a Company to take over her premises.
-
-“What’s become of her? Can you tell us?” said June.
-
-“Had to go to the Workhouse, I believe, poor soul,” said the girl, who
-had a good heart.
-
-June looked at William. William looked at June.
-
-“Is the Workhouse far from here--please can you tell us?” It was
-William who asked the question.
-
-The Workhouse, it seemed, was not far. In fact it was quite near. To
-get there you had only to go to the end of the lane, turn to the left,
-cross the recreation ground and the footbridge over the canal, and keep
-on bearing to the left and you couldn’t miss it.
-
-“Will it take long?” The question was June’s. And a glance at her wrist
-accompanied it.
-
-“Not more than five minutes.”
-
-“Thank you very much indeed. We are greatly obliged to you.” William it
-was who brought the conversation to a climax with a lift of the hat.
-
-
-
-
-LXV
-
-
-THERE was only one thing to be done now. Mr. Mitchell’s hour
-was up, but there was no help for it. The Workhouse, as the girl had
-said--she might, in June’s opinion have had a claim to good looks if
-she had not suffered from “a rush of teeth to the head”--was not more
-than five minutes away if you followed her instructions.
-
-As June had the matter in hand, the instructions were followed to the
-letter and they arrived at the Workhouse without delay. But as the
-pile, dark and grim, came into view at the far side of the canal, an
-odd emotion suddenly brought them up with a round turn.
-
-A long moment they gazed at the bleak and frowning thing before their
-eyes. And then June said with a laugh, “I’m thinking that’s where
-you’ll be one day, if you don’t find someone who isn’t a genius to look
-after you.”
-
-The words came from the heart, yet William did not appear to hear them.
-“Reminds one,” he murmured half to himself, “of that little thing of
-Duclaux’s called The Poor House.”
-
-June’s puzzlement was revealed by a frown.
-
-“There’s an exhibition of his pictures just now at the Bond Street
-Gallery. Wonderful line. A great sense of mass effect.”
-
-“You can’t tell me,” said June, “there’s beauty in a thing like
-that--in that old Workhouse?”
-
-“Duclaux would say so, with that dark cloud cutting across the gable.
-And that bend of the Canal in the foreground is not without value.” He
-smiled his rare smile which never had looked so divine. But June was a
-little afraid of it now. She kept her eyes the other way.
-
-“Canal,” she said with brevity. “Not without value. I should say so. As
-we say at Blackhampton, ‘where there’s muck there’s money.’”
-
-She glanced at her wrist again. Another ten minutes credited now to Mr.
-Mitchell’s account.
-
-“Duclaux, I suppose, would see it this way.” The queer fellow stepped
-back two paces, put up his hand to shade his eyes and adjust his vision
-to look at the Workhouse.
-
-This was Pure Pottiness, the concentrated essence in tabloid form.
-However, Miss Babraham had already impressed upon June the deep truth
-that genius must be allowed a margin.
-
-A little faint of heart she rang the bell of the gloomy and forbidding
-door. The summons was heeded, tardily and with reluctance, by its
-janitor, a surly male.
-
-“Can we see Mrs. Stark?” asked June.
-
-“Eh?” said the janitor. He must have been deaf indeed not to have heard
-the question in its cool clarity. June repeated it; whereon the keeper
-of the door looked her slowly up and down, turning over the name in his
-mind as he did so.
-
-“Mother Stark she was called,” said June, for his further
-enlightenment. “She sold all kinds of old rubbish at a shop that used
-to be opposite Middleton’s Dairy at the top of Love Lane.”
-
-“Mother Stark you say!” Light was coming to the janitor. “No, you can’t
-see her.”
-
-“Why not? The matter’s important.”
-
-“She’s been in her grave this two month--that’s why not,” said the
-janitor.
-
-“Oh,” said June; and then after brief commerce with the eye of William:
-“Has she any relations or friends?”
-
-The answer was no. Mother Stark had had a parish burial.
-
-William thanked Diogenes with that courtesy which was never-failing
-and inimitable; and then after one more swift glance at each other,
-they turned away, feeling somehow, a little overcome, yet upheld by
-the knowledge of being through at last with the matter of the poor old
-thing’s annuity.
-
-Returning in their tracks across the canal footbridge, across the
-recreation ground, up the lane, past the site of the new picture house,
-past Middleton’s Dairy, they entered the High Street, without haste, in
-spite of Mr. Mitchell, and with a gravity new and strange, as if they
-both felt now the hand of destiny upon them.
-
-Heedless of all the Mr. Mitchells in the universe, they walked very
-slowly to draw out the last exquisite drop of a moment of bliss that,
-no matter what life had in store, they could never forget. And then for
-some mystic reason, June’s brain grew incandescent. It became a thing
-of dew and fire. Ideas formed within it, broke from it, took shape in
-the ambient air. She might have been treading the upper spaces of
-Elysium, except that no girl’s feet were ever planted more firmly or
-more shrewdly upon the pavement of High Street, Crowdham Market.
-
-Four doors from the Unicorn Inn was the most fashionable jeweller’s
-shop in the town, perhaps for the reason that there was no other; and
-as they came level with the window a spark flashed from its depths and
-met an instant answer in the eye of June. Nearly an hour behind the
-schedule they were now, yet they lingered one moment more, while June
-drew William’s attention to a coincidence. The vital spark it seemed,
-owed its being to a gem set in a ring which was almost a replica of the
-one worn by Miss Babraham in honor of its giver, who of course was a
-gentleman in the Blues.
-
-“It’s as like Miss Babraham’s engagement ring as one pea is like
-another pea,” said June in a soft voice.
-
-In the course of their friendship, William had been guilty of many
-silences of a disgraceful impersonality; and he was now guilty of one
-more. He glanced at the ring with a wistful eye, sighed a little,
-and then with slow reluctance moved on. June accompanied him to the
-very threshold of the Unicorn Inn. And upon its doorstep of all
-places, within hearing of the Office, wherein lurked Miss Ferris,
-the landlady’s daughter, he faced about, and then by way of an
-after-thought, his head apparently still full of Duclaux, began to
-stammer.
-
-“Miss June if I go back and get that ring will you--will you
-promise--to--to----?”
-
-Miss Ferris was in the Office; the top of her coiffure was to be seen
-above the frosted glass. And the Office door was wide open; June,
-therefore, gave her answer in a very low and gentle voice.
-
-Her answer, for all that, did not lack pith. “If only you’ll cut out
-the Miss, I’ll wear it like Miss Babraham--on my heart finger.”
-
-
-
-
-LXVI
-
-
-BACK they went to the jeweller’s four doors up. To the expert eye
-of William, the ring on inspection was so little like Miss Babraham’s
-that he seemed to have a qualm about buying it. He had a fancy for
-moonstones and diamonds, but Crowdham Market’s only jeweller did not
-run to these. June was firm, besides, that the ring in her hand was
-cheap at nine guineas, and as no one could call it vulgar, it was
-quite good enough.
-
-William was sure it was nothing like good enough. “But when we get to
-London, you shall have moonstones and diamonds.”
-
-“That’ll be lovely,” said June; and a deep thrill ran in her heart as
-she realized that her dreams were coming true.
-
-William took a wad of Bradburys from his breast pocket. He was now a
-man of property, with a rent roll of twelve hundred a year, but even a
-most careful counting would not let them muster more than seven. June,
-however, as became the lawful owner of an Old Master, whom to acquire
-for the nation a committee had been lately formed, was equal to the
-occasion. For she promptly took a wad from the vanity bag which now
-graced her travels instead of her mother’s old purse, and made up the
-sum.
-
-In the meantime, the jeweller, a man of ripe experience, had put two
-and two together.
-
-“Will you wear it, madam, or will you have it packed in the box?”
-
-An unconventional question, no doubt, but places like Crowdham Market
-are close to nature and get down to bedrock by short cuts.
-
-“I’ll wear it,” June answered. “And I’ll have the box as well. It’ll do
-for my dressing table to keep pins in.”
-
-The jeweller, one of the old school, bowed to June as he handed her the
-box and also the change. And then, a jeweller with a fine technique, he
-smiled at William in a Masonic manner and handed him the ring.
-
-June, as cool as if she was on parade, removed a white kid glove from
-her left hand. “That’s the heart finger,” she said.
-
-If she blushed a little, the jeweller was too busy writing out the
-receipt at the other end of the shop to be aware of the fact.
-
-
-
-
-LXVII
-
-
-THEY decided to ask Miss Ferris, the landlady’s daughter, for
-a cup of tea, before they set out on the journey home. June felt she
-could afford to take the risk, since by now the situation was well in
-hand. Mr. Mitchell raised no objection. Himself an ampler man for a
-noble lunch, he had been recounting tales of Araby and lands of fair
-renown in the privacy of the Office. His suit of Robin Hood green and
-a certain gallantry of bearing had made considerable impact in an
-amazingly short time, not upon Miss Ferris merely, but upon her widowed
-mother, the sole proprietress of the Unicorn Inn, who in the words of
-the local manager of the East Anglia and Overtons Bank “was the warmest
-woman in Crowdham Market.”
-
-While Mr. Mitchell (Sergeant, R.E., D.C.M. with clasp), and the widow
-were in the garden admiring the early pansies, June and William sat
-down to tea in the coffee room. Even there the contiguity of Miss
-Ferris had rather a tendency to cramp June’s style. High-coloured girl,
-she was a little inclined to take liberties as she passed around the
-table. And when June, in her sweetest and best Miss Babraham manner,
-asked if they might have some crab apple jam, she caught the glint of
-the ring on June’s heart finger in a way so direct that she murmured
-something about having to look out for her eyesight--or words equally
-ill-bred--and nearly dropped the tea pot.
-
-By the time they got under way and the nose of the car was set for the
-pleasant land of Surrey, a doubt infected the mind of Mr. Mitchell as
-to whether they would make Homefield before midnight. Neither June
-nor William seemed to care very much whether they did or whether
-they didn’t. The car was most comfortable, the sense of romance hot
-upon them still, the presence of each other vital and delicious in
-their consciousness. Mile passed upon mile. The endless spool of road
-continued to unwind itself, a little wind breathed gentle nothings, Mr.
-Mitchell sat four-square in front, the birds still sang, but the sun
-was going down.
-
-Saying very little, they lived never-to-be-forgotten hours. Now and
-again William pointed to a bird or a tree, the fold of a hill, the form
-of a cloud, the gleam of a distant water. Yet for the most part the
-nearness of each other was all sufficing. June began to nestle closer;
-the chill of night came on. Saying less than ever now, moonstones and
-diamonds stole upon her thoughts. She was haunted by a lovely fear that
-she could not live up to them. And then softly and more soft, she began
-to breathe with a rhythmical rise and fall, slowly deepening to a faint
-crescendo that blended with the motions of the car.
-
-East by west of nowhere came the high moment when the sun was not,
-and the moon not yet. Somewhere over Surrey a star was dancing. Very
-shyly and gently he ventured to give her a kiss. She stirred ever so
-little. A bird spoke from a brake, a note clear and wonderful, yet the
-month was young for the nightingale. But this was Cloud Cuckoo Land, a
-divine country in which the nightingale may be heard at odd seasons.
-
-Psyche stirred again. With a reverence chaste and simple he gave her a
-second kiss, deep and slow. The solemn sacrament was fire to the soul
-of an artist. And then he gave a little gasp. The high gods in his
-brain whispered that the moon was coming.
-
-The moon was coming.
-
-Yes, there she was, the sovereign lady! He sat very still, praying,
-praying that he might surprise some holy secret, hidden even from
-Duclaux.
-
-She was very wonderful to-night. Her loveliness was more than he could
-bear. There was a touch of intimacy in her magic; the country over
-which she shone was elfland. He seemed to hear a faint familiar sound
-of horns. Or it might have been the swift gliding of the car.
-
-In the quietness of the spirit’s ecstasy he could have wept.
-
-Might it be given to Duclaux to see her, lovely lady, just as he could
-see her now!
-
-But he mustn’t dare to breathe or the vision would be forever lost.
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
-NOVELS BY J. C. SNAITH
-
-
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-alone raise the story far above the dead level of society
-fiction.”--_Philadelphia North American._
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-strength.”--_New York Tribune._
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- New York London
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-conflict.”--_Philadelphia Public Ledger._
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-
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-
-“An excellently written and handled tale of adventure and thrills in
-the dark spruce valleys of Canada.”--_New York Times._
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-
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-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
-On page 10, finger-nail has been changed to finger nail.
-
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-
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-
-On page 70, “was not be” has been changed to “was not to be”.
-
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-
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-
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-
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-
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-common usage.
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-dialogue have been retained.
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-<body>
-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Van Roon, by J. C. Snaith</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. 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.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Van Roon</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: J. C. Snaith</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July 13, 2022 [eBook #68520]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>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 University of California libraries)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VAN ROON ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter hide" style="width: 35%">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Cover" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph1">THE VAN ROON</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="adblock2">
-<p class="center no-indent">By<br />
-J. C. SNAITH</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center no-indent">THE VAN ROON<br />
-THE COUNCIL OF SEVEN<br />
-THE ADVENTUROUS LADY<br />
-THE UNDEFEATED<br />
-THE SAILOR<br />
-THE TIME SPIRIT<br />
-THE COMING<br />
-ANNE FEVERSHAM</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<p class="center no-indent">D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br />
-Publishers &ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp; New York</p></div>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="titleblock">
-<h1>THE VAN ROON</h1>
-
-<p class="center no-indent">BY<br />
-<br />
-J. C. SNAITH<br />
-<br />
-AUTHOR OF “THE SAILOR,” “THE UNDEFEATED,”<br />
-“THE COUNCIL OF SEVEN,” ETC.</p>
-
-<p class="p4b">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img src="images/i_titlepage.jpg" width="100" alt="Publishers Logo"
-title="" /></div>
-
-<p class="center no-indent p4">D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br />
-NEW YORK :: LONDON :: MCMXXII</p></div>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center no-indent">COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY<br />
-D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Copyright, 1922, by the Curtis Publishing Co.<br />
-PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA<br />
-</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
-<p class="ph2 nobreak" id="THE_VAN_ROON">THE VAN ROON</p>
-</div>
-
-<h2>I</h2>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">N</span>orth</span> of the Strand, east of the National Gallery,
-a narrow street winds a devious course
-towards Long Acre. To the casual eye it is no more
-than a mean and dingy thoroughfare without charm or
-interest, but for the connoisseur it has its legend. Here
-Swinburne came upon his famous copy of “The Faerie
-Queene”; here more than one collection has been enriched
-by a Crome, a Morland, a choice miniature, a
-first proof or some rare unsuspected article of bigotry
-and virtue.</p>
-
-<p>On the right, going from Charing Cross, halfway
-up the street, a shop, outwardly inconspicuous, bears
-on its front in plain gilt letters the name S. Gedge,
-Antiques.</p>
-
-<p>A regard for the <i>mot juste</i> could omit the final
-letter. S. Gedge Antique was nearer the fact. To
-look at, the proprietor of the business was an antique
-of the most genuine kind, whose age, before he
-was dressed for the day, might have been anything.
-When, however, he had “tidied himself up” to sit at
-the receipt of a custom, a process involving a shave, the
-putting on of collar and dickey, prehistoric frock coat,
-new perhaps for the Prince Consort’s funeral, and a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span>
-pair of jemimas that also were “of the period,” his
-years, in spite of a yellow parchment countenance of
-an incredible cunning, could at conservative estimate
-be reckoned as seventy.</p>
-
-<p>On a certain morning of September, the years of the
-proprietor of S. Gedge Antiques, whatever they might
-be, sat heavily upon him. Tall, sombre, gaunt, a cross
-between a hop-pole and a moulting vulture, his tattered
-dressing gown and chessboard slippers lent a touch of
-fantasy to his look of eld, while the collar and dickey
-of commerce still adorned the back kitchen dresser.</p>
-
-<p>Philosophers say that to find a reason for everything
-is only a question of looking. The reason for the undress
-of S. Gedge Antiques so late as eleven o’clock in
-the morning was not far to seek. His right hand man
-and sole assistant, who answered to the name of
-William, and who was never known or called by any
-other, had been away for an annual holiday of one
-week, which this year he had spent in Suffolk. He was
-due back in the course of that day and his master
-would raise a pæan on his return. In the absence of
-William the indispensable S. Gedge Antiques was like
-a windjammer on a lee shore.</p>
-
-<p>There was a further reason for his lost air. He
-was “at outs” with Mrs. Runciman, his charwoman, a
-state of affairs which had long threatened to become
-chronic. An old, and in her own opinion, an undervalued
-retainer, the suspension of diplomatic relations
-between Mrs. Runciman and her employer could
-always be traced to one cause. S. Gedge attributed it
-to the phases of the moon and their effect on the human
-female, but the real root of the mischief was Mrs.
-Runciman’s demand for “a raise in her celery.” For<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</span>
-many years past the lady had held that her services
-were worth more than “half a crown a day and her
-grub.” The invariable reply of her master was that
-he had never paid more to a char all the time he had
-been in trade and that if she wanted more she could
-keep away. This Thursday morning, according to
-precedent when matters came to a head, Mrs. Runciman
-had taken him at his word. The old man knew,
-however, that her absence would only be temporary.
-A single day off would vindicate the rights of woman.
-As sure as the sun rose on the morrow Mrs. R. would
-return impenitent but in better fettle for charring. But
-as he made a point of telling her, she would play the
-trick once too often.</p>
-
-<p>Char-less for the time being, assistant-less also, this
-morning S. Gedge was not only looking his age, he
-was feeling it; but he had already begun to examine
-the contents of a large packing case from Ipswich
-which Messrs. Carter Paterson had delivered half an
-hour ago at the back of the premises by the side entry.
-Handicapped as S. Gedge Antiques at the moment was,
-he could well have deferred these labours until later
-in the day. Human curiosity, however, had claimed
-him as a victim.</p>
-
-<p>By a side wind he had heard of a sale at a small and
-rather inaccessible house in the country where a few
-things might be going cheap. As this was to take place
-in the course of William’s holiday, the young man had
-been given a few pounds to invest, provided that in his
-opinion “the goods were full value.” By trusting
-William to carry out an operation of such delicacy, his
-master whose name in trade circles was that of “a very
-keen buyer” was really paying him the highest compliment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span>
-in his power. For the god of S. Gedge Antiques
-was money. In the art of “picking things up,” however,
-William had a lucky touch. His master could
-depend as a rule on turning over a few shillings on each
-of the young man’s purchases; indeed there were occasions
-when the few shillings had been many. The
-truth was that William’s flair for a good thing was
-almost uncanny.</p>
-
-<p>Adroit use of a screwdriver prised the lid off the
-packing case. A top layer of shavings was removed.
-With the air of a <i>dévot</i> the old man dug out William’s
-first purchase and held it up to the light of New Cross
-Street, or to as much of that dubious commodity as
-could filter down the side entry.</p>
-
-<p>Purchase the first proved to be a copy of an engraving
-by P. Bartolozzi: the <i>Mrs. Lumley and Her Children</i>
-of Sir Joshua Reynolds. An expert eye priced it
-at once a safe thirty shillings in the window of the
-front shop, although William had been told not to exceed
-a third of that sum at Loseby Grange, Saxmundham.
-So far so good. With a feeling of satisfaction
-S. Gedge laid the engraving upon a chair of ornate appearance
-but doubtful authenticity, and proceeded to
-remove more straw from the packing case. Before,
-however, he could deal with William’s second purchase,
-whatever it might be, he was interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>A voice came from the front shop.</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Si! Uncle Si! Where are you?”</p>
-
-<p>The voice was feminine. S. Gedge Antiques, crusted
-bachelor and confirmed hater of women, felt a sudden
-pang of dismay.</p>
-
-<p>“Where are you, Uncle Si?”</p>
-
-<p>“Com-ming!” A low roar boomed from the interior<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span>
-of the packing case. It failed, however, to get beyond
-the door of the lumber room.</p>
-
-<p>“That girl of Abe’s” ruminated the old man deep in
-straw. In the stress of affairs, he had almost forgotten
-that the only child of a half brother many years his
-junior, was coming to London by the morning train.</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Si!”</p>
-
-<p>With a hiss of disgust worthy of an elderly cobra he
-writhed his head free of the straw. “Confound her,
-turning up like this. Why couldn’t she come this afternoon
-when the boy’d be home? But that’s a woman.
-They’re born as cross as Christmas.”</p>
-
-<p>A third time his name was called.</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques, unshaven, beslippered, bespectacled,
-slowly emerged from the decent obscurity of
-the back premises into the fierce publicity of the front
-shop. He was greeted by a sight of which his every
-instinct profoundly disapproved.</p>
-
-<p>The sight was youthful, smiling, fresh complexioned.
-In a weak moment, for which mentally he had been
-kicking himself round the shop ever since, he had been
-so unwise as to offer to adopt this girl who had lost
-her father some years ago and had lately buried her
-mother. Carter Paterson had delivered her trunk
-along with the packing case from Ipswich, a fact he
-now recalled.</p>
-
-<p>Had S. Gedge had an eye for anything but antiques,
-he must have seen at once that his niece was by way
-of being a decidedly attractive young woman. She
-was nineteen, and she wore a neat well-fitting black
-dress and a plain black hat in which cunning and good
-taste were mingled. Inclined to be tall she was slender
-and straight and carried herself well. Her eyes were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span>
-clear, shrewd and smiling. In fact they appeared to
-smile quite considerably at the slow emergence from
-the back premises of S. Gedge Antiques.</p>
-
-<p>In the girl’s hand was a pilgrim basket, which she
-put carefully on a gate-legged table, marked “£4.19.6,
-a great bargain” and then very fearlessly embraced its
-owner.</p>
-
-<p>“How are you, niece?” gasped the old man who felt
-that an affront had been offered to the dignity of the
-human male.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, Uncle Si, I’m first rate,” said the girl
-trying for the sake of good manners not to smile too
-broadly.</p>
-
-<p>“Had a comfortable journey?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, thank you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t expect you so soon. However, your box
-has come. By the way, what’s your name? I’ve
-forgotten it.”</p>
-
-<p>“June.”</p>
-
-<p>“June, eh? One of these new fangled affairs,” S.
-Gedge spoke aggrievedly. “Why not call yourself
-December and have done with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I will if you like,” said June obligingly. “But it
-seems rather long. Do you care for De, Cem, or Ber
-for short?”</p>
-
-<p>“It don’t matter. What’s in a name? I only thought
-it sounded a bit sloppy and new fangled.”</p>
-
-<p>The eyes of June continued to regard S. Gedge Antiques
-with a demure smile. He did not see the smile.
-He only saw her and she was a matter for grave
-reflection.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="II">II</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">S.</span> Gedge Antiques</span> peered dubiously at his
-niece. He had a dislike of women and more
-than any other kind he disliked young women. But
-one fact was already clear; he had let himself in for
-it. Frowning at this bitter thought he cast his mind
-back in search of a reason. Knowing himself so well
-he was sure that a reason there must be and a good one
-for so grave an indiscretion. Suddenly he remembered
-the charwoman and his brow cleared a little.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me have a look at you, niece.” As a hawk
-might gaze at a wren he gazed at June through his
-spectacles. “Tall and strong seemingly. I hope you’re
-not afraid of hard work.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not afraid of anything, Uncle Si,” said June
-with calm precision.</p>
-
-<p>“No answers,” said S. Gedge curtly. “If you intend
-to stay here you’ve got to mind your p’s and q’s and
-you’ve got to earn your keep.” He sighed and impatiently
-plucked the spectacles from his nose. “Thought
-so,” he snarled. “I’m looking at you with my selling
-spectacles. For this job I’ll need my buying ones.”</p>
-
-<p>Delving into the capacious pockets of his dressing
-gown, the old man was able to produce a second pair
-of glasses. He adjusted them grimly. “Now I can
-begin to see you. Favour your father seemingly. And
-he was never a mucher&mdash;wasn’t your father.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dad is dead, Uncle Si.” There was reproof in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span>
-June’s strong voice. “And he was a very good man.
-There was never a better father than Dad.”</p>
-
-<p>“Must have been a good man. He hardly left you
-and your mother the price of his funeral.”</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t Dad’s fault that he was unlucky in business.”</p>
-
-<p>“Unlucky.” S. Gedge Antiques gave a sharp tilt to
-his “buying” spectacles. “I don’t believe in luck
-myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you?” said June, with a touch of defiance.</p>
-
-<p>“No answers.” Uncle Si held up a finger of warning.
-“Your luck is you’re not afraid of work. If
-you stop here you’ll have to stir yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>June confessed a modest willingness to do her best.</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge continued to gaze at her. It was clear that
-he had undertaken an immense responsibility. A live
-sharp girl, nineteen years of age, one of these modern
-hussies, with opinions of her own, was going to alter
-things. It was no use burking the fact, but a wise man
-would have looked it in the face a little sooner.</p>
-
-<p>“The char is taking a day off,” he said, breaking this
-reverie. “So I’d better give you a hand with your box.
-You can then change your frock and come and tidy up.
-If you give your mind to your job I daresay I’ll be
-able to do without the char altogether. The woman’s
-a nuisance, as all women are. But she’s the worst kind
-of a nuisance, and I’ve been trying to be quit of her
-any time this ten years.”</p>
-
-<p>In silence June followed Uncle Si kitchenwards,
-slowly removing a pair of black kid gloves as she did
-so. He helped her to carry a trunk containing all her
-worldly possessions up a steep, narrow, twisty flight of
-uncarpeted stairs to a tiny attic, divided by a wooden<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span>
-partition from a larger one, and lit by a grimy window
-in the roof. It was provided with a bedstead, a mattress,
-a chest of drawers, a washing stand and a crazy
-looking-glass.</p>
-
-<p>“When the boy comes, he’ll find you a couple o’
-blankets, I daresay. Meantime you can fall to as soon
-as you like.”</p>
-
-<p>June lost no time in unpacking. She then exchanged
-her new mourning for an old dress in which to begin
-work. As she did so her depression was terrible. The
-death of her mother, a month ago, had meant the loss
-of everything she valued in the world. There was no
-one else, no other thing that mattered. But she had
-promised that she would be a brave girl and face life
-with a stout heart, and she was going to be as good
-as her word.</p>
-
-<p>For that reason she did not allow herself to spend
-much time over the changing of her dress. She would
-have liked to sit on the edge of the small bed in that
-dismal room and weep. The future was an abyss.
-Her prospects were nil. She had ambition, but she
-lacked the kind of education and training that could
-get her out of the rut; and all the money she had in
-the world, something less than twenty pounds, was in
-her purse in a roll of notes, together with a few odd
-shillings and coppers. Nothing more remained of the
-sum that had been realized by the sale of her home,
-which her mother and she had striven so hard to keep
-together. And when this was gone she would have
-to live on the charity of her Uncle Si, who was said to
-be a very hard man and for whom she had already conceived
-an odd dislike, or go out and find something
-to do.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span></p>
-
-<p>Such an outlook was grim. But as June put on an
-old house frock she shut her lips tight and determined
-not to think about to-morrow. Uncle Si had told her
-to clean out the grate in the back kitchen. She flattered
-herself that she could clean out a grate with anybody.
-Merely to stop the cruel ache at the back of her brain
-she would just think of her task, and nothing else.</p>
-
-<p>In about ten minutes June came down the attic
-stairs, fully equipped even to an overall which she had
-been undecided whether to pack in her box but had
-prudently done so.</p>
-
-<p>“Where are the brushes and dust pan, Uncle Si?”</p>
-
-<p>“In the cupboard under the scullery sink.” A growl
-emerged from the packing case, followed by a gargoyle
-head. “And when you are through with the kitchen
-grate you can come and clear up this litter, and then
-you can cook a few potatoes for dinner&mdash;that’s if you
-know how.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I know how,” said June.</p>
-
-<p>“Your mother seems to have brought you up properly.
-If you give your mind to your job and you’re
-not above soiling your hands I quite expect we’ll be
-able to do without the char.”</p>
-
-<p>June, her large eyes fixed on Uncle Si, did not flinch
-from the prospect. She went boldly, head high, in the
-direction of the scullery sink while S. Gedge Antiques
-proceeded to burrow deeper and deeper into the packing
-case.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he dug out a bowl of Lowestoft china,
-which he tapped with a finger nail and held up to the
-light.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a good piece,” he reflected. “There’s one thing
-to be said for that boy&mdash;he don’t often make mistakes.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>
-I wonder what he paid for this. However, I shall
-know presently,” and S. Gedge placed the bowl on a
-chair opposite the engraving “after” P. Bartolozzi.</p>
-
-<p>His researches continued, but there was not much to
-follow. Still, that was to be expected. William had
-only been given twenty pounds and the bowl alone was
-a safe fiver. The old man was rather sorry that William
-had not been given more to invest. However,
-there was a copper coal-scuttle that might be polished
-up to fetch three pounds, and a set of fire irons and
-other odds and ends, not of much account in themselves,
-but all going to show that good use had been made of
-the money.</p>
-
-<p>“Niece,” called Uncle Si when at last the packing
-case was empty, “come and give a hand here.”</p>
-
-<p>With bright and prompt efficiency June helped to
-clear up the débris and to haul the packing case into
-the backyard.</p>
-
-<p>The old man said at the successful conclusion of
-these operations:</p>
-
-<p>“Now see what you can do with those potatoes. Boil
-’em in their skins. There’s less waste that way and
-there’s more flavour.”</p>
-
-<p>“What time is dinner, Uncle Si?”</p>
-
-<p>“One o’clock sharp.”</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques, having put on his collar, and
-discarded his dressing gown for the frock coat of
-commerce, shambled forward into the front shop with
-the air of a man who has no time to waste upon
-trivialities. So far things were all right. The girl
-seemed willing and capable and he hoped she would
-continue to be respectful. The times were against it,
-certainly. In the present era of short skirts, open-work<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span>
-stockings, fancy shoes and bare necks, it was hard,
-even for experts like himself, to say what the world
-was coming to. Girls of the new generation were terribly
-independent. They would sauce you as soon as
-look at you, and there was no doubt they knew far
-more than their grandmothers. In taking under his
-roof the only child of a half-brother who had died
-worth precious little, S. Gedge Antiques was simply
-asking for trouble. At the same time there was no
-need to deny that June had begun well, and if at eight
-o’clock the next morning he was in a position to say,
-“Mrs. R. you can take another day off and get yourself
-a better billet,” he would feel a happier man.</p>
-
-<p>A voice with a ring in it came from the shop threshold.
-“Uncle Si, how many potatoes shall I cook?”</p>
-
-<p>“Three middling size. One for me, one for you,
-one for William if he comes. And if he don’t come,
-he can have it cold for his supper.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or I can fry it,” said the voice from the threshold.</p>
-
-<p>“You can fry it?” S. Gedge peered towards the
-voice over the top of his “buying” spectacles. “Before
-we go in for fancy work let us see what sort of a job
-you make of a plain bilin’. Pigs mustn’t begin to fly
-too early&mdash;not in the West Central postal district.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know much about pigs,” said June, calmly,
-“but I’ll boil a potato with anyone.”</p>
-
-<p>“And eat one too I expect,” said S. Gedge severely
-closuring the incident.</p>
-
-<p>The axiom he had just laid down applied to young
-female pigs particularly.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="III">III</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">S.</span> Gedge Antiques</span>, feather duster in hand,
-began to flick pensively a number of articles of
-bigotry and virtue. The occupation amused him. It
-was not that he had any great regard for the things he
-sold, but each was registered in his mind as having
-been bought for so much at So-and-So’s sale. A thoroughly
-competent man he understood his trade. He
-had first set up in business in the year 1879. That was
-a long time ago, but it was his proud boast that he had
-yet to make his first serious mistake. Like everyone
-else, he had made mistakes, but it pleased him to think
-that he had never been badly “let in.” His simple rule
-was not to pay a high price for anything. Sometimes
-he missed a bargain by not taking chances, but banking
-on certainties brought peace of mind and a steady
-growth of capital.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the worst shot he had ever made was the
-queer article to which he now applied the duster. A
-huge black jar, about six feet high and so fantastically
-hideous in design as to suggest the familiar of a Caribbean
-witch doctor or the joss of a barbarous king, held
-a position of sufficient prominence on the shop floor
-for his folly to be ever before him. Years ago he had
-taken this grinning, wide-mouthed monster, shaped
-and featured like Moloch, in exchange for a bad debt,
-hoping that in the course of time he would be able to
-trade it away. As yet he had not succeeded. Few people
-apparently had a use for such an evil-looking thing
-which took up so much house room. S. Gedge Antiques<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>
-was loth to write it off a dead loss, but he had
-now come to regard it as “a hoodoo.” He was not a
-superstitious man but he declared it brought bad luck.
-On several occasions when a chance seemed to arise
-of parting with it to advantage, something had happened
-to the intending purchaser; indeed it would have
-called for no great effort of the imagination to believe
-that a curse was upon it.</p>
-
-<p>By an association of ideas, as the feathers flicked
-that surface of black lacquer, the mind of S. Gedge
-reverted to his niece. She, too, was a speculation, a
-leap in the dark. You never knew where you were
-with women. Now that the fools in Parliament had
-given females a vote the whole sex was demoralised.
-He had been terribly rash; and he could tell by the
-look of the girl that she had a large appetite. Still if
-he could do without “that woman” it would be something.</p>
-
-<p>The picture, however, was not all dark. A flick of
-the feathers emphasised its brighter side as William recurred
-suddenly to his mind. Taking all things into
-account, he was ready to own that the able youth was
-the best bargain he had ever made. Some years ago,
-William, a needy lad of unknown origin, had been engaged
-at a very small wage to run errands and to make
-himself of general use. Finding him extremely intelligent
-and possessed of real aptitude, his master with an
-eye to the future, had taught him the trade. And he
-had now become so knowledgeable that for some little
-time past he had been promoted to an active part in the
-business.</p>
-
-<p>If William had a fault it was that in his master’s
-opinion he was almost too honest. Had it been humanly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>
-possible for S. Gedge Antiques to trust any man
-with a thousand pounds, William undoubtedly would
-have been that man. Besides, he had grown so expert
-that his employer was learning to rely more and more
-upon his judgment. The time had come when S. Gedge
-Antiques had need of young eyes in the most delicate
-art of choosing the right thing to buy; and this absolutely
-dependable young man had now taken rank in
-his master’s mind, perhaps in a higher degree than that
-master recognised, as an asset of priceless value.
-Sooner or later, if William went on in his present way,
-the long-deferred rise in his wages would have to enter
-the region of practical politics. For example, there
-was this packing case from Ipswich. Without indulgence
-in flagrant optimism&mdash;and the old man was seldom
-guilty of that&mdash;there was a clear profit already in
-sight. The bowl of Lowestoft might fetch anything
-up to ten pounds and even then it would be “a great
-bargain at clearance sale prices.” Then there was the
-engraving. William had a nose for such things; indeed
-his master often wondered how a young chap with no
-education to speak of could have come by it.</p>
-
-<p>At this point there was heard a quiet and respectful:
-“Good morning, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge, standing with his back to the shop door,
-the china bowl again in hand, was taken by surprise.
-William was not expected before the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>That young man was rather tall and rather slight;
-he was decidedly brown from the sun of East Anglia;
-and some people might have considered him handsome.
-In his left hand he carried a small gladstone bag. And
-beneath his right arm was an article wrapped in brown
-paper.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Ah, that’s the bowl,” said William eagerly. “A nice
-piece, sir, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I may be able to tell you more about that,” the
-cautious answer, “when I know what you gave for it.”</p>
-
-<p>William had given thirty shillings.</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques tapped the bowl appraisingly.
-“Thirty shillings! But that’s money.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure it’s a good piece, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you may be right,” said S. Gedge grudgingly.
-“Lowestoft is fetching fair prices just now.
-What’s that under your arm?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s something I’ve bought for myself, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Out of the money I gave you?” said the old man
-as keen as a goshawk.</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir,” said William with great simplicity. “Your
-money was all in the packing case. I’ll give you an
-account of every penny.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what’s the thing you’ve bought for yourself,”
-said the master sternly.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a small picture I happened to come across in
-an old shop at Crowdham Market.”</p>
-
-<p>“Picture, eh?” S. Gedge Antiques dubiously
-scratched a scrub of whisker with the nail of his forefinger.
-“Don’t fancy pictures myself. Chancey things
-are pictures. Never brought <i>me</i> much luck. However,
-I’ll have a look at it. Take off the paper.”</p>
-
-<p>William took off the paper and handed to his master
-the article it had contained. With a frown of petulant
-disgust the old man held an ancient and dilapidated
-daub up to the light. So black it was with grime and
-age that to his failing eyes not so much as a hint of the
-subject was visible.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing to write home about anyhow,” was the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>
-sour comment. “Worth nothing beyond the price of
-the frame. And I should put that”&mdash;S. Gedge pursed
-a mouth of professional knowledge&mdash;“at five shillings.”</p>
-
-<p>“Five shillings, sir, is what I paid for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not worth bringing home.” S. Gedge shook a
-dour head. Somehow he resented his assistant making
-a private purchase, but that may have been because
-there was nothing in the purchase when made. “Why
-buy a thing like that?”</p>
-
-<p>William took the picture gravely from his master
-and held it near the window.</p>
-
-<p>“I have an idea, sir, there may be a subject underneath.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t believe in ideas myself,” snapped S. Gedge,
-taking a microscope from the counter. After a brief
-use of it he added, “There may be a bit o’ badly painted
-still life, but what’s the good o’ that.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve a feeling, sir, there’s something below it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Rubbish anyhow. It’ll be a fortnight’s job to get
-the top off and then like as not you’ll have wasted your
-time. Why buy a pig in a poke when you might have
-invested your five shillings in a bit more china? However,
-it’s no affair of mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s something there, sir, under those flowers,
-I feel sure,” said the young man taking up the microscope
-and gazing earnestly at the picture. “But what
-it is I can’t say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor can anyone else. However, as I say, it’s your
-funeral. In our trade there’s such a thing as being too
-speculative, and don’t forget it, boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“I might find a thing worth having, sir,” William
-ventured to say.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Pigs might fly,” snapped S. Gedge Antiques, his
-favourite formula for clinching an argument.</p>
-
-<p>The mention of pigs, no doubt again by an association
-of ideas, enabled S. Gedge to notice, which he
-might have done any time for two minutes past, that
-his niece had emerged from the back premises, and
-that she was regarding William and the picture with
-frank curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, niece,” said the old man sharply. “What do
-you want now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Is the cold mutton in the larder for dinner, Uncle
-Si?” said June with a slight but becoming blush at being
-called upon to speak in the presence of such a very
-nice looking young man.</p>
-
-<p>“What else do you think we are going to have?
-Truffles in aspic or patty de four grass?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Uncle Si,” said June gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well then,” growled S. Gedge Antiques.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IV">IV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">I</span>t</span> was not until the evening, after tea, when S.
-Gedge Antiques had gone by bus to Clerkenwell in
-order to buy a Queen Anne sofa from a dealer in difficulties
-that William and June really became known to
-one another. Before then, however, their respective
-presences had already charged the atmosphere of No.
-46 New Cross Street with a rare and subtle quality.</p>
-
-<p>William, even at a first glance, had been intrigued
-more than a little by the appearance of the niece. To
-begin with she was a great contrast to Mrs. Runciman.
-She looked as clean and bright as a new pin, she had
-beautiful teeth, her hair was of the kind that artists
-want to paint and her way of doing it was cunning.
-Moreover, she was as straight as a willow, her movements
-had charm and grace, and her eyes were grey.
-And beyond all else her smile was full of friendship.</p>
-
-<p>As for June, her first thought had been, when she
-had unexpectedly come upon William holding up to
-the light the picture he had bought at Crowdham Market,
-that the young man had an air at once very gentle
-and very nice. And in the first talk they had together
-in the course of that evening, during the providential
-absence of Uncle Si, this view of William was fully
-confirmed.</p>
-
-<p>He was very gentle and he was very nice.</p>
-
-<p>The conversation began shortly after seven o’clock
-when William had put up the shutters and locked the
-door of the shop. It was he who opened the ball.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You’ve come to stay, Miss Gedge, haven’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said June, “if I can make myself useful to
-Uncle Si.”</p>
-
-<p>“But aren’t you adopted? The master said a fortnight
-ago he was going to adopt you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Si says I’m half and half at present,” said
-June demurely. “I’m a month on trial. If I suit his
-ways he says I can stay, but if I don’t I must get after
-a job.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you will stay,” said William with obvious
-sincerity.</p>
-
-<p>There was enough Woman in the heart of the niece
-of S. Gedge Antiques to cause her to smile to herself.
-This was a perfect Simple Simon of a fellow, yet she
-could not deny that there was something about him
-which gave her quite a thrill.</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you hope so?” asked Woman, with seeming
-innocence.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know why I do, unless it is that you are so
-perfectly nice to talk to.” And the Simpleton grew
-suddenly red at his own immoderation.</p>
-
-<p>Woman in her cardinal aspect might have said
-“Really” in a tone of ice; she might even have been
-tempted to ridicule such a statement made by such a
-young man; but Woman in the shrewdly perceptive
-person of June was now aware that this air of quaint
-sincerity was a thing with which no girl truly wise
-would dare to trifle. William was William and must
-be treated accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t you very clever?”</p>
-
-<p>She knew he was clever, but for a reason she couldn’t
-divine she was anxious to let him know that she knew
-it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think I am at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you are,” said June. “You must be very clever
-indeed to go about the country buying rare things cheap
-for Uncle Si to sell.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, anybody can pick up a few odds and ends now
-and again if one has been given the money to buy
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Anybody couldn’t. I couldn’t for one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t that because you’ve not been brought up to
-the business?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s more than that,” said June shrewdly. “You
-must have a special gift for picking up things of
-value.”</p>
-
-<p>“I may have,” the young man modestly allowed.
-“The master trusts me as a rule to tell whether a thing
-is genuine.”</p>
-
-<p>June pinned him with her eyes. “Then tell me this.”
-Her suddenness took him completely by surprise. “Is
-<i>he</i> genuine?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who? The master!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;Uncle Si.”</p>
-
-<p>The answer came without an instant’s hesitation.
-“Yes, Miss June, he is. The master is a genuine
-piece.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am very glad to hear it,” said June with a slight
-frown.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, the master is genuine.” Depth and conviction
-were in the young man’s tone. “In fact,” he added
-slowly, “you might say he is a museum piece.”</p>
-
-<p>At this solemnity June smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s a very good man.” A warmth of affection
-fused the simple words. “Why he took me from down<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>
-there as you might say.” William pointed to the
-ground. “And now I’m his assistant.”</p>
-
-<p>“At how much a week,” said the practical June, “if
-the question isn’t rude?”</p>
-
-<p>“I get fifteen shillings.”</p>
-
-<p>“A week?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. And board and lodging.”</p>
-
-<p>She looked the young man steadily in the eyes. “You
-are worth more.”</p>
-
-<p>“If the master thinks I’m worth more, he’ll give it
-to me.”</p>
-
-<p>June pursed her lips and shook a dubious head. Evidently
-she was not convinced.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, I’m sure he will. In fact, he’s promised
-to raise my wages half a crown from the first of the
-new year.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should just think so!” said June looking him still
-in the eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I always get everything found.”</p>
-
-<p>“What about your clothes?”</p>
-
-<p>With an air of apology he had to own that clothes
-were not included; yet to offset this reluctant admission
-he laid stress on the fact that his master had taught
-him all that he knew.</p>
-
-<p>June could not resist a frown. Nice as he was, she
-would not have minded shaking him a little. No Simon
-had a right to be quite so simple as this one.</p>
-
-<p>A pause followed. And then the young man suddenly
-said: “Miss June would you care to see something
-I bought the other day at Crowdham Market?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d love to,” said the gracious Miss June. She
-had seen ‘the something’ already but just now she was
-by no means averse from having another look at it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps you wouldn’t mind coming up to the
-studio.” William laughed shyly. “I call it that, although
-of course it isn’t a studio really. And I only
-call it that to myself you know,” he added naïvely.</p>
-
-<p>“Then why did you call it ‘the studio’ to me?” archly
-demanded Woman in the person of the niece of S.
-Gedge Antiques.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know why, I’m sure. It was silly.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, it wasn’t,” said Woman. “Rather nice of you,
-I think.”</p>
-
-<p>The simpleton flushed to the roots of his thick and
-waving chestnut hair which was brushed back from a
-high forehead in a most becoming manner; and then
-with rare presence of mind, in order to give his confusion
-a chance, he showed the way up the two flights
-of stairs which led direct to June’s attic. Next to it,
-with only a thin wall dividing them, was a kind of extension
-of her own private cubicle, a fairly large and
-well lit room, which its occupant had immodestly called
-“a studio.” A bed, a washing stand, and a chest of
-drawers were tucked away in a far corner, as if they
-didn’t belong.</p>
-
-<p>“The master lets me have this all to myself for the
-sake of the light,” said the young man in a happy voice
-as he threw open the door. “One needs a good light
-to work by.”</p>
-
-<p>With the air of a Leonardo receiving a lady of the
-Colonnas he ushered her in.</p>
-
-<p>A feminine eye embraced all at a glance. The walls
-of bare whitewash bathed in the glories of an autumn
-sunset, the clean skylight, the two easels with rather
-dilapidated objects upon them, a litter of tools and canvases<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>
-and frames, a pervading odour of turpentine,
-and a look of rapture upon the young man’s face.</p>
-
-<p>“But it <i>is</i> a studio,” said June. Somehow she felt
-greatly impressed by it. “I’ve never seen one before,
-but it’s just like what one reads about in books.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, a studio is where pictures are painted. Here
-they are only cleaned and restored.”</p>
-
-<p>“One day perhaps you’ll paint them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I will; I don’t know.” He sighed a little,
-too shy to confess his dream. “But that day’s a long
-way off.”</p>
-
-<p>“It mayn’t be, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>He had begun already to try, but as yet it was a
-secret from the world. “<i>Ars est celare artem</i>,” he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean by that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Life is short, art eternal. It is the motto of the old
-man who teaches me how to clean and renovate these
-things. He says it keeps him up to his work.”</p>
-
-<p>“You go to an art school?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should hardly call it that. But the master wants
-me to learn as much as I can of the practical side of
-the trade, so he’s having me taught. And the more I
-can pick up about pictures, the better it will be for the
-business. You see, the master doesn’t pretend to know
-much about pictures himself. His line is furniture.”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t I say you were clever?” June could not help
-feeling a little proud of her own perception.</p>
-
-<p>“You wouldn’t say that”&mdash;the young man’s tone was
-sad&mdash;“if you really knew how little I know. But allow
-me to show you what I bought at Crowdham Market.
-There it is.” He pointed to the old picture on the
-smaller easel, which now divorced from its frame<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>
-seemed to June a mere daub, black, dilapidated, old and
-worthless.</p>
-
-<p>She could not conceal her disappointment. “I don’t
-call that anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“No!” He could not conceal his disappointment
-either. “Take this glass.” A microscope was handed
-to her. “Please look at it ve-ry ve-ry closely while I
-hold it for you in the light.”</p>
-
-<p>June gave the canvas a most rigorous scrutiny, but
-she had to own at last that the only thing she could see
-was dirt.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t you see water?”</p>
-
-<p>“Where?”</p>
-
-<p>With his finger nail the young man found water.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said June stoutly. “I don’t see a single drop.
-And that’s a pity, because in my opinion, it would be
-none the worse for a good wash.”</p>
-
-<p>This was a facer but he met it valiantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you see trees?”</p>
-
-<p>“Where are the trees?”</p>
-
-<p>The young man disclosed trees with his finger nail.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t see a twig.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you can see a cloud.” With his finger nail he
-traced a cloud.</p>
-
-<p>“I only see dirt and smudge,” said June the downright.
-“To my mind this isn’t a picture at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Surely, you can see a windmill?”</p>
-
-<p>“A windmill! Why there’s not a sign of one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait till it’s really clean,” said William with the
-optimism of genius. He took up a knife and began
-delicately to scrape that dark surface from which already
-he had half removed a top layer of paint that
-some inferior artist had placed there.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span></p>
-
-<p>June shook her head. There was a lovely fall in the
-young man’s voice but it would take more than that to
-convince her. She believed her eyes to be as good as
-most people’s, but even with a microscope and William’s
-finger to help them they could see never a sign
-of a cloud or so much as a hint of water. As for a tree!...
-and a windmill!... either this handsome
-young man ... he really was handsome ... had
-a sense that ordinary people had not ... or
-... or...!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="V">V</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>une</span> suddenly remembered that she must go and
-lay the supper.</p>
-
-<p>William modestly asked to be allowed to help.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you lay supper?” Polite the tone, but June
-was inclined to think that here was the limit to William’s
-cleverness.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, Miss June, I lay it nearly always. It’s part
-of my work.”</p>
-
-<p>“Glad of your help, of course.” The tone was gracious.
-“But I daresay you’d like to go on looking for
-a windmill.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I think perhaps I would.” It was not quite
-the answer of diplomacy, but behind it was a weight of
-sincerity that took away the sting.</p>
-
-<p>“Thought so,” said June, with a dark smile. It
-would have been pleasant to have had the help of this
-accomplished young man, but above all things she was
-practical and so understood that the time of such a
-one must be of great value.</p>
-
-<p>“But I’m thinking you’ll have to look some while
-for that windmill,” she said, trying not to be satirical.</p>
-
-<p>“The windmill I’ll not swear to, but I’m sure there’s
-water and trees; although, of course, it may take some
-time to find them.” William took up a piece of cotton
-wool. “But we’ll see.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span></p>
-
-<p>He moistened the wool with a solvent, which he kept
-in a bottle, a mysterious compound of vegetable oils
-and mineral water; and then, not too hard, he began to
-rub the surface of the picture.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope we shall,” said June, doubtfully. And she
-went downstairs with an air of scepticism she was
-unable to hide.</p>
-
-<p>Supper, in the main, was an affair of bread and
-cheese and a jug of beer, drawn from the barrel in the
-larder. It was not taken until a quarter past nine when
-S. Gedge Antiques had returned from Clerkenwell.
-The old man was in quite a good humour; in fact, it
-might be said, to verge upon the expansive. He had
-managed to buy the Queen Anne sofa for four pounds.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got a bargain, sir,” said William. It was
-William who had discovered the sofa, and had strongly
-advised its purchase.</p>
-
-<p>“That remains to be seen,” said his master, who
-would have been vastly disappointed had there been
-reason to think that he had not got a bargain.</p>
-
-<p>After supper, when the old man had put on his slippers
-and an ancient smoking cap that made him look
-like a Turkish pasha, he took from the chimneypiece
-a pipe and a jar of tobacco, drew the easy chair to the
-fire, and began to read the evening paper.</p>
-
-<p>“By the way, boy,” he remarked, quizzingly, “have
-you started yet on that marvellous thing you were
-clever enough to buy at Ipswich?”</p>
-
-<p>“Crowdham Market, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Crowdham Market, was it? Well, my father used
-to say that fools and money soon part company.”</p>
-
-<p>June, who was clearing the table, could not forbear<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>
-from darting at the young man a gleam of triumph.
-It was clear that Uncle Si believed no more in the windmill,
-not to mention the trees and the water than did
-she.</p>
-
-<p>A start had been made, but William confessed to a
-fear that it might be a long job to get it clean.</p>
-
-<p>“And when you get it clean,” said his master, “what
-do you expect to find, eh?&mdash;that’s if you’re lucky
-enough to find anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t quite know,” said William frankly.</p>
-
-<p>“Neither do I,” S. Gedge Antiques scratched a cheek
-of rather humorous cynicism. And then in sheer expansion
-of mood, he went to the length of winking at
-his niece. “Perhaps, boy,” he said, “you’ll find that
-Van Roon that was cut out of its frame at the Louvre
-in the Nineties, and has never been seen or heard of
-since.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was there one, sir?” asked William, interested and
-alert.</p>
-
-<p>The old man took up the evening paper, and began to
-read. “Canvas sixteen inches by twelve&mdash;just about
-your size, eh? One of the world’s masterpieces. Large
-reward for recovery been on offer for more than twenty-five
-years by French Government&mdash;but not claimed
-yet seemingly. Said to be finest Van Roon in existence.
-Now’s your chance, boy.” A second time S.
-Gedge Antiques winked at his niece; and then folding
-back the page of the <i>Evening News</i>, he handed it to
-William, with the air of a very sly dog indeed. “See
-for yourself. Special article. Mystery of Famous
-Missing Picture. When you find the signature of
-Mynheer Van Roon in the corner of this masterpiece<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>
-of yours, I shouldn’t wonder if you’re able to set up
-in business for yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>Allowing Fancy a loose rein in this benign hour,
-the old man, for the third time honoured his niece with
-a solemn wink.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VI">VI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> next morning saw the beginning of a chain
-of epoch-making events in the history of S.
-Gedge Antiques.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly before eight o’clock Mrs. Runciman turned
-up as usual after her day off. With a most businesslike
-promptitude, however, she was given her quietus.
-In dispensing with her services, from now on, Uncle
-Si took a real pleasure in what he called “telling her
-off.” Many times had he warned her that she would
-play the trick once too often. And now that his prophecy
-had come true, he was able to say just what he
-thought of her, of her ancestry, and of her sex in
-general. She would greatly oblige him by not letting
-him see her face again.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Runciman, for her part, professed a cheerful
-willingness to take her late employer at his word.
-There was plenty of work to be had; and she departed
-on a note of dignity which she sustained by informing
-him in a voice loud enough for the neighbours to hear
-that “he was a miser, and a screw, and that he would
-skin a flea for its feathers.”</p>
-
-<p>On the top of this ukase to the char, the old man held
-a short private conversation with his niece. June had
-begun very well; and if she continued to behave herself,
-got up in the morning without being called, was
-not afraid of hard work, and had the breakfast ready
-by a quarter to eight she would receive, in addition to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>
-board and lodging, two shillings a week pocket money,
-and perhaps a small present at Christmas.</p>
-
-<p>As far as it went this was very well. “But,” said
-June, “there’s my clothes, Uncle Si.”</p>
-
-<p>“Clothes!” The old man scratched his cheek.
-“You’ve money of your own, haven’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only twenty pounds.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll think about clothes when the time comes to
-buy some.”</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge, however, admitted to William privately
-that he had hopes of the niece. “But let me tell you
-this, boy: it’s asking for trouble to have a young female
-sleeping in the house. Old ones are bad enough,
-even when they sleep out; young ones sleeping in may
-be the very mischief.”</p>
-
-<p>In fact, the old man deemed it wise to reinforce
-these observations with a solemn warning. “Understand,
-boy, there must be no carrying on between you
-and her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Carrying on, sir!” Such innocence might have
-touched the heart of King Herod.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I said. I can trust you; in some ways
-you hardly know you’re born; but with a woman, and
-a young one at that, it’s another pair o’ shoes. Women
-are simply the devil.”</p>
-
-<p>William’s blank face showed a fleck of scarlet; yet
-the true inwardness of these Menander-like words were
-lost upon him; and he was rebuked for being a perfect
-fool in things that mattered. However, the arrangement
-was merely temporary. If the girl behaved herself,
-well and good; if she didn’t behave herself, niece
-or no niece, she would have to go. But&mdash;touching
-wood!&mdash;there was nothing to complain of so far.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span></p>
-
-<p>William quite agreed, yet he dare not say as much
-to his master. In his opinion, there was no ground for
-comparison between the dethroned goddess of whom
-he had always been a little in awe, and the creature of
-grace and charm, of fine perception and feminine
-amenity who slept the other side the “studio” wall.
-For all that, in the sight of this young man, one aspect
-of the case was now a matter of concern.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss June,” he said on the evening of the second
-day, “do you mind if I get up early to-morrow and do
-a few odd jobs about the house?”</p>
-
-<p>“What sort of jobs?” Miss June’s air of suspicion
-was tinged with sternness. Now that she reigned in
-Mrs. Runciman’s stead she could not help feeling
-rather important.</p>
-
-<p>“If you’ll show me where the brushes are kept, I’ll
-blacklead the kitchen grate.”</p>
-
-<p>“Please don’t come interfering.” In June’s manner
-was a touch of hauteur.</p>
-
-<p>Beneath the tan of East Anglia, the young man
-coloured. “But you’ll spoil your hands,” he ventured.</p>
-
-<p>“My hands are no affair of yours,” said June, a little
-touched, and trying not to show it.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me take over the kitchen grate for the future.
-And if you don’t mind, I’ll scrub the shop floor.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is there anything else you’d like to do?” said June,
-with amused scorn.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to do all the really rough jobs if I may.”</p>
-
-<p>“For why?”</p>
-
-<p>The Sawney had given his reason already, and, in
-spite of a growing embarrassment, he stuck to his
-guns.</p>
-
-<p>Said June sternly: “You mustn’t come interfering.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>
-Yet the light in her eyes was not anger. “You’ve got
-your department and I’ve got mine. Windmills are
-your department. Blackleading kitchen grates and
-cleaning floors won’t help you to find windmills. Besides,
-you have the shop to look after, and you have to
-go out and find things for Uncle Si, and study art, and
-talk to customers, and goodness knows what you
-haven’t got to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you don’t mind,” said William tenaciously,
-“I’ll get in the coal, anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>June shook her head. “No interference,” was her
-last word.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, the following morning saw a division
-of labour within the precincts of No. 46, New Cross
-Street. When June came downstairs at a quarter to
-seven, she found a young man on his knees vigorously
-polishing the kitchen grate. He was sans coat, waistcoat
-and collar; there was a smudge on the side of his
-nose, and as the temper of a lady is apt to be short at
-so early an hour, it was no wonder that he was rebuked
-crushingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t I say I wouldn’t have interference? I don’t
-come into your studio and look for windmills, do I?”</p>
-
-<p>William, still on his knees, had penitently to own
-that she didn’t.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s&mdash;it’s a great liberty,” said June, hotly.</p>
-
-<p>He looked up at her with an air to disarm the Furies.
-“Oh&mdash;please&mdash;no!”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it then?” Secretly she was annoyed with
-herself for not being as much annoyed as the case demanded.
-“What is it then? Coming into my kitchen
-with your interference.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m ever so sorry, but&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But what?”</p>
-
-<p>“I simply can’t bear to think of your spoiling your
-beautiful hands.”</p>
-
-<p>June’s eyes were fire; her cheek flamed like a peony.
-“Go and look for your beautiful windmills, and leave
-my hands alone.”</p>
-
-<p>But the owner of the beautiful hands was now fettered
-by the knowledge that she was beginning to blush
-horribly.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VII">VII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">I</span>n</span> the evening of the next day, about half an hour
-before supper, June climbed the attic stairs and
-knocked boldly upon the studio door.</p>
-
-<p>“Come in,” a gentle voice invited her.</p>
-
-<p>William, a lump of cotton wool in one hand, the
-mysterious bottle in the other, was absorbed in the task
-of looking for a windmill. He had to own, the queer
-fellow, that so far success had not crowned his search.</p>
-
-<p>“I should think not,” said June, uncompromisingly.</p>
-
-<p>“But there are the trees.” William took up a knife
-and laid the point to a canvas that was already several
-tones lighter than of yore.</p>
-
-<p>There was a pause while June screwed up her eyes
-like an expert; and in consequence she had reluctantly
-to admit that they were unmistakable trees.</p>
-
-<p>“And now we are coming to the water, don’t you
-see?” said the young man in a tone of quiet ecstasy.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s the water?”</p>
-
-<p>With a lover’s delicacy, William ran the point of the
-knife along the canvas.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you see it, Miss June?” There was a thrill
-in the low voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, yes,” said June. “It’s water, right enough.”
-No use trying now not to be impressed. “Now I call
-that rather clever!”</p>
-
-<p>“I knew it was there. And if you know a thing’s
-there, sooner or later you are bound to find it. Do you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>
-know what my opinion is?” Of a sudden, the exalted
-voice sank mysteriously.</p>
-
-<p>June had no idea what William’s opinion was, but
-she was quite willing to hear it, whatever it might be,
-for he had just had a considerable rise in her estimation.</p>
-
-<p>“It wouldn’t surprise me at all if this turns out to be
-a&mdash;&mdash;” He broke off with a perplexing smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Turns out to be a what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I’d better not say.” The words, in their
-caution and their gravity intrigued a shrewd daughter
-of the midlands. June, in spite of herself, was beginning
-to respect this odd young man.</p>
-
-<p>“You think it might be something very good?”</p>
-
-<p>“It might be something almost <i>too</i> good.” William’s
-tone had a deep vibration. “If it keeps on coming out
-like this, it’ll be wonderful. Do you see that cloud?”</p>
-
-<p>June peered hard, but she could not see a suspicion
-of a cloud.</p>
-
-<p>“Take the microscope.”</p>
-
-<p>Even with the microscope no cloud was visible to
-June.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m as sure of it as I ever was of anything,” said
-William. “There’s a cloud&mdash;oh, yes!” The note of
-faith was music. “And there’s a sky&mdash;oh, yes!” A
-stray beam of the September sunset made an effect so
-remarkable, as it slanted across the upturned eyes, that
-June paid them rather more attention at the moment
-than she gave to the canvas.</p>
-
-<p>“Has Uncle Si seen those trees?” she asked suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, the master came up to look at them a few minutes
-ago.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What did he say?”</p>
-
-<p>“He just scratched his cheek and changed his spectacles.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you tell him what you’ve just told me?”</p>
-
-<p>The young man nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Did Uncle Si believe you?”</p>
-
-<p>“He said he’d wait till he saw it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he can’t deny the trees, anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he can’t deny the trees. But, of course the
-real picture is only just beginning to come out, as you
-might say. All the same, he’s made me an offer for
-it, even as it stands.”</p>
-
-<p>With a swift, sudden intuition, June cried: “I hope
-you haven’t taken it!”</p>
-
-<p>“As a matter of fact, I haven’t,” said William, casually.
-“I feel I’d like to keep the picture until I find out
-what it really is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, mind you do. And, if the question isn’t a
-rude one, what did Uncle Si offer?”</p>
-
-<p>“Seven and sixpence. But that’s for the frame
-mainly.”</p>
-
-<p>June grew magisterial. “You mustn’t think of parting
-with it.”</p>
-
-<p>With an innocence hard to credit in one so clever,
-William asked why.</p>
-
-<p>“Why!” June almost snorted. “Because if Uncle
-Si offers you seven and sixpence for a thing which he
-knows you bought for five shillings, you can be sure
-that he considers it may be valuable.”</p>
-
-<p>“The master has always been very good to me,”
-said the young man with extreme simplicity.</p>
-
-<p>At these words June felt a stab of pain, so great was
-the contrast between the two men. One saw the wares<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>
-in which they dealt only in terms of beauty, the other
-in terms of money.</p>
-
-<p>“You are too modest. And, although you are so
-clever, if you don’t mind my saying so, you are also
-rather foolish in some ways&mdash;at least that’s my
-opinion.”</p>
-
-<p>William frankly admitted the impeachment.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, now,” said June, a cool and steady eye upon
-him, “suppose you tell me where you think your foolishness
-lies?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I was foolish enough to think that patch”&mdash;the
-Simpleton pressed the finger of an artist upon the
-patch&mdash;“was really and truly a windmill. But, of
-course, it’s nothing of the kind.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not speaking of windmills now,” said June
-severely. “I’m speaking of things much more important.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but a windmill can be very important. Have
-you ever really seen a windmill?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, of course, I have.”</p>
-
-<p>The Sawney asked where.</p>
-
-<p>June had seen a windmill in Lincolnshire.</p>
-
-<p>“Lincolnshire! Oh, but you should see the one in
-the National Gallery.”</p>
-
-<p>“The one in the where?” said June, with a frown.</p>
-
-<p>Of a sudden his voice took its delicious fall. The
-rare smile, which lit his face, was for June an enchantment:
-“It’s a Hobbema.”</p>
-
-<p>“A what!&mdash;emma!”</p>
-
-<p>“A Hobbema. On Saturdays the shop closes at one,
-so that I could take you to see it, if you’d care to. I
-should like you so much to see it&mdash;that’s if it interests<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span>
-you at all. It will give you an idea of what a windmill
-can be.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I meant a real windmill. I’m only interested
-in real things, anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>“A Hobbema is better than real.”</p>
-
-<p>“Better than real,” said June, opening wide eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“When you see it, you’ll understand what I mean. I
-do hope you’ll come and look at it.”</p>
-
-<p>June was such a practical person that her first instinct
-was to refuse to do anything of the kind. But
-that instinct was overborne by the complexity of her
-feelings. In some ways he was the simplest Simon of
-them all; a longing to shake him was growing upon
-her, but the disconcerting fact remained that after a
-fashion he was decidedly clever. And leaving his mental
-qualities out of the case, when you got his face at
-an angle and you caught the light in his eyes, he was
-by far the handsomest young man she had ever seen.
-Therefore her promise was reluctantly given that on
-Saturday afternoon she would go with him to the National
-Gallery to see what a windmill was really like.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VIII">VIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>une’s</span> promise was made on the evening of Monday.
-Before it could be fulfilled, however, much
-had to happen. Saturday itself was put out of the
-case by the departure of William early that morning
-to attend a sale in Essex, where several things might
-be going cheap. And on the following Thursday he
-had to go to Tunbridge Wells. During his absence on
-that day, moreover, June’s interest in the picture he
-had bought at Crowdham Market was roused suddenly
-to a very high pitch.</p>
-
-<p>Even before this significant event occurred, her mind
-had been full of this much-discussed purchase. Day
-by day William wrought upon it with growing enthusiasm.
-There was now no more doubt in regard to the
-clouds and the sky than there was as to the trees and
-the water. S. Gedge Antiques had been up to the attic
-several times to see for himself, and although in his
-opinion, the best that could be said for the picture was
-that it might turn out to be a copy of a fair example
-of the Dutch School, he went to the length of doubling
-his offer of seven and sixpence. In other words, which
-he issued with point at the supper table on the evening
-prior to William’s trip to Tunbridge Wells, there was
-“a full week’s extra wages sticking out,” if only the
-young man cared to take it in exchange for a dubious
-work of little or no value.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span></p>
-
-<p>William needed, among other things, a new pair of
-boots; he was short of the materials of his craft, and
-the sum of fifteen shillings meant a great deal to him
-at any time, facts with which his employer was well
-acquainted. The temptation was great. While the
-offer was under consideration, June held her breath.
-She had a frantic desire to signal across the table to
-William not to part with his treasure. Much to her
-relief, however, the young man resisted the lure. His
-master told him roundly that only a fool would refuse
-such an offer. William allowed that it was princely,
-but he had quite an affection for the picture now, besides,
-much had to be done to get it really clean.</p>
-
-<p>At present, moreover, he had not even begun to look
-for the signature.</p>
-
-<p>“Signature!” S. Gedge Antiques took up the word
-sarcastically. And there were times, as June knew
-already, when the old man could be terribly sarcastic.
-“You’ll be looking, I suppose, for the signature of
-Hobbema. Seems to me, boy, you’re cracked on that
-subject.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think, sir,” said William, in his gentle voice,
-“that this picture is a Hobbema.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you indeed?” To conceal a rising impatience
-Uncle Si made a face at his niece. “You’re cracked,
-my boy.” He gave his own forehead a symbolical tap.
-“Why waste your time looking for a signature to a
-thing you bought for five shillings at an old serendipity
-shop at Crowdham Market! You’d far better turn
-over a snug little profit of two hundred per cent and
-forget all about it.”</p>
-
-<p>The next day, however, when William set out for
-Tunbridge Wells, he was still the owner of the picture.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>
-And in the light of what was to follow it was a fact of
-considerable importance.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of that morning, while June was helping
-Uncle Si to dress the front window, there sauntered
-into the shop a funny, oldish, foxy little man, who wore
-a brown billycock hat at the back of his head, and had
-a pair of legs as crooked as a Louis Quinze chair. She
-set him down at once as a character out of Dickens.</p>
-
-<p>“Mornin’ to you, Mr. Gedge,” said this quaint
-visitor.</p>
-
-<p>“Mornin’ to you, Mr. Thornton!” said S. Gedge
-Antiques returning the salutation with deference.</p>
-
-<p>June cocked her ears. The note in Uncle Si’s rasping
-voice, which always seemed to need a file, told her
-at once that the visitor was no common man.</p>
-
-<p>As a preliminary to business, whatever that business
-might be, Mr. Thornton fixed an eye like a small bright
-bead on the Hoodoo, whose sinister bulk seemed to
-dominate half the shop. It was fixed, moreover, with
-an air of whimsical appreciation as he murmured:
-“The British Museum is the place for that.”</p>
-
-<p>“There I’m with you, Mr. Thornton.” S. Gedge
-Antiques looked his visitor steadily in the eye. “Wonderful
-example of early Polynesian craftsmanship.”</p>
-
-<p>“Early Polynesian craftsmanship.” The little man
-stroked the belly of the Hoodoo with a kind of rapt
-delicacy which other men reserve for the fetlock of a
-horse.</p>
-
-<p>“Only one of its kind.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should say so,” murmured Louis Quinze-legs,
-screwing up his eyes; and then, by way of after-thought:
-“I’ve just dropped in, Mr. Gedge, to have a
-look at that picture you mentioned to me yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, <i>that</i>, Mr. Thornton.” The voice of S. Gedge
-Antiques suggested that the matter was of such little
-consequence that it had almost passed from his mind.
-“S’pose I’d better get it for you.” And then with an
-odd burst of agility, which in one of his years was quite
-surprising, the old man left the shop, while June, her
-heart beating high, went on dressing the window.</p>
-
-<p>In three minutes or less, William’s picture appeared
-under the arm of William’s master. “Here you are,
-Mr. Thornton!” The voice was oil.</p>
-
-<p>June made herself small between a Chinese cabinet
-and a tallboys in the window’s deepest gorge. From
-this point of vantage, the privilege of seeing and hearing
-all that passed in the shop was still hers.</p>
-
-<p>Foxy Face received the picture in silence from Uncle
-Si, held it to his eyes, pursed his lips, took a glass from
-his pocket, and examined it minutely back and front,
-turning it over and tapping it several times in the process.
-The slow care he gave to this ritual began to get
-on June’s nerves.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s good work in it,” said Louis Quinze-legs, at
-last.</p>
-
-<p>“Good work in it!” said S. Gedge Antiques in what
-June called his “selling” voice. “I should just think
-there was.”</p>
-
-<p>“But there’s one thing it lacks.” The little man,
-looking more than ever like a fox, chose each word
-with delicacy. “It’s a pity&mdash;a very great pity&mdash;there’s
-no signature.”</p>
-
-<p>“Signature!” The old man’s tone had lost the
-drawling sneer of the previous evening. “Tell me, Mr.
-Thornton,&mdash;&mdash;” He must have forgotten that June
-was so near&mdash;“if we happened to come upon the signature<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>
-of Hobbema down there in that left hand corner&mdash;in
-that black splotch&mdash;what do you suppose it
-might be worth?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Thornton did not answer the question at once.
-And when answer he did, his voice was so low that
-June could hardly hear it. “I wouldn’t like to say offhand,
-Mr. Gedge. Mosby sent a Hobbema to New
-York last year, but what he got for it I don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“I heard twenty-eight thousand dollars.”</p>
-
-<p>“So did I, but I doubt it. Still, the Americans are
-paying big money just now. Did you see that thing
-of Mosby’s, by the way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; it was a bit larger than this chap, but it hadn’t
-the work in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, get it a bit cleaner; and then, if you can show
-me Hobbema’s signature with the date, about the place
-where I’ve got my finger, I dare say we can come to
-business, Mr. Gedge.”</p>
-
-<p>“I quite expect we’ll be able to do that,” said the old
-man with an air of robust optimism which surprised
-June considerably.</p>
-
-<p>Foxy Face ventured to hope that such might be the
-case, whereupon the voice of Uncle Si fell to a pitch
-which his niece had to strain a keen ear to catch.</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose, Mr. Thornton, we omit the question of
-the signature? Do you feel inclined to make an offer
-for the picture as it stands?”</p>
-
-<p>The pause which followed was long and tense, and
-then June was just able to hear the cautious voice of
-Foxy Face. “Possibly, Mr. Gedge&mdash;I dare say I
-might. But before I could think of doing that, I
-should like a friend of mine to vet it. He’s wise in
-these things, and knows what can be done with them.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Right you are, Mr. Thornton,” said S. Gedge Antiques
-brisk and businesslike. “If you can tell me
-when your friend is likely to call, I’ll be here to meet
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shall we say to-morrow morning at ten?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, Mr. Gedge. And if my friend can’t
-come, I’ll telephone.”</p>
-
-<p>Foxy Face was bowed out of the shop with a politeness
-that fairly astonished June. She could hardly
-believe that this mirror of courtesy was Uncle Si. In
-fact, it was as if the old man had had a change of heart.
-With the light step of a boy, he took back the picture
-to the attic, while June, thinking hard, retired to the
-back premises to cook two middling-sized potatoes for
-dinner.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IX">IX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">I</span>T</span> was not until the evening that William returned
-from Tunbridge Wells. He had been to look at a
-picture which his master had seen already, but S. Gedge
-Antiques was wise enough to recognise that his assistant
-had an instinct for pictures far beyond his own.
-In the matter of bric-à-brac he would always trust his
-own judgment, but when it came to an oil painting he
-was very glad to have it fortified by the special and
-peculiar knowledge that William had now acquired.
-There was no doubt that in this sphere, which for his
-master was comparatively new and full of pitfalls, the
-young man had a remarkable gift. It was a gift, moreover,
-of which he had yet to learn the true value.</p>
-
-<p>In “summer-time” September the days are long;
-and as supper was not until nine o’clock, there was
-light enough for William, on getting home, to spend a
-rare hour in the studio, delving for further beauties in
-that derelict canvas which already had far exceeded
-his hopes.</p>
-
-<p>“I know where you are going,” whispered June, in
-the young man’s ear as he left the little sitting-room
-behind the shop, where sat Uncle Si, spectacles on nose,
-poring over the pages of Crowe and Cavalcaselle.</p>
-
-<p>The young man glowed at this friendly interest on
-the part of Miss June; in fact, he was touched by it.
-She was the master’s niece; therefore she was on a
-plane of being superior to his own. And he had
-learned already that those who are above you in the
-world, are apt to turn their advantage to your detriment;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>
-but Miss June, for all that she was the master’s
-niece and had been one term at the Blackhampton High
-School, and was therefore a person of social weight,
-had been careful so far not to assert her status. And
-so his heart was open to her; besides this present keen
-interest in his labours was most encouraging.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m coming up to look at it again, if I may,” whispered
-June, as she followed him out of the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Please, please do,” he said, delightedly.</p>
-
-<p>As she climbed the steep stairs, William in the seventh
-heaven, followed close upon her heels. What a
-pleasure to expound the merits of such a work to one
-so sympathetic! As for June, her quick mind was at
-work. Even before the coming of Foxy Face she had
-guessed, or some instinct had told her, that this picture
-was no ordinary one, and now that she had overheard
-that gentleman’s recent talk with Uncle Si she had
-been given furiously to think. To understand all its
-implications needed far more knowledge of a deep,
-not to say “tricky,” subject than she possessed, but one
-fact was clear: her opinion as to the picture’s value was
-fully confirmed. Here was a treasure whose real
-worth even William himself might not be able to guess.</p>
-
-<p>Now was the moment, June shrewdly saw, for
-prompt and decisive action. Uncle Si had set his heart
-upon this rare thing; but if flesh and blood was equal
-to the task, she must take immediate steps to baulk him.
-Alas, she knew only too well that it was likely to prove
-an immensely difficult matter.</p>
-
-<p>June stood in front of the easel, and set her head to
-one side quite in the manner of an expert.</p>
-
-<p>“It seems to grow finer and finer,” she said, in a soft
-voice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it does,” said William, touching it here and
-there with loverly fingers. “If I can but manage to
-get the top off without hurting the fabric, I’m sure it’ll
-be a non-such.”</p>
-
-<p>June fervently said that she hoped it would be.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s the cloud I spoke to you about the other
-day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, yes,” said June, screwing up her eyes, in unconscious
-imitation of Foxy Face. “I see it now. And
-it’s very beautiful indeed.”</p>
-
-<p>“And the touch of sunlight in it. I hope you notice
-that!” As William spoke, it almost seemed to June
-that she could see the reflection of the sunlight in the
-eyes of this enthusiast.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I do,” said June stoutly.</p>
-
-<p>“A real painter has done that!” The young man’s
-voice took that dying fall she had learnt already to
-listen for. “This is a lovely thing, Miss June!” Pure
-cadence touched her heart with fire. “Do you know,
-I am beginning to think this little picture is the most
-perfect thing I have ever seen?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very valuable, I dare say,” said June, bringing him
-to earth.</p>
-
-<p>“I only know it’s good.”</p>
-
-<p>“But surely if it’s good it’s valuable? What do you
-think it might be worth?”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss June,”&mdash;the queer little tremble in his voice
-sounded divine&mdash;“don’t let us think of it as money.”</p>
-
-<p>But at those hushed words, at the far-off look in the
-deep eyes, she felt once more a touch of pain.</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Si would call that sentiment. He believes
-that money is the most important thing there is; he
-believes it is the only thing that matters.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span></p>
-
-<p>She meant it as a facer for this Sawney, who had declared
-to her that Uncle Si could neither think wrong
-nor ensue it. A hit, shrewd and fair, but the Sawney
-was still in business.</p>
-
-<p>“In a manner of speaking, it may be so. But I am
-sure the master will tell you there are things money
-can’t buy.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are they?” June’s frown was the fiercer for
-the effort to repress it.</p>
-
-<p>“Take this glint of sun striking through that wonderful
-cloud. All the money in the world couldn’t buy
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course it could. And I don’t suppose it would
-take much to buy it either.”</p>
-
-<p>He solemnly dissented. She asked why not.</p>
-
-<p>“Because,” said he, “that bit of sunlight only exists
-in the eye that sees it.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s sentiment,” said June severely. “You
-might say the same of anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“You might, of course. Nothing is, but thinking
-makes it so.”</p>
-
-<p>Again June heard the queer little tremble in his
-voice, again she saw that strange look steal across his
-face.</p>
-
-<p>“What you say sounds very deep, but if you talk in
-that way I’m quite sure you’ll never get on in the
-world.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be quite happy to live as I am, if only I’m allowed
-to see the wonderful things that are in it.”</p>
-
-<p>June had a fierce desire to shake him, but he beamed
-upon her, and she became a lamb.</p>
-
-<p>“On Saturday,” he said, “when we go to our little
-treasure house, you will see what I mean.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span></p>
-
-<p>“If you talk in this way,” said June once more severe,
-“I shall not go with you on Saturday to your little
-treasure house. Or on Sunday either. Or on any day
-of the week. If you were a millionaire, you could
-afford to be fanciful. Being what you are, and your
-salary less than half what it should be, I really think
-you ought to be ashamed of yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>She was a little astonished at her own vehemence.
-He seemed a little astonished at it also.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing is, but thinking makes it so,” said June,
-with fine scorn. “That’s what Mr. Boultby, the druggist
-at the bottom of our street at home, would call
-poppycock. It means you’ll be very lucky if some fine
-morning you don’t wake up and find yourself in the
-workhouse.”</p>
-
-<p>One smile more he gave her out of his deep eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“That sort of talk,” said June, with growing fierceness,
-“is just <i>potty</i>. It won’t find you tools and a place
-to work in, or three meals a day, and a bed at night.”</p>
-
-<p>“But don’t you see what I mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t. As I say, to my mind it’s potty. But
-now tell me, what do you think this picture’s worth if
-you were buying it for Uncle Si to sell again?”</p>
-
-<p>“That is a very difficult question to answer. The
-master is so clever at selling things that he might get a
-big price for it in the market.”</p>
-
-<p>“Even without the signature?” And June fixed the
-eye of a hawk on the young man’s face.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t say that. The signature might make a lot
-of difference to a dealer. But don’t let us talk of the
-price. There are things in this picture that money
-ought not to buy.”</p>
-
-<p>An impatient “Poppycock!” all but escaped Mr.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>
-Boultby’s disciple. Yet of a sudden, in a fashion so
-unexpected as to verge upon drama, her own voice took
-that soft quick fall he had taught her the trick of.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t tell you how much I love it,” she said,
-dreamily. “I would give almost anything if it were
-mine.”</p>
-
-<p>William’s limpid glance betrayed that he was only
-too happy to believe her.</p>
-
-<p>“It is quite as beautiful to me as it is to you.” June
-plunged on, but she did not dare to look at him. “And
-I think it would be a terrible pity if it ever came to be
-sold by Uncle Si. I simply love it. Suppose you sell
-it to me?”</p>
-
-<p>“To you, Miss June!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;to me.” There was swift decision and the
-fixing of the will. “I like it so much that I’ll give you
-nineteen pounds for it, and that’s all I have in the
-world.”</p>
-
-<p>William was astonished.</p>
-
-<p>“I hadn’t realised,” he said, in charmed surprise,
-“that you admire it so much as all that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I do admire it.” Her heart beat fast and high.
-“And I want it. I can’t tell you just what that picture
-means to me. But nineteen pounds is all I can pay.”</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head in slow finality.</p>
-
-<p>She did not try to conceal her disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>“I couldn’t think of taking a penny of your money,”
-he said, shyly. “But as you love it so much, I hope
-you will allow me to give it you.”</p>
-
-<p>She gave a little gasp. An act of such pure generosity
-was rather staggering.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you will, Miss June.” He spoke with a delicious
-embarrassment. “Loving it so much really<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>
-makes it yours. To love a thing is to possess it. And
-I shall always have the happiness of feeling that it has
-made you happy.”</p>
-
-<p>She turned away a face glowing with shame. She
-could never hope to feel about it in the way that he did,
-and it seemed almost wicked to deceive him. But a
-young man so poor as he could not afford to be so simple;
-and she soothed her conscience by telling herself
-what she was now doing was for his future good.</p>
-
-<p>Conscience, however, was not to be put out of action
-that way. The part she was playing hurt like a scald
-on the hand. Both their tongues were tied by the pause
-which followed, and then she said in a weak, halting
-manner that was not like her: “You must have something
-in exchange for it, of course&mdash;not that I shall
-ever be able to offer anything near its true value.”</p>
-
-<p>“I ask no more than what you have given me already.”</p>
-
-<p>“What have I given you?”</p>
-
-<p>“You have given me the wonderful look I see sometimes
-in your face, and the light that springs from your
-eyes and the glow of your hair. When you came to
-this house, you brought something with you that was
-never in it before.”</p>
-
-<p>“How funny you are!” June’s cheek was a flame.
-But he spoke so impersonally, delicately weighing each
-word before a passion of sincerity gave it birth, that
-any effective form of rebuke was out of the question.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss June,” this amazing fellow went on, speaking
-for all the world as if she were a picture whose signature
-he was looking for, “when you came here, you
-brought the sun of beauty. Colour and harmony and
-grace, you brought those too. If only I knew how to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>
-paint,”&mdash;he sighed gently,&mdash;“I could never rest until I
-had put you on canvas just as you stand at this
-moment.”</p>
-
-<p>It was clear that he had forgotten completely that
-this was the niece of his employer. She also forgot
-that no young man had ventured yet to speak to her
-like that. This was William the wonderful who was
-addressing her, and his voice was music, his eyes slow
-fire, his whole being a golden web of poetry and romance.</p>
-
-<p>“You oughtn’t to give away such a thing,” she
-persisted, but with none of her usual force. “It’s
-valuable; and I oughtn’t to take it.” The sound of
-her voice, she knew only too well, was thin and
-strange.</p>
-
-<p>“Please, please take it, Miss June,” he quaintly entreated
-her. “It will give me more pleasure to know
-that you are caring for it, and that its beauty speaks to
-you than if I kept it all to myself. I love it, but you
-love it, too. If you’ll share the happiness it brings me,
-then I shall love it even more.”</p>
-
-<p>Shadows of the evening were now in the room. His
-face was half hidden, and the wildness of her heart
-scarcely allowed his voice to be heard. She thought
-no longer of the worth of the gift, nor was she now
-concerned with the propriety of its acceptance. Her
-mind was in the grip of other things. Was it to herself
-he was speaking? Or was he speaking merely
-to a fellow worshipper of beauty? To such questions
-there could be no answer; she trembled at the daring
-which gave them birth.</p>
-
-<p>His mere presence was a lure. She longed to touch
-his hand very gently, and would perhaps have done<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>
-so, had she not been cruelly aware that even the hem of
-her sleeve would defile it. She was cheating him, she
-was cheating him outrageously. The only excuse she
-had was that it was all for his own good; such, at least,
-must now be her prayer, her hope, her faith.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="X">X</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> next morning Foxy Face, true to the appointment
-he had made with S. Gedge Antiques, came
-at ten o’clock with a friend. A quarter before that
-hour William had been sent to the King’s Road, Chelsea,
-in quest of a Jacobean carving-table for which
-his master had a customer.</p>
-
-<p>June, in anticipation of the event, took care to be
-busy in a distant corner of the shop when these gentlemen
-arrived. As on the occasion of Louis Quinze-legs’
-previous visit, Uncle Si lost no time in going himself
-to fetch the picture, but his prompt return was
-fraught for June with bitter disappointment. By sheer
-ill luck, as it seemed, his stern eye fell on her at the
-very moment he gave the picture to Mr. Thornton’s
-friend, a morose-looking man in a seedy frock coat
-and a furry topper.</p>
-
-<p>“Niece,” sharply called S. Gedge Antiques, “go and
-do your dusting somewhere else.”</p>
-
-<p>There was no help for it. June could almost have
-shed tears of vexation, but she had to obey. The most
-she dared venture in the way of appeasing a curiosity
-that had grown terrific was to steal back on tiptoe a
-few minutes later, to retrieve a pot of furniture polish
-she had been clever enough to leave behind. Like a
-mouse she crept back for it, but Uncle Si flashed upon
-her such a truculent eye that, without trying to catch a
-word that was passing, she simply fled.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span></p>
-
-<p>Fear seized her. She felt sure that she had seen
-the last of the picture. Her distrust of S. Gedge Antiques
-had become so great that she was now convinced
-that money would tempt him to anything. Twenty
-miserable minutes she spent wondering what she must
-do if the picture was disposed of there and then. She
-tried to steel her heart against the fact, now looming
-inevitable, that she would never see it again.</p>
-
-<p>At last the visitors left the shop. June then discovered
-that her fears had carried her rather too far,
-and that for the time being, at any rate, Uncle Si had
-been done an injustice.</p>
-
-<p>He shambled slowly into the kitchen and to June’s
-intense relief the picture was in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Niece,” he said, threatfully; “understand once for
-all that I won’t have you hanging about the shop when
-I am doing business with important customers.”</p>
-
-<p>The sight of the picture was so much more important
-than the words which came out of his mouth that June
-felt inclined to treat them lightly.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m telling you,” said the old man fiercely. “Mark
-what I say. I won’t have females listening with their
-mouths open when I’m doing business. And don’t
-laugh at me, else you’ll have to pack your box. Here!”
-Uncle Si handed her the picture with a scowl. “Take
-this back to where it came from; and just remember
-what’s been said to you, or you’ll find yourself short
-of a week’s pocket money.”</p>
-
-<p>Adjured thus, June was a model of discretion for
-the rest of that day; and yet she was the prey of a
-devouring curiosity. She would have given much to
-know what had taken place in the course of the morning’s
-traffic with Louis Quinze-legs and his friend. It<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>
-was not until supper-time that she was able to gather
-a clue, when Uncle Si mentioned the matter to William.
-He was careful to do so, however, in the most casual
-way.</p>
-
-<p>“By the way, boy,” said the old man gravely balancing
-a piece of cheese on the end of his knife, and fixing
-June with his eye as he did so; “that daub of yours&mdash;I’ve
-had Mr. Thornton here to look at it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope he liked it, sir,” said William, with his eager
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Si pursed his mouth. Then he went through
-the rest of his performance, which on this occasion
-ended in a noise through closed lips like a hornet’s
-drone, which might have meant anything.</p>
-
-<p>June felt an insane desire to give the old wretch a
-punch on his long and wicked nose.</p>
-
-<p>“What did he think of the cloud?” asked William.
-“And the light of the sun striking through on to the
-water?”</p>
-
-<p>“He says it’s very rough and dirty, and in bad condition,
-but if I could buy it for two pounds he might
-be able to show me a small profit.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should think so,” murmured June, holding a glass
-of water in suspense.</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Si laid down his knife and looked at her.</p>
-
-<p>“You <i>think</i> so, niece,” he snarled. “Have the goodness
-to mind your own affairs, or you and I will quarrel.
-That’s twice to-day I’ve had to speak to you.”</p>
-
-<p>June covered a retreat from the impossible position
-strong feelings had led her into by emptying her glass
-in one fierce draught.</p>
-
-<p>“You see, boy,” said Uncle Si, turning to William
-with a confidential air, “this&mdash;this <i>picture</i>.”&mdash;It seemed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>
-a great concession on his part to allow that the thing
-was a picture at all&mdash;“is without a signature. That
-makes it almost valueless.”</p>
-
-<p>William smiled and gently shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Beg your pardon, sir, but it is signed in every line.”</p>
-
-<p>“Rubbish. No theorising&mdash;this is a business proposition.
-And I tell you that without the signature, this
-bit of pretty-pretty just amounts to nix.” The old man
-gave his fingers a contemptuous snap. “That’s what
-it amounts to. But as you’ve taken the trouble to bring
-it all the way from Suffolk and you’ve spent a certain
-amount of your master’s time in trying to get it clean,
-as I say, I’ll spring a couple of pounds to encourage
-you. But why I should I really don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>June was hard-set to refrain from breaking the peace
-which followed, with the laugh of derision. Happily,
-by a triumph of will power, she bridled her tongue and
-kept her eyes modestly upon her plate.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, boy!” Uncle Si made a series of conjuror’s
-passes with his spectacles. “Two pounds! Take it
-or leave it! What do you say?”</p>
-
-<p>William did not say anything, yet one of his shy
-smiles was winged to June across the table. She
-promptly sent back a scowl quite feral in its truculence,
-which yet was softened by a world of eloquence and
-humour behind it. There was no other way of intimating
-that Uncle Si must not learn too soon that the
-picture was now hers.</p>
-
-<p>William, no fool, if he chose to use his wits, was
-able to interpret this wireless. Thus he began to temporise;
-and he did so in a way delightfully his own.</p>
-
-<p>“What difference, sir, do you think the signature
-would make to our little masterpiece?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span></p>
-
-<p>The old man gave his assistant a look almost superhuman
-in its caution.</p>
-
-<p>“Heh?” said he.</p>
-
-<p>The question was repeated.</p>
-
-<p>“Depends whose it is,” was the testy answer. “You
-know that as well as I do. If it’s Hobbema’s, it might
-be worth money.”</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t Hobbema’s.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” said S. Gedge Antiques. “Interesting to
-know that.” Had he been on winking terms with his
-niece, he would have winked at her; as it was, he had
-to be content with a sarcastic glance at the tablecloth.
-“But how do you know?” he added, idly careless.</p>
-
-<p>“Anyone can see it isn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>Anyone could not see it wasn’t a Hobbema, and that
-was the snag in the mind of the old man at this moment.
-Neither Mr. Thornton nor his friend, Mr. Finch, was
-quite certain it was not a Hobbema; they were even
-inclined to think that it was one, but in the absence of
-proof they were not disposed to gamble upon it.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you mean, boy, that anyone can see it
-isn’t?”</p>
-
-<p>“That gleam of sunlight, sir.” The voice of William
-was music and poetry in the ear of June. “I doubt
-whether even Hobbema could have painted that.”</p>
-
-<p>“You tell that to the Marines,” said S. Gedge Antiques
-impatiently. All the same he knew better than
-to discourage William in the process of unbosoming
-himself. The young man was continually betraying
-such a knowledge of a difficult and abstruse subject that
-it was becoming a source of wonder to his master.
-“Maybe you’ve found somebody else’s signature?”
-The tone was half a sneer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, I rather think I have,” said William
-quite calmly and simply.</p>
-
-<p>“You have!” A sudden excitement fused the cold
-voice. “When did you find it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It would be about half an hour ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, indeed!” said the old man.</p>
-
-<p>This queer fellow’s casual tone was extremely puzzling.
-Why should he be inclined to apologise for having
-discovered the name of the artist, when it was of
-such vital importance? The only possible explanation
-of the mystery at once presented itself to the astute
-mind which asked the question.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I expect you’ve been a fool. If you couldn’t
-find Hobbema’s signature you had no right to find the
-signature of anyone else.”</p>
-
-<p>William was out of his depth. He could only regard
-his master with eyes of bewilderment. But June was
-not out of hers; she was careful, all the same, not to
-regard Uncle Si with eyes of any kind. She merely
-regarded her plate. And as she did so, a little shiver
-that was almost pain ran through her. Uncle Si was
-such a deep one that she felt ashamed of knowing how
-deep he was.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t understand, sir,” said William, in the way
-that only he could have spoken.</p>
-
-<p>“Boy,” said his master, “you make me tired. In
-some ways you are clever, but in others you are just
-the biggest idiot that ever happened. I should have
-thought a child would have known that this has either
-got to be a Hobbema or it has got to be nothing. The
-best thing you can do is to go upstairs right now and
-take out that signature.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But I understood you to say, sir, that the picture
-has no market value without a signature.”</p>
-
-<p>“No more it has, you fool. But there may be those
-who think it’s a Hobbema. And if there are, it is up
-to us to help them to keep on thinking.”</p>
-
-<p>June hung breathlessly on every word that passed.
-She watched William shake his head in slow and grave
-perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>“But anybody can see that it isn’t a Hobbema.”</p>
-
-<p>“Anybody can’t,” said the old man. “Mr. Thornton
-can’t for one, and he’s a pretty good judge, as a rule.
-Mr. Finch is more doubtful, but even he wouldn’t like
-to swear to it.”</p>
-
-<p>William shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Boy, you are a fool. You are getting too clever;
-you are getting above your trade. Go at once and take
-out that signature, whatever it may be, provided it
-isn’t Hobbema’s, and I’ll give you two pounds for the
-thing as it stands. And let me tell you two pounds is
-money.”</p>
-
-<p>William shook his head a little more decisively.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d have to paint out the trees,” he said, “and the
-water, and that cloud, and that gleam of sunlight before
-I could begin to touch the signature.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a Van Roon,” said William, in a voice so gentle
-that he might have been speaking to himself.</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques laid his knife on his plate with a
-clatter. He gave an excited snort. “Van Fiddlestick!”</p>
-
-<p>William’s smile grew so intense that June could
-hardly bear to look at him.</p>
-
-<p>“Every inch of it,” said William, “and there are not
-so many, is Van Roon.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Why, there are only about a dozen Van Roons in
-existence,” said the old man, a queer little shake coming
-into his voice.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s one more now, sir.” William’s own voice
-was curiously soft.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XI">XI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">“I</span>f</span> you go on like this,” said S. Gedge Antiques,
-after a pause, full of drama, “you will have to
-have a cold compress put on your head. Do you mean
-to tell me you have actually found the signature?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” said William, “right down in the corner
-about half an hour ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then why didn’t you say so instead of keeping it
-all to yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because it doesn’t seem half so important as the
-other things I’ve found.”</p>
-
-<p>“What other things?”</p>
-
-<p>“The trees and the water and that&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve heard more than enough about those. Here
-have you been rubbing for that signature for the best
-part of a fortnight, and you pretend to have found a
-Van Roon, and you keep it as close as the tomb.”</p>
-
-<p>“I had found Van Roon, sir, long before I came upon
-his name.”</p>
-
-<p>“Rubbish! What do you know of Van Roon?”</p>
-
-<p>“There is a Van Roon in the treasure house in the
-Square,” said William with his inward smile.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s only one,” snapped S. Gedge Antiques, “in
-the treasure house in the Square, as you call it, and it’s
-a very small one, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ours is very small, sir. All Van Roons are small.
-And they are very scarce.”</p>
-
-<p>“They are so scarce, my friend, that you’ll never
-convince anybody that ours is genuine.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span></p>
-
-<p>“There’s no need, sir, provided you know it is yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“But that’s just what I don’t know,” said the old
-man. “Anyhow you had better go upstairs and fetch
-it. I’ll have a look at the signature of Mynheer Van
-Roon.” And then Uncle Si scowled at his niece who,
-in a state of growing excitement, had already begun to
-remove the bread and cheese from the supper table.</p>
-
-<p>While the young man went up to the attic, his master
-ruminated.</p>
-
-<p>“Fellow’s cracked,” he declared, a hostile eye still
-fixed upon June. “That’s his trouble. I’ll never be
-able to make anything of him. This comes of Hobbemaising.
-Van Fiddlestick!”</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Si,” said June, in the voice of a dove, “if
-it is a Van Roon, what is the value of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Heh?” growled Uncle Si, and his eye became that
-of a kite. “Never you mind. Get on with the clearing
-of that table, and don’t interfere. I never knew such
-creatures as women for minding other people’s business.
-But I can tell you this, only a born fool would
-talk of Van Roon.”</p>
-
-<p>A born fool came down the stairs at that moment,
-the picture in one hand, a microscope in the other.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not a very good light, sir&mdash;” William’s voice
-trembled a little&mdash;“but I think if you hold it up to the
-gas, you will be able to see the signature right down in
-the corner. Just there, sir, along by my thumb.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man, glass in hand, brought a close scrutiny
-to bear upon the spot along by William’s thumb. Then
-he shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“No, it is just as I thought. There doesn’t begin to
-be the sign of a signature.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you see the upstroke of the R?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t I see the leg of my grandmother!”</p>
-
-<p>“Just there, sir. Round by the edge of my finger
-nail.”</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques solemnly exchanged his “selling”
-spectacles for his “buying” ones, screwed up his
-eyes and grunted: “Why, that’s the tail of a Q, you
-fool.” Again he took up the microscope and made
-prodigious play with it. “That’s if it’s anything.
-Which I take leave to doubt.”</p>
-
-<p>William, however, was not to be moved. And then
-Uncle Si’s manner had a bad relapse. He began to
-bully. William, all the same, stuck to his guns with a
-gentle persistence that June could only admire. This
-odd but charming fellow would have Van Roon, or he
-would have none.</p>
-
-<p>At last the old man laid the microscope on the supper
-table, and there came into his cunning, greedy eyes
-what June called the “old crocodile” look. “If you’ll
-take my advice, boy, you’ll turn that R into an A, and
-you’ll make that upstroke a bit longer, so that it can
-stand for an H, and you’ll touch up those blurs in the
-middle, so that ordinary common people will really be
-able to see that it <i>is</i> a Hobbema. Now what do you
-say?”</p>
-
-<p>William shook a silent, rather mournful, head.</p>
-
-<p>“If you’ll do that, you shall have five pounds for it.
-That’s big money for a daub for which you paid five
-shillings, but Mr. Thornton says American buyers are
-in the market, and with Hobbemas in short supply, they
-might fall for a thing like this. But of course the job
-must be done well.”</p>
-
-<p>William was still silent.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Now what do you say, boy?” The Old Crocodile
-was unable to conceal his eagerness. “Shall we say
-five pounds as it stands? We’ll leave out the question
-of the signature. Mr. Thornton shall deal with that.
-Now what do you say? Five pounds for it now?”</p>
-
-<p>William did not speak. It was at the tip of June’s
-tongue to relieve his embarrassment by claiming the
-picture as her own; but, luckily, she remembered that
-to do so just now might have an effect opposite to the
-one intended. Even as it was, she could not refrain
-from making a “mouth” at William to tell him to stand
-firm.</p>
-
-<p>He saw the “mouth,” but unfortunately so did Uncle
-Si. There were few things escaped the old man when
-he happened to be wearing his “buying” spectacles.</p>
-
-<p>“Niece, you cut off to bed,” he said sternly. “And
-you must learn not to butt in, or one of these days
-you’ll bite granite.”</p>
-
-<p>June showed no desire to obey, but Uncle Si, with
-a look set and dour, shuffled as far as the parlour door
-and opened it. “No more of it, my girl.” The voice
-was full of menace.</p>
-
-<p>One further instant June hesitated. The picture had
-been given to her, and the right and proper course was
-to claim it. But this daughter of the midlands was
-afraid of a false move. The revelation sprang to the
-tip of her tongue, yet a mysterious power seemed to
-hold it back. She may have expected help from William,
-but he, alas, seemed too much occupied in proving
-his case to be able to give a moment’s thought to the
-picture’s ownership.</p>
-
-<p>“Off to bed with you.” The old man’s voice was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span>
-now savage. “Or&mdash;!” There was a world of meaning
-in the strangled threat.</p>
-
-<p>June climbed up to her attic with the best grace she
-could, her thunderbolt unlaunched. As slowly she
-undressed by the uncertain light of one poor candle,
-she felt very unhappy. Not only was there something
-unpleasant, one might almost say wicked, about Uncle
-Si, but his manner held a power of menace which fed
-her growing fear.</p>
-
-<p>What <i>was</i> there to be afraid of? As she blew out
-the candle and leapt into the meagre, rickety bed which
-had lumps in the middle, that was the question she put
-to a rather stricken conscience. To ask the question
-was not to answer it; a fact she learnt after she had
-said her prayers in which Uncle Si was dutifully included.
-Perhaps the root of the mischief was that the
-old man was so horridly deceitful. While he held the
-picture up to the light, and he gazed at it through the
-microscope, she fancied that she had seen the devil
-peeping out of him. In a vivid flash she had caught
-the living image of the Hoodoo. And June was as
-certain as that her pillow was hard, that cost what it
-might he had made up his mind to get possession of the
-treasure.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, she lacked the knowledge to enter
-fully into the niceties of the case. The picture might
-be a thing of great value; on the other hand it might
-not. She was not in a position to know; yet she was
-quite sure that William in spite of his cleverness was
-in some ways a perfect gaby, and that his master was
-out to take advantage of the fact.</p>
-
-<p>As she sought in vain for a soft place in her comfortless
-bed, she was inclined to admire her own astuteness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>
-in persuading William to bestow the picture upon
-herself. It was for the Sawney’s own sake, that at
-least was how she chose to view the transaction now.
-But a sense of vague triumph was dashed by the
-thought lurking at the back of her mind. Uncle Si
-was bound to get the picture from the feckless William
-somehow; indeed the young man, being as clay
-in the hands of his master, she was soon besieged with
-a fear that he had parted with it already.</p>
-
-<p>The slow passing of the tardy minutes gave form
-and pressure to this spectre. With an excitement that
-grew and grew she listened intently for William ascending
-to the room next door. Soon or late she would
-hear his feet on the carpetless stairs; but to one burning
-with impatience it seemed that an age had to pass.</p>
-
-<p>At last came the sounds for which she was so expectantly
-listening. The door of the next room was
-softly closed. What had happened? Was the picture
-still in his keeping? To lie all night with that question
-unanswered was more than she could bear. Suddenly
-she jumped out of bed, flung a macintosh over her
-white nightdress, so that the proprieties might be observed,
-thrust her feet into slippers and then knocked
-upon William’s door.</p>
-
-<p>It was opened at once.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Miss June!” Astonishment was in the tone.
-“Are you ill?”</p>
-
-<p>“The picture?” said June, in quick whisper, so that
-Uncle Si should not hear. “You haven’t left it downstairs,
-I hope?”</p>
-
-<p>Laughing gently, William half turned from the
-threshold and pointed to a small table in the middle of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>
-the room, on which lay the treasure with a bit of candle
-burning beside it.</p>
-
-<p>A deep sigh expressed June’s relief. “Please give it
-to me. I will lock it up in my box for safety.”</p>
-
-<p>He smiled at her eagerness, and declared that it
-was quite all right where it was. Besides, another
-week’s work was needed to give the last touches to the
-delicate process of cleaning. June, whose careful bringing-up
-would not allow her to enter the room in such
-circumstances, tried from its threshold to make clear
-that the picture was already clean enough for her. But
-William was not to be moved. Many exquisite details yet
-called for the labours of a true lover.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you must promise,” whispered June finally,
-“to take <i>enormous</i> care of it. You must promise not
-to let it out of your sight for a single moment.”</p>
-
-<p>William hesitated to give this pledge. It appeared
-that his master wanted to show the picture to a friend;
-a fact which did but serve to confirm June in her suspicions.
-But she had the wisdom not to put them into
-words. She was content to affirm once more that the
-picture was now hers and that she would not trust
-<i>anyone</i> with a thing of such value.</p>
-
-<p>“But I’d trust the master with my life,” said William
-softly.</p>
-
-<p>June felt that she would like to beat him for his
-innocence, as her manner plainly showed. In some
-things he was almost too simple to live.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly she gave him a stern good-night, and
-abruptly closed the door. But it was long after Saint
-Martin’s Church had struck the hour of two that sleep
-visited her pillow.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XII">XII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> next day was Saturday; and as the shop
-closed at one, June prepared to keep her promise
-of accompanying William to his “treasure house.”
-Strategy was needed, all the same. After she had
-washed up, she put on her “going out” dress. But when
-she came downstairs in it, Uncle Si, who took a most
-unwelcome interest in all her movements, inquired
-what was in the wind.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to look at a hat,” was the answer, bland
-and cool.</p>
-
-<p>“Going to look <i>at</i> a hat!” To the mind of Uncle Si
-it was an unheard-of proceeding. “Next thing you’ll
-be wanting to buy a hat.”</p>
-
-<p>June confessed that it might be so.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got one already, haven’t you? Besides, the
-shops won’t be open.”</p>
-
-<p>The good shops might not be open, June allowed.
-But she was not seeking a good hat. The article to
-which her fancy turned was for every-day use; yet
-when all was said it was a mere blind. She did not
-really intend to buy a hat, but she certainly meant if
-possible, to throw dust in the eyes of the Old Crocodile.
-Had he been able to guess that she was going with
-William to the National Gallery he would have banned
-the expedition.</p>
-
-<p>In order to stand well with her conscience and not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span>
-be a story teller in the eyes of the world, June walked
-as far as the Strand, and carefully inspected the window
-of a cheap milliner’s. And then, as arranged, she
-met William as the clocks were striking three at the
-Charing Cross corner of Trafalgar Square.</p>
-
-<p>It was a glorious September afternoon. And for
-June it was an exquisite if brief escape from servitude.
-She had yet to see William apart from the shop, yet
-now, as she came upon him standing by the post office,
-she was quite struck by his appearance. Tall and slight
-of form, he carried himself well, his neat suit of blue
-serge, old though it was in the revealing light of the
-sun, was brushed with scrupulous care, and his large
-flowing tie which he had the art of tying in a way of
-his own, made him look so interesting that June secretly
-was rather proud of being seen in his company. For
-undeniably he was handsome. In fact, standing there
-straight, alert and smiling upon the world, he had a
-look of mysterious charm which in the eye of one beholder
-raised him above the run of men.</p>
-
-<p>At the sight of June, he lifted his old straw hat with
-a little air of homage, and also with a slight blush that
-became him adorably. And in his mood there was a
-poetry that delighted her, although she was careful
-not to let him know it.</p>
-
-<p>“How wonderful it all is!” He waved his hand
-gaily to the sky. “And to think that every bit of it
-belongs to you and me!”</p>
-
-<p>June, as matter-of-fact a young woman as the city
-of Blackhampton had ever produced, felt bound to ask
-what William meant by this extravagant remark.
-Charmed she was, and yet she was a little scandalised
-too.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Beauty, beauty everywhere,” said the young man,
-letting his voice take its delicious fall. “There was an
-old Frenchman who said, that to see Beauty is to possess
-it. Look, Miss June, at that marvellous blue, and
-those wonderful, wonderful clouds that even Van Roon
-himself could hardly have painted. It is all ours, you
-know, all for our enjoyment, all for you and me.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you are speaking of the world, aren’t you?”
-There was a slight note of protest in June’s solemn tone.</p>
-
-<p>“If you fall in love with beauty, all the world is
-yours. There’s no escape from beauty so long as the
-sky is above us. No matter where we walk we are
-face to face with beauty.”</p>
-
-<p>June was afraid that a girl who looked so smart in
-a lilac silk dress and a picture hat that she had the
-air of a fashion plate must have caught William’s injudicious
-observation. At any rate, she smiled at him
-as they passed. But then arose the question, had he
-not first smiled at her? Certainly, to be up against that
-intriguing frock, to say nothing of the hat, must have
-meant rare provocation for such an out-and-out lover
-of the ornamental.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Grandeur, no doubt, had caught the look in his
-eyes which a minute ago June herself had surprised
-there. He simply could not help paying tribute to such
-radiance.</p>
-
-<p>But was the girl beautiful? There was no doubt
-that William thought so. Still, the worst of it was
-that in his eyes everything under the sun was beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>“She’d be nothing at all if it were not for the money
-she spends on herself,” June remarked, with more
-severity than relevance.</p>
-
-<p>All the same it was a rare experience to walk abroad<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>
-with William. He had an eye for all things and in
-all things he found the thing he sought.</p>
-
-<p>On the steps of the National Gallery was a majestic
-policeman. To June he was but an ordinary symbol
-of the law, but for William he had a different message.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>At the compliment of this unwonted style of address,
-Constable X drew himself up, and returned the greeting
-with a proud smile.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t tell you how grateful we are to you,” said
-William, “for taking such care of our treasures.”</p>
-
-<p>The policeman seemed rather amused. “It’s my job,”
-he said, training, at the same time, upon June an eye
-of quizzical intelligence. It was odd, yet all in a moment
-Constable X had ceased to be a stern-looking
-fellow.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as William crossed the threshold of his
-treasure house, a kind of rapture came upon him. His
-voice grew hushed. And to June it seemed doubtful
-whether he would ever get beyond the Hermes on the
-main staircase. Once within this palace of many enchantments,
-he began to lose all sense of time and
-place; and, in spite of the fact that he was the soul of
-chivalry, he even seemed in danger of forgetting that
-he was accompanied by a lady.</p>
-
-<p>Troubled at last by the silence of her escort, June
-gently observed: “This place seems nearly as big as
-the Blackhampton Art Museum.”</p>
-
-<p>To William’s fine perception it was a delicate reminder
-that art is eternal, and that in the month of September
-the National Gallery closes at six.</p>
-
-<p>The young man sighed deeply and turned away from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span>
-the Hermes. Up the main staircase they walked side
-by side.</p>
-
-<p>“Keep straight on, Miss June. If we glance to the
-right or the left, we may not get to the Van Roon before
-next Saturday.”</p>
-
-<p>“We!” was June’s thought. “Better speak for yourself.
-In the Blackhampton Art Museum we have things
-far nicer than a few old chipped statues.” Happily, for
-the time being at least, it remained a thought without
-words.</p>
-
-<p>They went through a room on the right, and then
-into an inner room. June was led to its farthest corner,
-and proudly marshalled into the presence of an object
-so small, and so insignificant, that she felt it was
-really surprising that even William should attach the
-least importance to it.</p>
-
-<p>However, a mere glance proved that it was not so
-surprising after all. The picture contained a cloud,
-a tree, some water and a windmill. And these objects
-in themselves so trivial, yet sufficed, as June had learned
-already, to raise William at any time to the seventh
-heaven of bliss.</p>
-
-<p>A moment’s inspection of the picture was enough for
-June. To her mind the work was quite commonplace.
-Yet William stood in front of it in an attitude of silent
-adoration, his head a little to one side, and apparently
-holding his breath for such a long period that June began
-to wonder how the trick was done. She was bound
-in honour to share this silent ecstasy, but having varied
-the proceedings a little by standing first on her right
-foot, and then on her left, she decided at last to throw
-up her part.</p>
-
-<p>Very gently she put an end to William’s reverie.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I think I will sit down,” said June.</p>
-
-<p>“Please, please do!” The queer fellow came back
-with a start to the world of reality. “Let us sit over
-there on the corner of that sofa. Perhaps we may be
-able to see it even better then than we do now.”</p>
-
-<p>To the sofa they went accordingly and to June’s discomfiture
-her mentor was at pains to dispose them both
-in a way that should enable them to keep the picture in
-their eye. June had no wish to keep the picture in her
-eye. She had had more than enough of it already.
-Besides, the large room was full of things vastly more
-imposing, much better worth looking at. But William,
-even seated on the sofa by her side, was still in thrall
-to this remarkable work.</p>
-
-<p>There is no saying how long June’s trial would have
-lasted, but after it had gone on for a length of time
-that began to seem interminable, it came to an end in
-the most abrupt and dramatic way. Without any
-kind of warning, a strange appearance swam into their
-ken. Uncle Si, looking spruce and businesslike, and
-much better dressed than usual, entered the room
-through the door behind them.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XIII">XIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>une</span> held her breath, while S. Gedge Antiques with
-thought for nothing save the object that had
-brought him there, made a bee-line for the picture at
-which William was still solemnly staring. The old
-man put on his spectacles. Whether they were his
-“buying” or his “selling” ones, June was unable to
-decide, but whichever they might be they had an important
-function to perform. Uncle Si’s long and foxlike
-nose bent so close to the paint that it might have
-been smelling it.</p>
-
-<p>June’s instinct was to flee before they were discovered.
-And perhaps she would have urged this
-course upon William had not pride said no. She was
-in mortal fear of the old man, yet she despised herself
-for that emotion. After all, they were doing no wrong
-in spending Saturday afternoon in such a very elevated
-form of amusement. Surely it devolved upon her to
-stand up to this tyrant.</p>
-
-<p>William, for his part, was without misgiving.
-Thinking evil of none, least of all his master, he was
-a little awed by that odd arrival, and yet he was unfeignedly
-glad of his presence. The simpleton regarded
-it as a compliment to himself that S. Gedge
-Antiques should take the trouble to come in his own
-person to look at the Van Roon.</p>
-
-<p>At last S. Gedge Antiques turned away from the
-Van Roon, and little suspecting who were so near<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>
-to him, came full upon William and June seated together
-upon the adjacent sofa. For a moment it was
-as if a feather would have knocked him down. He
-could trust his eyes so little that he hastily changed
-his spectacles.</p>
-
-<p>“What!” His brow was thunder. “You! Here!”</p>
-
-<p>June, ready to carry the war into the country of the
-enemy, was prepared to offer a cool “Why not?”
-Happily, a second and wiser thought led her to await
-developments. Secretly, Uncle Si was in a pretty rage
-as June could tell by the look of him. But he was
-not one to let his feelings override his judgment.
-Whatever they were, they could keep. He had come
-there for a particular purpose; this afternoon he was
-bent on business only.</p>
-
-<p>In the rasping voice which made June think of a
-file and sandpaper, S. Gedge Antiques remarked: “Still
-Hobbemaising, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>William modestly admitted that he hoped Miss June
-would have a look at The Avenue.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s hope she’ll be the better for it.” The old man
-did his best to be polite. “It will improve her mind, no
-doubt.”</p>
-
-<p>“But we have come to see the Van Roon, sir,” said
-William impulsively.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you have.” There was a sudden narrowing of
-foxy eyes. “Seems to me, boy, you’ve got Van Roon
-on the brain.”</p>
-
-<p>William could not help laughing at his master’s tone
-of playfulness, but June did not laugh. She knew but
-too well that as far as Uncle Si was concerned, Van
-Roon was an exceedingly serious matter.</p>
-
-<p>“You are wise, boy”&mdash;the old man tried very hard<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span>
-to keep the sneer out of his voice&mdash;“to come and find
-out what a Van Roon really looks like.”</p>
-
-<p>William modestly said that he thought he knew that
-already.</p>
-
-<p>His master shook the head of wisdom. “Judging
-by the way you’ve been going on lately I take leave to
-doubt it. If you can trace the slightest resemblance to
-that thing of ours”&mdash;as Uncle Si half turned to point
-to the picture, June noticed that he was careful to say
-“ours”&mdash;“I’m afraid, boy, you’re qualifying for Colney
-Hatch.”</p>
-
-<p>William laughed gaily at his master’s humour. He
-felt bound in honour to do so, since the jokes from that
-quarter were thin and few. But June did not laugh.
-Something cold, subtle, deadly, was creeping into her
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>The old fox struck an attitude before the Van Roon.
-“How a man who has his wits can compare that daub
-of ours with this acknowledged masterpiece passes me
-altogether.”</p>
-
-<p>As a fact, William had not exactly compared his
-Crowdham Market purchase with Number 2020 in the
-official catalogue. He had merely affirmed that it was
-by the same hand.</p>
-
-<p>June was privileged to hear great argument. And
-as at her birth a kind fairy had bestowed the gift
-of penetration upon her, she listened to all that passed
-with a fixity of mind that was almost painful. Carefully
-weighing the pros and the cons as they were
-advanced, she was fully determined to get a real insight
-into the merits of a most singular and perplexing
-matter.</p>
-
-<p>Who was in the right? It was the opinion of William<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span>
-against the opinion of Uncle Si. From the first
-she had had horrid doubts of the old man’s sincerity,
-yet she must not prejudge so grave an issue. Account
-must be taken, moreover, of the entire range of William’s
-fantastic ideas. The thought was not pleasant,
-but on the face of it, Uncle Si was likely to be far the
-safer guide of the two.</p>
-
-<p>As June listened, however, to the wheedling sneers
-of the one and the forthright tone of the other, almost
-too transparent in its honesty, she could only conclude
-that Uncle Si was deliberately cheapening William’s
-discovery for purposes of his own.</p>
-
-<p>Looking at the masterpiece on the opposite wall, with
-what June was only too keenly aware were the eyes
-of ignorance, it was impossible to deny an extraordinary
-similarity of subject and treatment. And this,
-as she perceived at once, was where Uncle Si overdid
-it. He would not allow that to the vision of a technical
-expert, the possession of which he did not scruple
-now to claim for himself, there was the slightest resemblance.
-Such similarities as might exist on the
-surface to delude the untutored eye he explained away
-in a flood of words whose force was intended to convince
-them both. But he convinced neither. June,
-pinning her wits to a plain argument, smiled secretly
-as more than once he contradicted himself. William
-on the other hand, was not permitted by the love and
-reverence he bore his master, to submit his speeches
-to the scale. He took his stand upon the divine
-instinct that was his by right of birth. Such being the
-case he could but gently dissent from the old man. It
-was one of his peculiarities that the surer he was, the
-more gentle he grew. And therein, as June perceived,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>
-he differed strangely from Uncle Si who could only
-render conviction in terms of vehemence.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, as a clincher, S. Gedge Antiques growled:
-“Boy, you talk like a fool!” and head in air, marched
-with the aid of his knobby walking stick out of
-William’s treasure house.</p>
-
-<p>William and June having stood to talk with the old
-man, now sat down again.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank goodness he’s gone!” said June.</p>
-
-<p>William confessed that the master had puzzled him
-considerably.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tisn’t like him to close his eyes to the facts of a
-case. I can’t think what has happened to the master.
-He hardly ever makes a mistake.”</p>
-
-<p>Said June sagaciously: “Uncle Si being so wise about
-most things, isn’t it likely that the mistake is yours?”</p>
-
-<p>“It may be so,” William allowed. But at once he
-added, with a divine simplicity: “I will stake my life,
-all the same, Miss June, that our picture is a Van
-Roon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or a clever forgery, perhaps.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no. As sure as you and I sit here, only one
-hand painted that little thing of ours.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then why should Uncle Si declare that it doesn’t in
-the least resemble a Van Roon?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, that I don’t know. It is very strange that he
-should be so blind to the truth. As I say, it is the first
-time I have known it to happen.”</p>
-
-<p>“It may be,” said June, “that this is the first time
-there has been so much money in the case.”</p>
-
-<p>William dissented gravely. “The master would
-never let money influence him in a matter of this kind.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Si lets money influence him in matters of
-every kind.”</p>
-
-<p>William shook his head. “I am afraid you don’t
-quite understand the master,” he said, with a wonderful
-look in his deep eyes.</p>
-
-<p>June was too wise to contest the point. He might
-know more about pictures than did she, but when it
-came to human nature it was another pair of shoes.
-It made her quite hot with anger to feel how easily
-he could be taken in.</p>
-
-<p>Sitting by William’s side on the edge of the sofa
-she made a vow. From now on it should be her aim
-in life to see that Uncle Si did not get the better of
-this young man. She had made a good and wise beginning
-by inducing him to bestow the picture upon
-herself, instead of giving it, as so easily might have
-happened, to the Old Crocodile. She knew that some
-bad quarters of an hour lay ahead, in the course of
-which she and her box might easily find themselves in
-the street; but come what might, let her cherish that
-picture as if it were life itself. For she saw with a
-startling clearness that William’s future, and perhaps
-her own, was bound up in its fortunes.</p>
-
-<p>This surmise as to trouble ahead was borne out very
-exactly by events. When accompanied by William she
-returned to tea in a state as near positive happiness as
-she had ever known, Uncle Si’s aspect was so hostile
-that it would not have been surprising had she been
-sent packing there and then. The presence of William
-helped to restrain the anger of S. Gedge Antiques,
-since there was more to lose than to gain just now by
-fixing a quarrel upon him; but it was clear that the old
-man did not intend to pass over the incident lightly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Niece,” he began the moment his cup had been
-handed to him, “kindly tell me what you mean by
-gallivanting about London.”</p>
-
-<p>A hot flame of resentment ran in June’s cheek. But
-she was too proud to express it otherwise than by
-rather elaborately holding her peace. She continued to
-pour out tea just as if not a word had been said on the
-subject.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s my fault, sir,” said William, stepping into the
-breach chivalrously, but with an absence of tact. “Miss
-June very kindly consented to come and look at the
-Van Roon.”</p>
-
-<p>“There must be no more of it.” Miss June received
-the full benefit of a north eye. “I will not have you
-going about with a young man, least of all a young man
-earning fifteen shillings a week in my employ.”</p>
-
-<p>It was now the turn of William’s cheek to feel the
-flame, but it was not in his nature to fight over a thing
-of that kind, even had he been in a position to do so.
-Besides, it hardly needed his master to tell him that he
-had been guilty of presumption.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, the circumstances of the case made it almost
-impossible for either of the culprits to defend such
-conduct in the other’s presence. Yet June, to the intense
-astonishment of Uncle Si, and no doubt to her
-own, contrived to give battle in hostile territory.</p>
-
-<p>“I can only say,” she remarked, with a fearlessness
-so amazing that Uncle Si scalded his mouth by drinking
-out of his cup instead of out of his saucer, “that if
-fifteen shillings a week is all that William gets, it is
-just about time he had a rise in his wages.”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment Uncle Si could only splutter. Then
-he took off his spectacles and wiped them fiercely.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Gracious goodness me! God bless my body and my
-soul!” June would not have been at all surprised had
-the old slave-driver “thrown a fit.”</p>
-
-<p>“William is very clever,” she said undaunted.</p>
-
-<p>“Niece, hold your tongue.” The words came through
-clenched teeth. “And understand, once for all, that
-I’ll have no more carryings-on. If you don’t look out,
-you’ll find your box in the street.”</p>
-
-<p>Having put June out of action, the old man turned
-his attention to William. But with him he walked
-more delicately. There must be no more Van Rooning,
-but the ukase was given in a tone so oily that June
-just had to smile.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of his own edict, however, it was clear that
-Van Roon continued much in the mind of William’s
-master. The next day, Sunday, instead of taking the
-air of the west central postal district, his custom as
-a rule, when the forenoon was fine, he spent most of
-the morning with the young man in the studio. June
-felt this boded so ill that she went about her household
-chores in a fever of anxiety. She was sure that Uncle
-Si had fully made up his mind to have the picture; he
-meant, also, to have it at his own price. However, she
-had fully made up hers that this tragedy simply must
-not occur.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XIV">XIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>une</span>, preparing for dinner a Yorkshire pudding,
-brought an acute mind to bear on the still graver
-problem before it. What would happen when Uncle
-Si found out that William had been persuaded to give
-her the picture? It was a question she was bound to
-ask, yet she dare not foretell the answer. William and
-she were completely in his power. Wholly dependent
-upon the food and lodging the old man provided and
-the few shillings a week with which he grudgingly
-supplemented them, they could not afford to come to
-an open breach with him; at the same time to June’s
-practical mind, it would be an act of sheer madness to
-give up the rare thing that fortune had put into their
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>Her need just then was the advice of some able and
-disinterested friend. There was only her power of
-putting two and two together to tell her that the picture
-might be worth a large sum. And even that did not
-allow her to know for certain; she must find a means
-of making sure. Unhappily, there was not one person
-in the world to whom she could turn for advice, unless
-it was William himself; and in plain matters of business
-he seemed so hopelessly at sea&mdash;if they involved dealings
-with his master at all events&mdash;that June was convinced
-he would be no use at all.</p>
-
-<p>Beating up an egg for the Yorkshire pudding, she
-felt a deep concern for what was now taking place up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>
-that second pair of stairs in the garret next the tiles.
-Vainly she wished that she had had the sense to ask
-William to keep back as long as possible the fact that
-he had given the picture to her. But the mere request
-would have opened the door to another anxiety. If
-the picture was what he thought it was, could such a
-gift, made in such circumstances, be regarded as irrevocable?
-That must be left to the giver himself to decide:
-assuming the simpleton had enough strength of mind
-to prevent Uncle Si deciding it for him.</p>
-
-<p>The pudding was just ready for the oven when she
-heard Uncle Si come downstairs. He went into the
-parlour, where every Sunday morning, with the help
-of the <i>Exchange and Mart</i> and half an ounce of shag,
-he spent an hour in meditation. As soon as the door
-closed upon the old man, June ran attic-wards to confer
-with William.</p>
-
-<p>There was no beating about the bush. Bursting in
-upon him breathlessly, she cried: “I hope you have not
-told Uncle Si the picture is mine. I had meant to warn
-you not to do so on any account&mdash;not for the present,
-at least.”</p>
-
-<p>William looked up from the treasure with his absorbed air;
-but it appeared that as yet he had not let
-the cat out of the bag.</p>
-
-<p>“I am very glad.” June breathed freely again.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought,” said William sadly, “it would be best
-not to tell the master until after his dinner. But I fear
-that whenever he knows it will upset him terribly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s like this, Miss June&mdash;the master is fairly setting
-his heart upon this picture.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then he’d better unset it,” said June harshly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span></p>
-
-<p>Trouble came unmistakably into the expressive face
-of the picture’s late owner.</p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid it will be quite a blow to him if he
-doesn’t get this beautiful thing,” he said, gazing affectionately
-at what he held in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“And yet he thinks so little of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no! Not now. This morning after a careful
-examination he’s changed his mind.”</p>
-
-<p>June was not impressed by this face-about on the
-part of S. Gedge Antiques. “If you ask me,” she
-declared scornfully, “he changed his mind some time
-ago. But he’s a bit too artful to let you know that.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why?” said William perplexedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you see that he thinks the more he cheapens
-it the easier it will be to get it from you?”</p>
-
-<p>William could not bring himself to take so harsh a
-view.</p>
-
-<p>“What does he offer for it now?” the new owner of
-the Van Roon sternly inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“You are not fair to the dear old master, believe me,
-Miss June.” The young man spoke with charming
-earnestness. “He has such a reverence for beauty that
-he cannot reckon it in terms of money. This morning
-I have brought him to see with my eyes.” Pride and
-affection deepened in the voice of the simpleton. “He
-has now such a regard for this lovely thing that he will
-not be happy until he possesses it, and I shall not be
-happy until you have given it to him.”</p>
-
-<p>June was simply aghast.</p>
-
-<p>“But&mdash;but it was given to me!”</p>
-
-<p>“I know&mdash;I know.” The giver was pink with confusion.
-“But you see, Miss June, your uncle has quite
-set his heart on it. And I am wondering if you will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>
-return it to me, so that I may offer it to him, as a
-token of my love. No one could have had a better
-or kinder master. I owe everything to him.” Suddenly,
-however, the young man was aware of her dismay.
-“I do hope you will not mind too much,” he said,
-anxiously. “If you will allow me, I will give you something
-else.”</p>
-
-<p>June averted her eyes. “You gave me this. And
-you can’t believe how much it means to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know you have a great feeling for it. To
-part with it will hurt you, I can see that. But please
-think of the dear old master’s disappointment if he
-doesn’t get it.”</p>
-
-<p>“He merely wants it to sell again.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are unjust to yourself, Miss June, in thinking
-so. Money does not enter into your feeling about this
-beautiful thing; it doesn’t enter into mine. Why should
-it enter into the master’s, whose love of art is so intense?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because his love of money is intenser. It’s his
-ruling passion. Where are your eyes that they can’t
-see a thing as plain as that?”</p>
-
-<p>She must be as gentle as she could with this absurd
-fellow, yet she feared that such words must cause a
-wound. And the wound was wilfully dealt. It was so
-important that he should be made to see the whole thing
-as really and truly it was. But her hope was slight that
-he would ever be brought to do so.</p>
-
-<p>“I beg you,” he said, almost with passion, “to let
-me have it back, so that I may give it to the dear old
-master.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is madness,” said June bitterly. “He has no true
-feeling for the picture at all.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span></p>
-
-<p>She saw that her words were unwise. They made
-her own position worse. But faced by such an appeal
-she had to do her best on the spur of the moment.</p>
-
-<p>“I know how much it means to you.” Pain was
-clouding the eyes of this dreamer. “I know your love
-for it is equal to mine, but that will make our joy in
-giving it to your uncle so much the greater.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why to Uncle Si&mdash;of all people?”</p>
-
-<p>“He wants it.” William’s voice was low and solemn.
-“At this moment, I believe he wants it more than anything
-else in the world.”</p>
-
-<p>June said with scorn: “He wants it as much as he
-wants a thousand pounds. And he doesn’t want it
-more. I believe money is his god. Think of the fifteen
-shilling he pays you a week. It makes my blood boil.”</p>
-
-<p>A quick flush sprang to the young man’s cheek.
-“Money has nothing to do with this, Miss June.”</p>
-
-<p>“It has to do with everything.”</p>
-
-<p>Delicately he ventured to contradict. “Where love
-is, money doesn’t come in. I simply want to offer this
-priceless thing to the old master out of a full heart, as
-you might say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you shouldn’t have parted with it.” She hated
-herself for her words, but she was not in a mood to
-soften them. “You have already had the pleasure of
-giving it to me, therefore it is only right that you should
-now deny yourself the pleasure of giving it to Uncle
-Si. It is like eating your cake and having it.”</p>
-
-<p>William was not apt in argument, and this was cogent
-reasoning. He lacked the wit to meet it, yet he
-stuck tenaciously to his guns. “When you realize what
-this rare treasure means to the old man, I’m sure you’ll
-change your mind.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span></p>
-
-<p>June shook her head. Secretly, however, she felt
-like weakening a bit. In the wistful voice was a note
-that hurt. But she could not afford to yield; there
-was far too much at stake. “I shall have to think the
-matter over very carefully,” she temporised. “And,
-in the meantime, not a word to Uncle Si that the picture’s
-mine.”</p>
-
-<p>She mustered the force of will to exact a promise.
-Bewildered, sad, a little incredulous, he gave it.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>I hope he doesn’t hate me half as much as I hate
-myself</i>,” was the swift and sickening thought that
-annihilated June, as she ran from the studio, having
-recollected with a pang of dismay that she had not put
-in the pudding for dinner.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XV">XV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">D</span>inner</span> was a miserable meal. The Yorkshire
-pudding was light, the roast sirloin was done to a turn, the potatoes were white and floury, the kidney
-beans were tender, but June could find nothing in the
-way of appetite. The mere presence of William at the
-other side of the table was almost more than she could
-bear. So keen was her sense of a terribly false position
-that she dare not look at him. What did he think
-of her? How must she appear to one all high-minded
-goodness and generosity?</p>
-
-<p>Surely he must know, after what had just passed,
-that her love of the picture was mere base deceit.
-Surely he must hold such an opinion of her now that
-he would never believe or trust her again. And the
-tragedy of it was that she could not hope to make him
-see the real motive which lay behind it all.</p>
-
-<p>Seated at the table, making only a pretence of eating,
-but listening with growing anger and disgust to the
-artful change she now detected in the tone of Uncle
-Si, it was as if the chair in which she sat was poised
-on the edge of an abyss. William must despise her
-quite as much as she despised the Old Crocodile, was
-the thought which turned her heart to stone.</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques having had the wit to discover
-the set of the wind, had begun most successfully to
-trim his sails. An hour’s careful examination of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>
-picture that morning had convinced him that he had
-underrated its merits. There was very good work in
-it, and as a lifelong lover of art&mdash;with a devout glance
-at William&mdash;good work always appealed to him. But
-whether the thing, as a whole, was to be rated as highly
-as William put it, was decidedly an open question.
-Still the picture had merit, and personally he should
-treasure it as much for William’s sake as for its own.</p>
-
-<p>June realized that it was now the turn of this cunning
-old fox to make love to the Van Roon’s owner.
-But was he cunninger than she? Yet what concerned
-her more than anything just now was the plain fact that
-he had already managed to persuade himself that the
-treasure was his property.</p>
-
-<p>This was not the hour to disabuse his mind. And no
-matter when that hour came she foresaw a dire quarrel.
-She was now involved in a business to strain all the
-resources of her diplomacy. But William needed help.
-Cost what it might the task devolved upon her of looking
-after his affairs.</p>
-
-<p>William, meanwhile, in his own peculiar way, seemed
-not averse from looking after hers. After dinner her
-first duty was to clear the table and wash up; and he
-simply insisted upon bearing a hand. He carried the
-tray into the back kitchen, and then, almost with defiance,
-presided at the washing of the crockery, while she
-had to be content with the humbler office of drying it.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s your hands I’m thinking of, Miss June.”</p>
-
-<p>“My hands are no affair of yours,” was the terse
-reply.</p>
-
-<p>The lover of beauty shyly declared that such hands
-were not meant for such a task.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing to write home about&mdash;my hands aren’t.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span></p>
-
-<p>Politely sceptical, William drew from his pocket a
-bit of pumice stone.</p>
-
-<p>“It is to take the soils out of your fingers,” he said,
-offering this talisman shyly.</p>
-
-<p>June’s face was now a tawny scarlet. She did not
-know whether to laugh or to be angry. Yet how was
-it possible to be angry with a creature who was so
-charmingly absurd?</p>
-
-<p>“May I take them out for you?”</p>
-
-<p>The answer was “no.”</p>
-
-<p>But somehow her face must have said “yes.” For
-without more ado, the amazing fellow took one of her
-hands and with nice discretion began to apply the
-pumice stone.</p>
-
-<p>“There, now,” he said finally.</p>
-
-<p>A stern rebuke trembled upon her lips, yet with the
-best will in the world it could not find a form of words
-whereby to get itself uttered.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XVI">XVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span> little</span> later in the day Uncle Si came into the
-back kitchen where June was at work. It seemed
-that he had an announcement to make.</p>
-
-<p>“Niece, there’s a piece of news for you. I’ve decided
-to take Mrs. Runciman back.”</p>
-
-<p>June saw no reason why Mrs. Runciman should not
-be taken back. Indeed, she would welcome the return
-of the charwoman. It would certainly reduce the
-burden of her own labours which was by no means
-light.</p>
-
-<p>“You and I are not going to hit it off, I can see that.
-Already there’s been too much of your interference.
-Next thing you’ll upset that boy. And I wouldn’t have
-that happen&mdash;not for a thousand pounds. So I think
-the best thing I can do is to take Mrs. Runciman back,
-and get her to find you a job.”</p>
-
-<p>“For me!” said June slowly. “Mrs. Runciman find
-a job for me!”</p>
-
-<p>“If she comes you’ll have to go. I can’t afford
-to keep a couple o’ women eating their heads off. The
-times don’t run to it.”</p>
-
-<p>“What sort of a job do you expect a charwoman
-to find for me?” June asked, biting her lip.</p>
-
-<p>“She may know of somebody who wants a domestic
-help. As far as I can see, you are not fitted for anything
-else.”</p>
-
-<p>That was true enough, as June felt with a sharp<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>
-pang. She was a girl without any sort of training except
-in the tedium of housework. No other career was
-open to her and she was going to be turned adrift.
-There came a hot flame to her cheeks, a sting of quick
-tears to her eyes. She was a proud and ambitious
-girl; never had she felt so keenly humiliated.</p>
-
-<p>“If you stay here,” said Uncle Si, “you’re sure to
-upset that boy. And, as I say, rather than that should
-happen I’d pay a thousand pounds to a hospital.”</p>
-
-<p>June didn’t reply. But in a surge of feeling she
-went up to her attic, and with rage in her heart flung
-herself full length on the bed.</p>
-
-<p>The blow was fully expected, yet that hardly made
-the weight of it less. Soon or late this miser was
-bound to turn her out of doors; yet coming at such a
-time “the sack” was in the nature of a calamity.</p>
-
-<p>Well, she must face it! Domestic service was the
-only thing to which she could turn her hand, and that,
-she foresaw, was likely to prove a form of slavery. A
-future, hard, confined and miserable, lay in front of
-her.</p>
-
-<p>Bitterly she regretted now that she had not been able
-to fit herself for some other way of life. She had had
-a reasonably good education, as far as it went, in her
-native town of Blackhampton, where her father at
-one time had been in a moderately good position. But
-he had died when she was fourteen. And her mother,
-with health completely broken several years before her
-death had been left so badly off that June, perforce, had
-to give up all thoughts of a wider field. Stifling vague
-ambitions, she had bravely submitted to the yoke but,
-in spite of a sense of duty honestly, even nobly done,
-the sequel was a grim distaste of household drudgery.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>
-And this had not been made less by a month under the
-roof of S. Gedge Antiques.</p>
-
-<p>With a gnawing sense of misery that was like a
-toothache, June slid off the bed and looked at herself
-in the cracked mirror which adorned the crazy dressing-table.
-Her only assets were comprised in her personal appearance.
-Instinctively she took stock of them.
-Alas, as she beheld them now, they were pretty much
-a “washout.”</p>
-
-<p>First to strike her was the tell-tale redness of her
-eyelids, and that disgusted her to begin with. But,
-apart from that, she felt in her own mind that her personality
-was not really attractive. Her education was
-small, her life had been restricted and narrow; and now
-there seemed no way out.</p>
-
-<p>Honestly she was not pretty, she was not clever, and
-she knew next to nothing of the world. Even at Blackhampton,
-where the supply of smart girls was strictly
-limited, she had never passed for anything out of the
-common. She had felt sometimes that her nature was
-too serious. In a girl a serious nature was a handicap,
-she had once heard Mr. Boultby, the druggist at the
-corner of Curzon Street, remark. One “asset,” however,
-she certainly had. The mop of golden-brown
-hair had always been her stand-by, and Mr. Boultby,
-that man of the world, had paid her compliments upon
-it. An artist would revel in it, he had said. Certainly
-there was a lot of it, and the colour having aroused
-comment even in her early days at the High School
-among her form-mates, it was no doubt rather striking.
-She was also inclined to be tall and long in the
-leg, she knew that her shoulders and chest were good,
-she prided herself upon the neatness of her ankles, yet<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span>
-at the back of her shrewd mind lurked the fear that
-the general effect must be plainness, not beauty. She
-had heard Mr. Boultby, always a friend, describe her
-as “unusual,” but she had felt that it was his polite way
-of saying she was not so good-looking as she might be.</p>
-
-<p>No, wherever her fortune might lie, it was not in
-her face. Once or twice, in her romantic Blackhampton
-phases, which at best were very brief and few,
-she had thought of the stage. But one month of London
-had convinced her that it was not her line. Considering
-her inexperience of life her fund of horse
-sense was rather remarkable. She was a great believer
-in the doctrine of “looking facts in the face.”
-And the fact she had to meet now was that she was not
-in any way pretty or talented. Unless you were one
-or the other, and London teemed with girls who were
-both, the doors of the theatre were locked and barred.</p>
-
-<p>Back on the edge of the bed, she began to consider
-the question of learning shorthand and typing, so that
-she might become a clerk in an office. But her means
-were so scant that the plan was hardly feasible. Really
-it seemed that no career was open to her, other than
-the one she loathed. And then the thought of William
-came. At once, by a strange magic, it eased the pressure.
-Heart, brain and will were merged in an immediate task;
-she must stand between this child of
-nature and the avarice of his master.</p>
-
-<p>The sudden thought of William brought courage,
-tenacity, fighting power. She knew that at this moment
-he was the other side the wall. An impelling need
-urged her to go to him. Forgetful of red and swollen
-lids she got up at once and went and knocked on the
-studio door.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span></p>
-
-<p>A familiar voice said, “Come in!”</p>
-
-<p>William, as usual in that room, was pottering about
-amid oils, canvasses and varnish. He was in shirt
-sleeves, he wore a large apron, his shock of fair hair,
-which gave him the look of a poet, was rumpled, there
-was a smudge on his cheek, but the absorption of his
-eyes, their look of intensity, half filled her with awe.</p>
-
-<p>She had really come to tell him that she was going
-to be sent away. But as soon as she found herself in
-his presence she was overcome by sheer pride. From
-the first this young man had treated her with a deference
-which implied that she was of a clay superior
-to his own. His bearing towards her always stressed
-the fact that she was the niece of his good master, and
-that he was a servant humbly grateful for his fifteen
-shillings a week.</p>
-
-<p>At first this attitude had fed her vanity in a subtle
-way. But now, in present circumstances, it seemed
-almost to enrage her. It was quite absurd that a man
-of such distinguished talent should place her upon a
-pedestal. The truth of the matter was she was unfit
-to lace his shoes, and it was amazing that he did not
-know it.</p>
-
-<p>Upon her entrance William had immediately risen
-from his stool, and had bowed slightly over the pot of
-varnish he held in his hand, with a half-humorous
-air of homage, as some famous chemist might have
-done when disturbed by a great lady in the midst of
-his wonderful researches. “I know it’s not me you
-have come to see,” his gentle manner seemed to say;
-“it is this marvellous thing on the easel at my elbow.”</p>
-
-<p>All the same it was William she had come to see.
-She had come to him for countenance and sympathy.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span>
-And it did not help her at all that she should be treated
-with a shy reserve. She craved to be told that she had
-come to mean something to him; she craved to be told
-that his fastidious concern for her hands, and the
-regard he had for a beauty in which she herself did
-not believe was more than mere chivalry towards women
-in general. Alas, in spite of the eager friendliness
-of her reception this was not apparent. In the eyes of
-William she was just the master’s niece, and the incident
-of the pumice stone was without significance, beyond
-the fact that he was no more than the least of
-her servants.</p>
-
-<p>It was very exasperating.</p>
-
-<p>“But if you are wise,” said a voice within, “you
-will not let this Gaby know that you think so.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XVII">XVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>une</span> spent a worried and disconsolate night. She
-had very little sleep. Time and again she listened
-to the melancholy drip-drip of rain on the eaves just
-over her head. Never in her life had she felt so
-wretched. She was horribly lonely, without resources
-or friends. How she was to live through the endless
-years of servitude and dependence on the will of others
-that lay ahead she did not know.</p>
-
-<p>To keep on telling oneself to bear up seemed of little
-use. She had had to do that each hour of each day
-since her mother’s death. The prospect of being cast
-upon the world was indeed dispiriting, yet in the end
-it might turn out better than to sacrifice one’s youth
-upon the altar of such a Moloch as Uncle Si.</p>
-
-<p>As people who sleep ill are apt to do, she fell into
-a comfortable doze just about the time she ought to
-be getting up. Thus, to her dismay, she entered upon
-the trying institution known as Monday morning at a
-quarter past seven instead of half past six.</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Si will be growling for his breakfast in another
-quarter of an hour,” was the thought that urged
-her into her clothes with a frantic haste. One twist
-she gave and no more, without so much as a glance in
-the glass, at the mane of brown gold hair, and then she
-flew downstairs, buttoning the front of her dress.</p>
-
-<p>A fire was burning in the kitchen grate, and upon it
-slices of bacon were sizzling in a frying-pan; the cloth<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>
-was laid for breakfast; moreover, the parlour was already
-swept and dusted. In fact, at the precise moment
-of June’s belated appearance upon the scene, William,
-with a businesslike air, was returning from a visit to
-the dustbin.</p>
-
-<p>When they met in the passage by the scullery she
-came within an ace of rebuking him. “Even if I oversleep
-myself you’ve no right to be so officious,” was
-the sharp phrase which rose to her lips. But a saving
-sense of justice, not always at the service of the female
-soul, held it back. After all, such kindness and devotion
-were worthy of respect; he had saved, besides, an
-unpleasant scene with Uncle Si.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, thank you, William, ever so much,” she had
-the grace to murmur, hoping as she hastily disposed of
-the last button of her dress, that he wouldn’t notice
-she had come down, “half undone.”</p>
-
-<p>“Please don’t mention it, Miss June,” he said, with
-the politeness of a courtier, as he returned the empty
-dustpan to its home beneath the scullery sink. “As you
-didn’t seem quite yourself last night I was hoping you
-would not get up at all this morning. I was going to
-bring your breakfast up to you, and set it outside your
-door.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but you are much too kind.” A sudden fierce
-rush of colour made her cheeks burn horribly. He was
-a very nice fellow, even if he was not so bright in some
-things as he ought to be.</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Si, by the grace of providence, was a few
-minutes late for his breakfast. This seldom happened
-for, as a rule, he was the soul of punctuality. However,
-he was going down to Newbury by the nine
-o’clock from Paddington to attend a sale; in consequence,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span>
-he had bestowed far more pains upon his appearance
-than was usual at this early hour. He was
-in a fairly good humour. The fact that the charwoman’s
-return would enable him “to fire” his niece
-had cheered him so much that for once he had slept
-like a just man.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t expect me until supper time,” he said to June,
-as he put on his high felt hat and his macintosh, and
-grasped the knobbed stick, as ugly as himself, which
-invariably accompanied his travels. “And my advice
-to you, my girl, is to think over very carefully what
-I said to you last night.”</p>
-
-<p>With an air of quiet satisfaction, S. Gedge Antiques
-stepped briskly forth into a soft autumn day where the
-sun as yet could not quite make up its mind to greet
-him.</p>
-
-<p>It was to be a day of great events. And the first
-of these began to materialise shortly before eleven
-when June chanced to enter the shop. William, just
-at that moment, was fathoms deep in conversation
-with a customer. The customer was very tall, she was
-strikingly distinguished and, in the opinion of June,
-she was dressed exquisitely. Soft silk and faint blue
-Chinese embroidery clothed her with a dangerous
-beauty. But it was the coquetry of her hat, an artful
-straw wreathed wonderfully in flowers of many a
-subtle shade that gave the crowning touch.</p>
-
-<p>The hat it was, no doubt, that completed William’s
-overthrow. There was a look of rapture in the eyes
-with which the vain fellow regarded its wearer, for
-which June could have found it in her heart to slay him
-on the spot.</p>
-
-<p>That tell-tale look was really a little too much. June<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>
-could not help lingering on the threshold to watch these
-two. So shamelessly was William engrossed with
-this vision of pure beauty that there was not a chance
-of his eyes straying to look at her. And she would not
-have cared if they had. Such an irrational surge of
-jealousy was now in her heart that she would have
-welcomed his seeing what she thought of his gazing
-like that, even upon the grandest young woman in the
-land.</p>
-
-<p>“So nice of you to take so much trouble,” the fair
-customer said in a voice of such melody that June had
-to own that the celebrated Miss Banks, the daughter
-of Blackhampton’s chief physician, whose charm of
-manner had ever remained in her mind as the high-water
-mark of human amenity, would now have to take
-second place.</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all, madam,” said William, in the William
-way. Even June had to admit that such fine courtesy,
-a little excessive, no doubt, was far removed from mere
-sycophancy. Had he not practised on her? For that
-reason she had a perfect right to feel furious; William’s
-homage was far too inclusive. At the same time,
-there was no gainsaying that in this case he had every
-excuse. Regarded as the mirror of fashion and the
-mould of form, Miss Banks of Blackhampton was
-now a back number.</p>
-
-<p>“The friend I sent it to liked it very much indeed,”
-said the Super-girl. “It was so exactly what she wanted.
-And if by chance you are able to match it, I shall
-be most grateful.”</p>
-
-<p>William, with that divine air of his, promised quite
-simply and sincerely to do his best.</p>
-
-<p>“The price, too, was very moderate,” said the Super-girl<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span>
-with the geniality of one who owns a province.
-Then suddenly she half turned, and her merry glance,
-assisted by a Miss Banksian stick-eyeglass was trained
-full upon the Hoodoo. “What a delicious monster!”
-The voice had quite a Brahms trill in it, not that June
-had ever heard of Brahms. “It reminds one of Edgar
-Allan Poe or the Grand Guignol.”</p>
-
-<p>Unabashed by culture, William stood to his full
-height. June could only marvel at his coolness.</p>
-
-<p>“So Oriental. So grotesque. Makes one think of
-Ali Baba and the Cave of the Forty Robbers. Very
-valuable, of course?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I wouldn’t exactly call it valuable.” June
-hardly knew whether to admire or to deplore this candour.
-“And it takes up a lot of room, and absorbs
-a lot of light. Almost needs the British Museum, as
-you might say, to show it to advantage.”</p>
-
-<p>Again the Brahms trill, as the eye of the Super-girl
-travelled from the Hoodoo to William. “Those fearful
-eyes and those grinning jaws studded with crocodile’s
-teeth make it look absolutely alive. And it’s so
-perfectly hideous that one feels sure there must be a
-curse on it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Gedge declares there is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really?” The eyes, the blue eyes of the Super-girl
-grew round and merry. “I’d love to have a thing
-with a curse on it&mdash;if it’s a real one?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Gedge would part with it for a very reasonable
-sum I feel sure,” said William, with a judicious air that
-June admired the more for being hardly able to credit
-it in him.</p>
-
-<p>With the casual air so becoming to riches, the young
-woman asked the price.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Twenty pounds would buy it,” she was informed.</p>
-
-<p>“Curse and all?”</p>
-
-<p>“Curse and all, madam.” William had a nice sense
-of humour, which June had discovered before she had
-known him an hour, but in this big moment he did not
-relax a muscle.</p>
-
-<p>For about a quarter of a minute the Super-girl
-looked again at the Hoodoo. And then with the air
-of one who takes a great decision, she gave the ugly
-chin a playful tap and said: “I believe the long gallery
-at Homefield is the very place for you, my friend. You
-may not be a thing of beauty, but at the far end I am
-sure you would be a joy for ever!” She made then
-such fine play with her stick-eyeglass, that Miss Banks
-was put off the map altogether. “And a real live curse
-given in, I think you said?”</p>
-
-<p>William bowed a grave affirmative.</p>
-
-<p>It was clear that Miss Blue Blood was intrigued.
-She folded, unfolded, refolded her stick-eyeglass; she
-looked the Hoodoo up, she looked the Hoodoo down,
-standing three paces back in order to do so. “Before I
-really decide”&mdash;addressing the monster in a voice of
-warm caresses&mdash;“I must get my father to come and
-look at you, my dear. He’s wiser than I in these matters.
-You might kill all the pictures in the long gallery.”</p>
-
-<p>At this point William bowed again with exceeding
-deference. But here was not the end. The stick-eyeglass
-lit on the bowl of Lowestoft, which the Sawney
-who was turning out to be not quite such a sawney as
-he seemed, had picked up in his recent travels in
-Suffolk.</p>
-
-<p>“I like that. What a charming piece!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Half-Sawney held the charming piece to the
-light for Miss Stick-eyeglass to gaze upon.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;really quite charming!”</p>
-
-<p>Their heads were so close while together they bent
-over its beauties, that June, without wishing real harm
-to either, could have found it in her heart to hope that
-the bowl might fall from the hands of William and
-break into a thousand pieces.</p>
-
-<p>“What is the price?”</p>
-
-<p>The bowl was turned on to its base while the young
-man glanced at the mystic code which had been traced
-by the hand of S. Gedge Antiques.</p>
-
-<p>“Six guineas, madam,” she was most deferentially
-informed.</p>
-
-<p>“I collect Lowestoft. A charming piece. It will go
-so well with my others. Will you kindly send it to 39b,
-Park Lane?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, Miss Babraham.”</p>
-
-<p>The amazing Miss Babraham opened a vanity bag,
-took out a sheaf of notes, and chose six which, with the
-smile of a siren, she handed to William, who received
-them with one more bow from his full height, and proceeded
-to write out a receipt.</p>
-
-<p>Somehow this transaction was altogether too much
-for June. Flashing one long last glance of immeasurable
-venom upon the stick-eyeglass who, all unconscious
-of the deadly passions it had aroused, had now
-returned to elegant and final contemplation of the Hoodoo,
-the niece of S. Gedge Antiques withdrew hurriedly
-to the scullery sink, filled a bucket of water, and
-proceeded with a kind of contained fury to scrub the
-floor of the larder.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XVIII">XVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">W</span>hen</span> William came in to dinner there was
-music to face. But as there was no sure ground
-at the moment for real battle, the music opened <i>pianissimo</i>.
-It began with a few rather pointed enquiries.</p>
-
-<p>“Had a rather busy morning, haven’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think it has been anything out of the way,”
-was the non-committal answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Done any business?” The question was casual, but
-June fixed him with her eye.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes!” So light and airy was the tone that business
-might have mattered nothing. “I’ve sold the
-Lowestoft bowl.”</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Si’ll be pleased, I expect.” She found it terribly
-difficult to keep a sneer out of her voice, but you
-never know what you can do till you try. “Fetch
-much?”</p>
-
-<p>She knew perfectly well, of course, the price it had
-fetched.</p>
-
-<p>“Six guineas!”</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t that a pretty good profit on what you paid for
-it at Saxmundham?” said June, with the precision of
-the born head for affairs.</p>
-
-<p>“I got it for thirty shillings at Saxmundham, but
-of course that was at a sale.”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems a fair profit, anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I suppose it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you get any?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh no!” said William, trying to spear a pickled
-walnut in a glass jar.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I think it’s an infamous shame that the whole
-of that six guineas should go into the pocket of Uncle
-Si.”</p>
-
-<p>With a polite shake of the head, William dissented.
-“But don’t you see, I couldn’t have bought it unless the
-master had given me the money, and also marked the
-catalogue.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was your brains that bought it. And your brains
-sold it, too. I think you ought to see that Uncle Si is
-simply living upon them.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, Miss June,” said William staunchly.
-“Please don’t forget that it is the master who taught
-me everything.”</p>
-
-<p>June declined to argue the point. She knew it was
-no use. For the hundredth time she was up against
-his fixed idea. Besides, there was something else to
-talk about.</p>
-
-<p>“To whom did you sell that beautiful bowl?” Her
-voice was that of the dove.</p>
-
-<p>“I sold it to a Miss Babraham,” said the Sawney in
-a voice of perfectly stupendous impersonality.</p>
-
-<p>“To a Miss Who?”</p>
-
-<p>She had caught the name quite clearly, and not for
-the first time that day, but there was a kind of morbid
-fascination in toying with a subject which was really
-without significance, and could lead nowhere. All the
-same she pined for an insight into the workings of the
-mind of this strange young man who was such a baffling
-mixture of the over-simple and the highly gifted.</p>
-
-<p>“Her name is Miss Babraham.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is she when she is at home?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span></p>
-
-<p>She tried hard to imitate a detachment which was a
-little uncanny, yet knowing all the time that she was
-making a sad hash of the performance. The trick seldom
-comes easy to the daughters of Eve.</p>
-
-<p>“Who did you say she was?”</p>
-
-<p>“Her father is Sir Arthur Babraham.” The impersonality
-of William made her writhe.</p>
-
-<p>“Oho!” said June, still trying her best to rise to
-William’s level, and fully conscious that she was failing
-miserably. “One of the big bugs, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>It was vulgar, she knew, to speak in that way.
-Among the things she had learned at the Blackhampton
-High School was a due and proper regard for baronets.
-Miss Preece, its august headmistress, would
-have been shocked, not merely by her tone, but also
-by her choice of words. But High School or no High
-School, the intrusion of Sir Arthur Babraham suddenly
-made her see red. She must be vulgar&mdash;or burst!</p>
-
-<p>“What you’d call one of the smart set, I suppose?”
-said June abruptly breaking a long and rather trying
-pause. “Well, I don’t think much of her stick-eyeglass,
-anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>Terrific disparagement of Miss Babraham, her
-works and her belongings was intended, yet to the
-queer creature seated opposite who by now was almost
-ready for the tapioca pudding, which had been so carefully
-prepared for him, it did not seem to imply anything
-at all.</p>
-
-<p>“You take no stock of smart sets, I dare say,” said
-June, with growing truculence. “You’ve never heard
-of them, have you? China tea sets are more in your
-line, aren’t they?”</p>
-
-<p>That was real wit, and people far less clever than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span>
-this Sawney&mdash;a contradiction in terms and yet the only
-word which seemed to describe him after all!&mdash;must
-have seen the force of it. But not he! He solemnly
-rose and collected the plates, and then fetched in the
-tapioca pudding for all the world as if there was absolutely
-no point in the remark.</p>
-
-<p>“Who did you say that tall girl was?” said June,
-returning mothlike to the flame, as she helped the
-Sawney very substantially to his favourite dish.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Babraham!”</p>
-
-<p>“And who did you say her father was?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sir Arthur Babraham!”</p>
-
-<p>“And what might <i>he</i> do for a living?”</p>
-
-<p>This was not ignorance. It was mere facetiousness.
-She knew quite well that no Sir Arthur Babraham
-since first invented by that ridiculous monarch, King
-James, had ever done anything for a living. But it
-was good to feel how such a “break” would have hurt
-Miss Preece.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s one of the richest men in England,” said
-William, dipping his spoon into his tapioca with an impersonality
-which approached the sublime.</p>
-
-<p>June knew that. There was the daughter of Sir
-Arthur Babraham to prove it.</p>
-
-<p>“One of Uncle Si’s best customers, I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p>“Doesn’t often come here. But he has wonderful
-taste.”</p>
-
-<p>“In daughters?” said June sardonically.</p>
-
-<p>“In everything. Only last night I read in the paper
-that there isn’t a better judge of pictures living.”</p>
-
-<p>June merely said “Oh!”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s one of the trustees of the National Gallery,
-you know.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” said June.</p>
-
-<p>“And owns a very fine private collection of the
-Dutch School.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does he?” It was June’s turn now to be impersonal;
-in fact, it was up to her to let him see that it
-would take more than Sir Arthur Babraham and a private
-collection of the Dutch School to impress her.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose his daughter is what you’d call rather
-<i>fetching</i>?” She had once heard the word on the lips
-of the admired Miss Banks at a charity bazaar.</p>
-
-<p>But in William’s opinion it was not adequate to the
-occasion.</p>
-
-<p>“To my mind,” he said, and his voice fell, “she’s a
-non-such.”</p>
-
-<p>June stepped midway in the act of bestowing upon
-him a second helping of tapioca.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s a what?” she demanded fiercely.</p>
-
-<p>“A museum piece, Miss June.” His enthusiasm was
-restrained but none the less absurd. “She’s hallmarked.
-She walks in beauty.” A blush, faint yet
-becoming, slowly overspread William’s delicately tinted
-complexion.</p>
-
-<p>June snorted. Had it been within the province of
-eyes to slay, this Gaby would have had no use for a
-second helping of tapioca.</p>
-
-<p>“Glad to know that!” said June, homicidally. “As
-you are so set on beauty, you must have had an interesting
-morning.”</p>
-
-<p>A disgracefully impersonal silence was William’s
-only answer. The deadliness of the observation seemed
-completely lost upon him. But was it?&mdash;that was the
-question for gods and Woman. Such a silence might
-mean anything.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you’d say she had wonderful taste?”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Babraham?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Joan of Arc,” said Woman, venomously.</p>
-
-<p>“Her taste is very good indeed&mdash;that is, in some
-things.”</p>
-
-<p>“In hats, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>“I meant in old china,” said the impersonal one.
-“I’ve never known her to make a mistake in old china.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s interesting.” It was a weak remark, but
-June had seldom felt less conversationally brilliant.</p>
-
-<p>Silence again. A third helping of tapioca was
-politely declined. June then pushed across the cheese.
-William removed its cover, and disclosed an extremely
-meagre piece of Leicestershire.</p>
-
-<p>“Please may I give you a little?” he asked, with his
-inimitable air.</p>
-
-<p>“There’ll be none for yourself if you do. Besides,
-I don’t want any. No thank you.” She remembered
-her manners, although that was not easy just now.
-“I’ll go out presently and buy some more. I’d quite
-forgotten the cheese.”</p>
-
-<p>“Please&mdash;please take this tiny piece.”</p>
-
-<p>“When I say no, I don’t mean yes,” said June, tempering
-strength of character with calm politeness. “I
-can’t imagine Miss Babraham eating a piece of Leicestershire
-cheese in a dirty overall&mdash;can you?”</p>
-
-<p>The remark was so irrelevant that it verged upon
-the grotesque. Heaven knows from what malign impulse
-it sprang. No girl in her senses would ever have
-made it. Giant Despair and the Hag Desperation must
-have been its sponsors.</p>
-
-<p>It was quite open to William to follow the line of
-least resistance and ignore the question. A William<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span>
-less true-blue, a William less a gentleman right
-through to the core might without dishonour have done
-so. But this was a William of a nobler clay.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss June, your overall isn’t dirty.”</p>
-
-<p>The rich sincerity of these six and a half little words
-seemed gravely to imperil the whole sublime edifice
-of his impersonality.</p>
-
-<p>He was contradicted flatly for his pains; yet she
-knew in her heart that whether the overall was dirty
-or whether it was clean, the renegade was already half
-forgiven.</p>
-
-<p>“What did you think of her dress?” This new on-rush
-of irrelevance was despicable, but she seemed
-quite to have lost control of herself.</p>
-
-<p>“It was perfect. To my mind, nothing is more becoming
-to a tall lady than a dress of soft dark blue
-silk.”</p>
-
-<p>Dyed-in-the-wool idiot! As though it was not his
-clear and obvious duty never even to have noticed
-whether Miss Babraham wore a dress of soft blue silk
-or a muslin with spots or a grey alpaca, or just a plain
-serge coat and skirt. Times there are when the stupidity
-of the human male has really no limit.</p>
-
-<p>“Must have cost a pretty penny,” said June acidly.</p>
-
-<p>William shook his head, and boldly affirmed that it
-couldn’t be bought for money.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s just nonsense,” said June tartly. “There
-isn’t a dress in the world that couldn’t be bought for
-money.”</p>
-
-<p>“What I really mean is, to have a dress which looked
-like that, you would also have to buy the wearer,” said
-William the amazing.</p>
-
-<p>June expressed a ripe scorn by vehemently beginning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span>
-to clear the table. High time, certainly. They
-had been discussing cold mutton and pickled walnuts
-and tapioca pudding and Leicestershire cheese and
-things and women for one solid hour by the Queen
-Anne clock, a real antique, in the middle of the chimneypiece,
-for which S. Gedge had lately refused the
-sum of forty guineas.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XIX">XIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">I</span>n</span> the course of the afternoon, June found herself
-immersed in the crisis of her fate. It began with
-a desire to own a dress of soft blue silk. This, she well
-knew, was insane. In the first place, she was still in
-mourning for her mother; in the second, she must
-hoard every penny of her slender means; in the third,
-was William’s conviction that the success of a dress
-depended upon its wearer.</p>
-
-<p>Not a shade of excuse could be found for this vaulting
-ambition. But it was fixed so firmly in the centre
-of her mind, that when she set out soon after three to
-order the cheese she could think of nothing else. The
-grocer was at the end of the street and two minutes
-did her business with him. And then in the toils of
-imperious desire she marched boldly down to Charing
-Cross and took a bus to Oxford Circus.</p>
-
-<p>A yearning for a dress of blue silk was upon her like
-a passion. It was madness and yet it was very delicious.
-What could a blue silk dress avail when at any
-moment she was likely to be cast adrift? That thought
-hit hard as she sauntered slowly along the Street of
-Streets gazing wistfully upon its long array of too-fascinating
-drapers’ windows.</p>
-
-<p>Her store of worldly wealth was nineteen pounds
-and a few odd shillings. It was as certain as anything
-could be that she was about to enter upon the most
-critical period of her life, and this was all she had to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>
-tide her over. But do what she would to act like a reasonable
-being she was now at the mercy of a demon
-more powerful than common prudence. She was
-haunted by a passion for a blue silk dress and no matter
-what happened to her afterwards she must satisfy
-that craving.</p>
-
-<p>It was a rather thrilling business to rake these forbidden
-windows in quest of a thing it was sheer madness
-to buy, yet within one’s power to do so. Why was
-she going to buy it? Because she wanted it so badly?
-Why did she want it so badly? That was a question
-she could not answer.</p>
-
-<p>Had she been really pretty this folly might have
-seemed less amazing. But she knew she was plain.
-At least, she always felt and always passed for plain
-at Blackhampton. But her pilgrimage along Oxford
-Street which, in the middle of a bright afternoon of
-early October, seemed the Mecca of fashion, beauty
-and good taste went some way to change the attitude
-she had taken up in regard to her personal appearance.</p>
-
-<p>Plain she might be, her clothes might be severely
-provincial, their hue depressing, but she was clearly
-informed by the sixth sense given to Woman that she
-was not wholly unlooked at. It was nice to feel that
-such was the case; indeed, it was stimulating, yet so
-deeply was she occupied just then with large affairs
-that she didn’t think much about it.</p>
-
-<p>After many windows she had seen, she found herself
-drifting with the tide into a store of regal aspect.
-Here she was received by young women, elegant and
-gracious, with a courteous charm that made a search
-for five yards of blue silk fabric in its least expensive
-form a perfectly simple and yet delightful adventure.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span>
-Moreover, it brought in its train a great idea. Was it
-necessary, after all, that domestic servitude should be
-her lot? Might it not be possible to become one of
-these smart and pleasant ladies in their very attractive
-clothes?</p>
-
-<p>Expenditure of spirit, anxious care, went to the final
-purchase of four and a half yards of cotton silk material,
-more cotton than silk, at eight and elevenpence
-three farthings a yard; and then the new thought
-gained such a hold upon her, that before leaving the
-store she took an inventory of her person in one of the
-huge mirrors which made the place so enchanting.
-Standing boldly in front of the great glass, surveying
-herself with a curiosity that was half fear, she went
-over her “points” as might an Eastern merchant who
-buys a slave.</p>
-
-<p>She was taller than she supposed. That was
-thought the first. And if she wore shoes with high
-heels, as so many girls did, she could look still taller.
-She could pass for slender, that was her second
-thought; and her chest was something to be proud of.
-She might not have much in the way of grace, and she
-might lack style, yet she didn’t lack dignity. Her features
-were irregular, and there was no denying their
-freckles, but seeing her frontispiece this afternoon,
-with its fighting chin and determined eyes, the full
-effect was rather striking. But when all was said it
-was her hair that was important. This she had always
-known, but in the strong and subtle lights of the best
-mirror into which she had ever gazed, it ministered
-considerably to the sum and total of her charms. Perhaps
-her friend, Mr. Boultby the druggist, had not
-overshot the mark when he compared her hair to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>
-Empress Eugenie’s, and said it ought to be painted by
-an R. A.</p>
-
-<p>A mop of russet gold hair was little enough for a
-girl who stood in her particular shoes. She felt that as
-she gazed upon it; felt it besides with something akin
-to resentment. But even a self-criticism, cool and stern,
-must allow that she made a better showing in Mr. Selfridge’s
-mirror than could have been expected. She
-was far from being beautiful, but that hair in its subtle-tinted
-abundance saved her somehow from being ordinary.
-And to-day she looked very much alive with the
-bloom of youth and health.</p>
-
-<p>Four and a half yards of blue material under her
-arm, she went out into Oxford Street, feeling rather
-better equipped for the battle of life. She drew back
-a pair of shoulders that were really not so bad, and
-defiantly lifted a chin that had looked uncommonly
-square in the mirror. It was good to feel that she had
-underrated herself. She must learn to dress in the
-London way, and then she might be able to hold her
-own.</p>
-
-<p>Walking slowly back to Oxford Circus, head higher
-now, she began quite to like this new idea of becoming
-a shop assistant. At the worst, it would be a far easier
-and more dignified way of life than domestic service.
-So much was she engaged by it, and so great the pressure
-of her thoughts that at first she didn’t notice that
-a man was following her.</p>
-
-<p>The knowledge overtook her by degrees. Stopping
-to look in various windows, each time she did so
-brought a vague feeling that the eyes of a man were
-upon her. She crossed the Circus, but the feeling was
-still there; and at the corner of Berners Street, without<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span>
-quite knowing how, surmise entered the region of
-fact. Moreover, she even contrived to learn the style
-of man he was.</p>
-
-<p>Out of the tail of an eye, as she stood by the edge
-of the kerb, she saw that he was pale and dark, neither
-short nor tall, that he had a slight moustache, and wore
-a hat of peach coloured velours. His presence gave
-her an odd feeling; in fact, it might be said to frighten
-her just a little, although there was certainly no reason
-why it should in broad daylight. But she had an idea
-that he was going to speak to her and that he was seeking
-an opportunity to do so.</p>
-
-<p>Hastily she moved on, determined to give further
-shop windows “a miss” for the present. However, she
-had not gone far when it occurred to her that she was
-in need of a cup of tea, and that it would be very pleasant
-to have one.</p>
-
-<p>Just across the road was an A. B. C. shop. The fear
-of pursuit still upon her, the sudden dash she made for
-this bourn was so ill-timed that her sovereign faculty
-of keeping her head in a crisis was needed to save her
-from being run over by Bus 13, which was going to the
-“Bell” at Hendon.</p>
-
-<p>With quite a sense of adventure, she went to one of
-a row of vacant tables at the far end of the shop. She
-ordered a small pot of tea, a scone and a pat of butter.
-And then she realized that a pale, dark man, neither
-short nor tall, with a slight moustache, and wearing a
-hat of peach-coloured velours had followed her in, and
-was just about to take a seat at the table next her own.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XX">XX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>une</span> was not a timid girl. She had no lack of courage;
-and now that a chance had been given her to
-reason things out, a feeling akin to fear promptly
-yielded to mere annoyance. And even that emotion
-took wings when she had had time to glance at the hat
-of peach-coloured velours. Its owner looked harmless
-enough. He was a man of thirty, or perhaps a little
-more; he wore a well-cut black jacket, a pair of rather
-baggy trousers of a light grey check, a silk collar, a
-flowing bow tie, a diamond ring on the little finger of
-the left hand. The general effect of what to June was
-a decidedly interesting personality was somehow to
-fulfil her preconceived idea of an artist.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the man felt the gaze of June upon him,
-he swept off the hat of peach-coloured velours with a
-gesture at once easy and graceful, fortified it with a
-smile at which it would have been impossible to take
-offence, and said with a slight lisp,</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Graham?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not Miss Graham,” said June calmly. She
-always prided herself upon her self-possession. Just
-now it seemed to help her considerably.</p>
-
-<p>The man carried off his question with such an air
-of tact that it must have ranked as a bona fide mistake
-had not June been aware that he had crossed the road<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span>
-and followed her into the shop. Rather strangely, as
-soon as he took it upon himself to speak to her, the
-lingering sense of vexation gave way to curiosity. The
-mere look of the man had the power to excite an immediate
-interest, but June was careful to keep strictly
-upon her guard.</p>
-
-<p>He ordered a bottle of ginger beer, and when the
-waitress had gone for it, he turned to June and said,
-with the companionable air of an old friend: “It’s
-funny, but you are exactly like a girl I used to know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why funny?” asked June bluntly.</p>
-
-<p>The nature of the question, and the look of June’s
-keen eye made the man smile a little. Evidently she
-was a bit of a character. It appeared to stimulate him.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s always funny when you mistake someone for
-someone else.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it?” said June, warily.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you agree,” he said, with a laugh that sounded
-decidedly pleasant.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a thing I should never think of doing myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are lucky.” He was amused by her bluntness.
-“I wish I had your good memory.”</p>
-
-<p>The tea arrived, and June poured it out in a spirit
-of thankfulness. As soon as she had drunk half a cup,
-which was reviving, she forgot all about her annoyance
-in a new feeling of exhilaration tempered by
-quiet amusement.</p>
-
-<p>“You are most remarkably like a Scotch girl I used
-to know in Paris,” said the man, taking up the thread
-of conversation, after having drunk a little, a very little,
-ginger beer.</p>
-
-<p>“Am I?” said June, coolly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span></p>
-
-<p>“She was an artist’s model. Sometimes she used to
-sit for me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you an artist?” said June, allowing herself
-to become interested, for the reason perhaps that she
-simply could not help it.</p>
-
-<p>“Of sorts,” was the answer. “I studied several
-years in Paris before the war.”</p>
-
-<p>From the moment he had sat down at the next table
-and June had been able to get a clear view of him she
-had somehow known that art was his calling. He
-looked an artist so emphatically that there would have
-been something fatally wrong with the cosmos had he
-turned out to be anything else.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of a determination to be cautious indeed,
-she was not equal to the task of repressing an ever
-growing curiosity. Art had lately come to have a
-magic meaning for her.</p>
-
-<p>“What kind of pictures do you paint?”</p>
-
-<p>“Portraits and the figure chiefly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you ever paint landscapes?”</p>
-
-<p>“They are not quite my line of country,” said the
-man. “Portraits and the figure are what I go for as a
-rule. I am looking for a model now. Would you like
-to sit to me?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know.” June spoke doubtfully. “I don’t
-think I could.”</p>
-
-<p>“Haven’t you ever sat?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I haven’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Time you began. You are just the sort of girl.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why am I?”</p>
-
-<p>“For one thing you have personality.”</p>
-
-<p>This was a surprising and rather thrilling corroboration
-of Mr. Boultby. At the back of her mind the old<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span>
-druggist had always figured as “a bit of a gasbag” with
-a ready flow of conversation and a gift of easy compliment.
-But it would seem that this estimate did him
-less than justice. Mr. Boultby was better informed
-than she had thought. And at this moment a phrase
-he had used came back to her with a force that was a
-little startling. “A girl as good-looking as you can
-always get a living,” Mr. Boultby had once said.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you mean my hair?” said June naïvely.</p>
-
-<p>He showed two rows of very white and level teeth
-in a smile which piqued her curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“Partly your hair, and partly your figure,” he said,
-taking a second tiny sip of ginger beer. “Why not
-come and try? I have a studio in Haliburton Street,
-just out of Manning Square.”</p>
-
-<p>June shook a doubtful head. She then gave a glance
-sideways at the imbiber of the ginger beer. Her
-knowledge of the world was slender, but she was not
-a fool, and there was something about this “forthcomingness”
-which even exceeded that of Mr. Boultby himself,
-that warned her to be careful.</p>
-
-<p>“You’d be well paid, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“How much?” June had no false modesty when it
-came to a question of money. This was an aspect of
-the matter that had not struck her until then.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d pay you five shillings an hour,” he said lightly.
-“And ten for the altogether.”</p>
-
-<p>June’s heart gave a leap. To a girl in her position
-it was a princely reward. Such an offer seemed most
-tempting. But a moment’s consideration of the issues
-it raised brought on a sudden fit of shyness.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think I could,” she said.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” The eyes of the man were now fixed
-intently upon her face.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Not enough, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>She felt his eyes so forcibly upon her that she coloured
-hotly.</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t that.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s your reason then?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve not been used to that sort of thing.”</p>
-
-<p>He smiled broadly.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s only a matter of keeping still. Of course, I
-shall not press you to sit for ‘the altogether’ if you
-had rather not.”</p>
-
-<p>“The altogether” was Greek to June.</p>
-
-<p>However, she did not confess her ignorance, but was
-content to make a mental note to ask William what it
-meant. And at the moment she did so the thought of
-William brought the Van Roon to her mind.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you know a lot about pictures?” An
-idea was forming already in that practical head.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I know as much about them as some people,”
-said the man, beginning to roll a cigarette. June
-could not help feeling that his answer was in piquant
-contrast to what William’s would have been had such
-a question been put to him. It had a self-complacency
-which even if it implied deep knowledge was also open
-to criticism.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think a Van Roon would be worth?”</p>
-
-<p>“A Van Roon!” he said, offhandedly. “Well, you
-know, that might depend on many things.”</p>
-
-<p>“They are very valuable, I suppose,” said June, trying
-to look innocent.</p>
-
-<p>“Very valuable indeed, at the present time. Privately,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span>
-I think they are overrated. The Flemish School
-is being run to death, but of course, that’s only my
-opinion.”</p>
-
-<p>“Would it be worth a hundred pounds?”</p>
-
-<p>“What! A Van Roon!” The man laughed. “My
-good girl, you might multiply a hundred pounds by a
-hundred, and then think you had got ‘some’ bargain
-if you found yourself the owner of a Van Roon.”</p>
-
-<p>“This mightn’t be a good one.” June spoke cautiously.
-She saw at once that it would be wise “to go
-slow.”</p>
-
-<p>“All Van Roons are good, you know. But some, of
-course, are a bit better than others.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been told it is one of the best,” said June, after
-a moment’s deliberation.</p>
-
-<p>“Which are you talking about? The one in the National
-Gallery, I suppose. That’s the only Van Roon
-in this country. The Americans have robbed us of
-three within the last ten years.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’ve heard so,” said June, with a wise air.</p>
-
-<p>“In my humble opinion, it can’t be compared with
-the chap in the Louvre, and they say that its stable
-companion, which was cut out of its frame back in the
-Nineties, and has never been found, is even finer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Still you think it’s very valuable?”</p>
-
-<p>“The one in the National Gallery? Sure! It
-wouldn’t be there, you know, if it wasn’t. The Flemish
-School is booming these days, and Van Roon is the
-pick of the bunch, and the least prolific. Tell me,”
-the man’s small and rather furtive eyes began to twinkle,
-“why are you so interested in Van Roons? Is
-it, by any chance, that you’ve got one for sale?” And<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span>
-he laughed very softly and gently at what he evidently
-considered a rich joke.</p>
-
-<p>June looked at him gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“It so happens that I have!” she said with a caution
-which seemed to give the value of drama to a simple
-announcement.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXI">XXI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span>dolph Keller</span> was the man’s name. And
-as June was to learn later, he had never felt
-more amused in his life. It was really a jest that he
-should follow a countrified-looking girl into a teashop,
-get into conversation with her, and then be quietly told
-that she had a Van Roon to sell. There was something
-rather pathetic in a girl of her class making such a
-statement. All she could mean was that somehow she
-had got hold of a more or less “dud” copy of “Sun
-and Cloud,” that much lithographed work in the National
-Gallery which in consequence was now familiar
-to the big public.</p>
-
-<p>“So you’ve got a Van Roon for sale, have you?”
-said Adolph Keller, who was hardly able to keep from
-laughing outright. “Good for you! What’s the size
-of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sixteen inches by twelve,” said June, with the patness
-of one who prided herself, and with reason, upon
-a most excellent memory.</p>
-
-<p>“Without the frame?”</p>
-
-<p>June nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that’s about the size,” said Keller. “It’s called
-‘Sun and Cloud,’ I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not called anything at present,” said June, “as
-far as I know, although sun and cloud are in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bound to be&mdash;if it’s a Van Roon.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span></p>
-
-<p>“And there are trees as well.”</p>
-
-<p>“Trees, are there? A copy of the one in the National
-Gallery, I expect. Is there a windmill in the left hand
-corner?”</p>
-
-<p>There was no windmill in the left hand corner, June
-declared with confidence. She remembered that at first
-William had thought there was, but had changed his
-opinion later.</p>
-
-<p>“Then that washes out the National Gallery. I dare
-say it’s a copy of ‘L’Automne’ in the Louvre. By the
-way, how did you come by it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It was given to me by a gentleman, a friend of
-mine,” said June, after a moment for reflection.</p>
-
-<p>“A very good friend, too.” The tone of the laugh
-had a little too much banter to be pleasant. “Isn’t
-everybody, you know, who gives a Van Roon to his
-best girl? A bit of a plutocrat evidently.”</p>
-
-<p>June didn’t know what a plutocrat was, but she was
-too proud to say so. She made a mental note to look
-up the word in the dictionary.</p>
-
-<p>“How did your rich friend come by it? Do you happen
-to know?”</p>
-
-<p>“He isn’t rich,” said June, with a wish for perfect
-honesty. “He found it in a shop.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where was the shop?”</p>
-
-<p>“It was at a place called Crowdham Market.”</p>
-
-<p>“Down in Suffolk. Sounds a funny place to find a
-Van Roon.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was ever so dirty when it was found. And another
-picture seemed to have been painted on the top
-of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Queer.” The eyes of Adolph Keller narrowed in
-their intentness. “Who told you it was a Van Roon?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The man who gave it to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who told him?”</p>
-
-<p>“He found the signature.” June’s quiet precision
-owed something to the fact that she was now fully and
-rather deliciously aware of the effect she was making.</p>
-
-<p>“What!... The signature of Mynheer Van
-Roon?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said June.</p>
-
-<p>The incredulity of Keller had yielded now to a powerful
-curiosity. He looked at June with a keenness
-he tried hard to veil. This was a very unlikely story,
-yet he knew enough of life to appreciate the fact that
-mere unlikelihood is no reason why a story should not
-be true. Besides, this girl had such an ingenuous air
-that it was impossible to believe her tale was a deliberate
-invention. At the same time, it had elements which
-were particularly hard to swallow.</p>
-
-<p>“Why was the picture given to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I asked for it,” said June, whose simple honesty
-now involved a tell-tale blush.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keller looked her steadily in the eye, and then
-he laughed, but not unsympathetically.</p>
-
-<p>“Your best boy, I suppose, and he could deny you
-nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it,” said June awkwardly. This audacious
-irony was new to her, and she did not know how to
-meet it.</p>
-
-<p>“By the way, what is this young chap of yours? An
-artist?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said June. “I suppose he is&mdash;in a way. He
-studies art and renovates pictures, and he knows a lot
-about them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not so much as he thinks,” said Adolph Keller,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span>
-“else he would not be such a fool as to give away
-a Van Roon, even to a girl as nice and pretty as you
-are.”</p>
-
-<p>He had lowered his voice to a whisper of rare
-sweetness and carrying power. There was something
-about him that was powerfully attractive; at the same
-time, a look had crept into a pair of rather furtive eyes
-which was oddly repellent.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you say you really have this picture in your
-possession?” His intentness when he put this question
-made June feel a little uncomfortable.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it has been given to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Could you let me see it?”</p>
-
-<p>June hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>“I think I could,” she said, after a pause.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suppose you bring it round to my studio for
-me to look at?”</p>
-
-<p>Again June hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>“As you like, of course,” said Keller, carelessly. “I
-was only thinking it might be worth your while, that’s
-all. You see, I happen to know one or two dealers
-and people, and I might be able to find out for you just
-what it’s worth.”</p>
-
-<p>June saw the force of this. She was in desperate
-straits, and this man had the appearance of a friend
-in need.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I will,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said the man. “When will you come?”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment June thought hard. “I couldn’t come
-before Thursday.”</p>
-
-<p>“The day after to-morrow&mdash;that’ll suit me. What
-time?”</p>
-
-<p>June continued to think hard. “It would have to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span>
-between three and four.” She spoke with slow reluctance.
-“That’s the only time I can really get away.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said the man, briskly. “You’ll find me
-at the Haliburton Street Studios up till five o’clock on
-Thursday. Number Four. Give a good ring; the bell
-is a bit out of gear. My name is Keller. Can you remember
-it, or shall I write it down for you, with the
-address?”</p>
-
-<p>“Write them down for me, please.”</p>
-
-<p>The man tore a leaf from a pocket book, and wrote
-his name and address with a fountain pen: Adolph
-Keller, 4 Haliburton Street Studios, Manning Square,
-Soho. When he had done this, and given it to her, he
-tore out another leaf and asked her to write down hers.
-This she accordingly did, and then the sudden thought
-of William’s tea caused her to rise abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keller wished to pay her bill, which was five-pence,
-but she declined to let him.</p>
-
-<p>“Au revoir! Thursday afternoon. Manning
-Square is only about three minutes from here. Don’t
-forget,” were the words with which he took leave of
-her. “Bring it along. I dare say I’ll be able to tell you
-whether it is genuine, and perhaps give you an idea of
-its value.”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed slightly, and then offered his hand in a
-very friendly manner. She took it with a reluctance
-she was rather ashamed of showing. He was so kind,
-so agreeable, so anxious to be of use that there seemed
-no warrant for the subtle complexity of feeling he had
-aroused in her.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXII">XXII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>une’s</span> way home to New Cross Street was beset
-with anxieties. Much would depend on what she
-did now. She felt that her whole life was about to turn
-on the decision she had to take in a very difficult
-matter.</p>
-
-<p>There was no one to guide her, not a soul on whose
-advice she might lean. But before she had returned
-to the threshold of S. Gedge Antiques she had made a
-resolve to get immediate possession of the picture, and
-to let this Mr. Keller have a look at it. She did not
-altogether like him, it was true. But the feeling was
-irrational; she must be sensible enough not to let it set
-her against him without due cause. For he was a
-friend whom Providence had unmistakably thrown in
-her way, and there was no other to whom she might
-turn.</p>
-
-<p>William was a broken reed. With all his perception
-and talent, he was likely to prove hopeless now that
-Uncle Si was setting his wits to work to obtain the
-picture for himself. William’s devotion to his master’s
-interest would be simply fatal to her scheme. For
-the sake of them both, June felt she must take a full
-advantage of the heaven-sent opportunity provided by
-this Mr. Keller.</p>
-
-<p>Other decisions, too, would have to be made. As
-soon as Uncle Si knew the picture was hers, he would
-almost certainly carry out his threat of putting her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span>
-in the street; at least she was no judge of character
-if the event proved otherwise. A means of livelihood
-must be sought at once. That afternoon’s experience
-of Oxford Street had opened up new vistas, which,
-however, might lead nowhere. But even if she could
-not get employment in a shop Mr. Keller’s offer of
-work as an artist’s model at five shillings an hour must
-not be lightly put aside.</p>
-
-<p>The first thing to be done, however, was to clinch
-William’s gift of the picture once and for all. She
-made up her mind that it should be fully consummated
-before the return of Uncle Si from Newbury.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as William had been given his tea she
-broached the subject. But when she asked for possession,
-there and then, his crest fell.</p>
-
-<p>“I was still hoping, Miss June,” the simpleton
-owned, “that you’d let the dear old master have this
-lovely thing. It has come to mean so much to him,
-you see. I will get another one for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not another Van Roon,” said June, sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I’m afraid I couldn’t promise a Van Roon.”
-A cloud passed over William’s face. “But I might be
-able to pick up something quite good, which perhaps
-you would come to like as much.”</p>
-
-<p>June shook a disconsolate head.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think,” she said, in a slow voice, as she fixed
-her eyes on the wall in front of her, “there is another
-picture in the world I should value so much as that
-one. I simply love that picture.”</p>
-
-<p>William was troubled.</p>
-
-<p>“The old master loves it, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you gave it me, you know.” June was painfully
-conscious of a swift deepening of colour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span></p>
-
-<p>The plain fact was not denied.</p>
-
-<p>“You mustn’t think me very hard and grasping if I
-hold you to the bargain.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Miss June. If you insist, of course the picture
-is yours.”</p>
-
-<p>“To do with just as I like.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why yes, certainly.”</p>
-
-<p>June proceeded to take the bull by the horns. “Very
-well,” she said. “After supper, I shall ask you to hand
-it over to me, and I will put it in a place of safety.”</p>
-
-<p>William sighed heavily. He seemed almost upon
-the verge of tears. June simply loathed the part she
-was playing. The only consolation was that she was
-acting quite as much in his interest as in her own.</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Si came in shortly before eight. He sat down
-to supper in quite a good humour. For once the old
-man was in high conversational feather.</p>
-
-<p>It was clear that his mind was still full of the picture.
-Without subscribing for one moment to William’s
-preposterous theory that the thing was a genuine
-Van Roon, he had had a further talk on the matter
-with his friend, Mr. Thornton, with whom he had
-travelled down to Newbury; and, he had arranged with
-that gentleman to bring his friend, Monsieur Duponnet,
-the famous Paris expert who was now in London,
-to come and look at it on Thursday afternoon. Monsieur
-Duponnet who knew more about Van Roon than
-anybody living, and had had several pass through his
-hands in the last ten years, would be able to say positively
-whether William was wrong, and S. Gedge
-Antiques was right, or with a devout gesture for which
-June longed to pull his ugly nose, vice versâ.</p>
-
-<p>The time had now come for June to show her hand.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>
-Very quietly indeed her bolt was launched. William
-had given the picture to her.</p>
-
-<p>The old man simply stared at her.</p>
-
-<p>It was clear, however, that his thoughts were running
-so hard upon M. Duponnet and the higher potentialities
-that just at first he was not able to grasp the
-significance of June’s bald statement.</p>
-
-<p>So that there should be no doubt about the position
-June modestly repeated it.</p>
-
-<p>“Given it to you!” said the old man, a light beginning
-to break. “How do you mean&mdash;given it to you?”</p>
-
-<p>Calmly, patiently June threw a little more light on
-the subject. And while she did so her eyes were fixed
-with veiled defiance upon the face of Uncle Si. The
-thought uppermost in her mind was that he took it far
-better than could have been expected. “Given it to
-you,” he kept on saying to himself softly. There was
-no explosion. “Given it to you,” he kept on. He
-grew a little green about the gills and that was all.</p>
-
-<p>At last he turned to William: “Boy, what’s this? Is
-the girl daft?” The mildness of tone was astonishing.</p>
-
-<p>William explained as well as he could. It was a
-lame and halting performance, and at that moment
-June was not proud of him. But she was even less
-proud of herself. The part she was playing, gloss it
-over as one might, was ignoble. And William’s embarrassment
-was rather painful to witness. He stammered
-a good deal, he grew red and nervous; and all
-the while the voice of his kind and good master became
-more deeply reproachful, and melted finally in a
-note of real pathos. “How could you do such a
-thing?” he said. “Why you know as well as I do, my
-boy, that I would have given you anything in reason<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span>
-for that picture&mdash;anything in reason.” And there he
-sat at his supper, the very image of outraged benevolence
-and enthusiasm, a Christian with a halo!</p>
-
-<p>“Old Serpent” said the fierce eyes that June fixed
-upon his face. For a moment it looked as if the old
-wretch was going to shed tears. But no, he was content
-with a mild snuffle and that was all.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXIII">XXIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">B</span>y</span> bedtime, when June went to her attic, she had
-fully made up her mind that there must be no
-half measures now. She feared Uncle Si more than
-ever. There was something in that snuffle at the supper
-table, in that whine of outraged feeling, in that
-down-gazing eye which was far more formidable than
-any mere outburst of violence. Here was such a depth
-of hypocrisy that she had got to look out.</p>
-
-<p>A light was showing under the studio door. June’s
-knock met with a prompt invitation to enter. William
-was affectionately lingering over a few final touches,
-which should prove beyond a doubt the authenticity of
-this masterpiece.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you got it really clean at last?” said June,
-trying to speak lightly, yet not succeeding. Emotional
-strain could not be so easily concealed; and&mdash;uncomfortable
-thought&mdash;her acting was not so finished as that
-of Uncle Si.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said William, with a little thrill of rapture.
-“And how wonderful it is!”</p>
-
-<p>June agreed. “Yes, wonderful!” Also with a little
-thrill of rapture, yet loathing herself because her tone
-was so vibrant&mdash;Uncle Si was not to have a walk over
-after all! “And now if you don’t mind I’ll put it in a
-place of safety.”</p>
-
-<p>He flashed one swift glance at her. “But, Miss
-June, isn’t it quite safe here?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I should just think it wasn’t!” leapt to the tip of her
-tongue. But Uncle Si’s masterly snuffle recalled to her
-mind the value of meiosis. Thus she had recourse to a
-gentle “I think I’ll sleep better if I take care of it myself,”
-which sounded quite disarming.</p>
-
-<p>With one of his deep sighs which made her feel a
-perfect beast, William handed over the picture. “If
-you only knew, if you could only guess what pleasure
-this exquisite thing would give the dear old
-master&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Overcome by a kind of nausea, June fled headlong
-to the room next door. She groped for her candle,
-found and lit it; and then she proceeded to bury the
-treasure at the bottom of her trunk. Heaping and
-pressing down as many things upon the picture as
-the trunk would hold, she locked it carefully, and put
-the key in her purse. Then she undressed, knelt and
-said her prayers; she then blew out the candle and
-crept into bed with a stifling sense of disgust, tempered
-by grim satisfaction.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXIV">XXIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">N</span>ext</span> morning at the breakfast table, June looked
-for developments. To her surprise, however,
-things went their accustomed way, except that if anything
-Uncle Si was a little more amiable than usual.
-He made no reference to the Van Roon; but it was
-referred to in his manner, inasmuch that he bore bacon
-and coffee to his lips with the air of a known good man
-deeply wounded in his private feelings. Not a feather
-of this by-play was lost upon his niece; and no doubt
-what was of more importance, it was not lost upon
-William. But its impact was very different in the two
-cases. While June simply longed to hit the Old Crocodile
-upon his long and wicked nose, William seemed
-hard set to refrain from tears.</p>
-
-<p>About midday, however, while June was in the back
-kitchen preparing a meal, Uncle Si came to her.</p>
-
-<p>“Niece,” he said, in the new voice, whose softness
-June found so formidable, “you remember the other
-day I told you to look for a job?”</p>
-
-<p>June nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you got one?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I haven’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Mrs. R. is coming back on Monday, so the
-sooner you get fixed up the better. Your best plan, I
-think, is to go this afternoon and have your name put
-down at a registry office as a cook-general. Cook-generals<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span>
-earn good money, and they live all found.
-Your cooking won’t be the Carlton or the Ritz, of
-course”&mdash;a gleam of frosty humour played upon that
-subtle face&mdash;“but you seem strong and willing, and
-you know how to boil a potato, and no doubt you’ll
-improve with experience.”</p>
-
-<p>June was inclined to curtsey. The old wretch
-plainly felt that he was giving her a handsome testimonial.
-But at the back of her mind was anger and
-contempt, and it was as much as she could do to prevent
-their peeping out.</p>
-
-<p>After dinner, as soon as the table was clear, and the
-pots washed, she proceeded to take Uncle Si at his
-word. She decided to go out at once and look for a
-place which, however, except as a last resort, should
-not be domestic service. To begin with, she would try
-the shops, or perhaps the dressmakers, as her mother
-always said she was handy with her needle; or, failing
-these, she might consider the exciting proposal of becoming
-an artist’s model.</p>
-
-<p>Fixing her hat before the crazy looking glass the
-thought of Mr. Keller recurred to her mind. Had the
-day only been Thursday she could have taken the picture
-to him there and then, and had his opinion upon
-it. Not that such a course would have been altogether
-wise. She knew nothing about this new and rather
-mysterious acquaintance, beyond the fact that if speech
-and manner meant anything he was a gentleman. Certainly,
-to talk to he was most agreeable.</p>
-
-<p>Before setting out on her pilgrimage, she had to
-make up her mind as to whether it would not be advisable
-to take the Van Roon with her, and put it in a
-place of safety. So long as it remained under that roof<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span>
-it was in jeopardy. Uncle Si was not to be trusted an
-inch. The fact, however, that she had nowhere to take
-the treasure decided her finally to let it stay where it
-was until the next day.</p>
-
-<p>Anyway, it was under lock and key. That was something
-to be thankful for; yet as she came downstairs
-and passed through the shop into New Cross Street,
-drawing on her neat black gloves with a sinking heart,
-instinct told her that she was taking a grave risk in
-leaving the picture behind.</p>
-
-<p>No, S. Gedge Antiques was not to be trusted for a
-moment. Of that she was quite sure. By the time
-she had gone twenty yards along the street this feeling
-of insecurity took such a hold upon her that she stopped
-abruptly, and faced about. To go back? Or not to go
-back? Indecision was unlike her, but never was it so
-hard to make up her mind. Could it be that Uncle Si
-was as wicked as she thought? Perhaps she had now
-become the prey of her own guilty conscience. In any
-case, she knew of nowhere just then in which to place
-the precious thing; and this fact it was that turned the
-scale and finally settled the question.</p>
-
-<p>She went down to the Strand, and took a bus to
-Oxford Circus. That Mecca, alas, did not prove nearly
-so stimulating as the previous afternoon. As soon as
-she came really to grips with that most daunting of all
-tasks, “the looking for a job,” her hopes and her courage
-were woefully dashed. Real pluck was needed to
-enter such a palace as David Jones Limited, to go up
-without faltering to some haughty overseer in a frock
-coat and spats and ask if an assistant was wanted.</p>
-
-<p>Three times, in various shops, she screwed herself
-to the heroic pitch of asking that difficult question.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span>
-Three times she met with a chilling response. And
-the only gleam of hope was on the last occasion.</p>
-
-<p>“There is one vacancy, I believe,” said Olympian
-Zeus. “But all applicants must apply by letter for a
-personal interview with the manager.”</p>
-
-<p>Sooner than renew the attempt just then, June felt
-she would prefer to die. A girl from the provinces,
-new to London and its ways, without credentials or
-friends, or knowledge of “the ropes” must not expect
-to be taken on, at any rate in Oxford Street.</p>
-
-<p>Much cast down she returned to her teashop of yesterday.
-Seated at the same table, her mind went back
-to the fascinating acquaintance she had made there.
-Was it possible that a career had been offered her?
-Or was the suggestion of this new friend merely the
-outcome of a keen interest in the picture?</p>
-
-<p>It could not be so entirely, because she clearly remembered
-that Mr. Keller had proposed her sitting to
-him as a model before she had mentioned the picture
-at all.</p>
-
-<p>She went back to New Cross Street in a state of
-gloom; her mind was dominated by a sense of being
-“up against it.” And this unhappy feeling was not
-softened by the discovery she made as soon as she entered
-that cold and uninviting garret. In her absence
-the lock of her trunk had been forced and the picture
-taken away.</p>
-
-<p>The tragedy was exactly what she had foreseen.
-But faced by the bitter fact she was swept by a tempest
-of rage. It could only be the work of one person. Her
-fear and dislike of Uncle Si rose to hatred now.</p>
-
-<p>In a surge of anger she went downstairs and in the
-presence of William charged Uncle Si.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You’ve been at my box,” she stormed.</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her with a kind of calm pensiveness
-over the top of his spectacles.</p>
-
-<p>“If you lock away things, my girl, that don’t belong
-to you, I’m afraid you’ll have to stand the racket.” So
-lofty, so severe was the old man’s tone that for the
-moment June was staggered.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s stealing,” she cried, returning hectic to the
-attack.</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Si waggled a magisterial finger in her face.
-“Niece,” he said, with a quietude which put her at a
-disadvantage, “I must ask you not to make an exhibition
-of yourself. Have the goodness to hold your
-tongue.”</p>
-
-<p>June maintained the charge. “The picture’s mine.
-William gave it me. You’ve broken open my box and
-stolen it.”</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques, after a mild side glance in the
-direction of William, proceeded to fix a glacial eye
-upon his niece. “What I have to say is this.” His tone
-was more magisterial than ever. “At present, my girl,
-you are under age, and as long as you live with me the
-law regards me as your guardian. And, as I have told
-William already, in my opinion you are not a fit and
-proper person to have the care of a thing so valuable
-as this picture may prove to be. Mind you,”&mdash;the old
-fox gave William a meaningful look&mdash;“I don’t go so
-far as to say that it <i>is</i> valuable, but I say that it <i>might</i>
-be. And, in that case, I can’t allow a mere ignorant
-girl from the country who, in a manner of speaking,
-doesn’t know the letter A from a pig’s foot to accept
-it from you, my boy. It’s very generous of you, and
-I hope she’s thanked you properly, but if I allow her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span>
-to take it, some unscrupulous dealer is sure to bamboozle
-her out of it. That’s assuming it’s valuable,
-which, of course, I don’t go so far as to say that it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thief!” stormed June. “Wicked thief!”</p>
-
-<p>However, she knew well enough that it was a real
-pity to let her feelings get the better of her; it enabled
-the Old Crocodile to shine so much by comparison. He
-addressed himself to William in his most sanctimonious
-manner. For the good of all concerned, such a bee-yew-ti-ful
-thing&mdash;it sickened June to see the old humbug
-lift his eyes to heaven&mdash;must be cared for by him
-personally. An uneducated mawkin could not hope to
-appreciate a work of art of that quality, and if anything
-happened to it, as in such hands something inevitably
-must, William’s master would never be able to forgive
-himself, he wouldn’t really!</p>
-
-<p>The old man spoke so gently and so plausibly and
-hovered at times so near to tears, that William would
-have been less than human not to have been moved by
-his words. Uncle Si had not the least difficulty in making
-clear to his assistant that he was swayed by the
-highest motives. His own private regard for the picture,
-which, of course, William must know was intense,
-did not enter into the case at all; but wisdom
-and experience declared that until Monsieur Duponnet
-of Paris had seen the picture it must remain in responsible
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>“But I tell you the picture’s mine, mine, mine!”
-cried June.</p>
-
-<p>No, the picture was William’s. That outstanding
-fact was emphasized again in his master’s kindly
-voice. Was he not William’s guardian also in the eyes
-of the law? Not for a moment could he think of allowing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span>
-the young man in a fit of weak generosity to
-give away a thing that might prove to be a real work
-of art.</p>
-
-<p>June was a little disappointed by William’s attitude
-in the matter. The way in which he submitted to Uncle
-Si did him no credit. Surely the picture was his to do
-with as he chose; yet to judge by Uncle Si’s handling
-of the affair the young man had no right to dispose of
-it. June deplored this lack of spirit. He should have
-fought for his own. At the same time, her mind was
-tormented by the unpleasant thought that he really
-wanted to revoke his gift.</p>
-
-<p>The more she considered the position, the less she
-liked it. She could not rid herself of a feeling that
-she was playing an unworthy part. It was all very well
-to regard her actions as strictly in William’s interest.
-But were they? She was haunted by a sense of having
-descended perilously near to the level of Uncle Si himself.</p>
-
-<p>Anyhow, she had tried her best to outwit S. Gedge
-Antiques. And he had outwitted her. There was no
-disguising it. Both were playing the same game, the
-same crooked game, and it seemed that Uncle Si, as
-was only to be expected, was able to play it much better
-than could she. The artful old fox had bested her
-with her own weapons. Were they not equally unscrupulous?
-Was not William the toy of both?</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXV">XXV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">I</span>n</span> the course of the next morning, June was informed
-by Uncle Si, with his most sanctimonious
-air that “he could not pass over her impudence, and that
-she had better pack her box and go.” Moreover, that
-force might be lent to this ukase, he sternly summoned
-William from the lumber room, and ordered the young
-man to help her down with her box as soon as it was
-ready; and then he must fetch her a cab.</p>
-
-<p>This was more than June had bargained for. She
-was expecting to be kicked out; but she had not looked
-for the process to be quite so summary. It did not
-suit her plans at all.</p>
-
-<p>“Get a room for yourself in a decent neighbourhood,”
-said the old man. “Mrs. Runciman will know
-of one, no doubt. You’ve money enough to keep you
-while you look for work.”</p>
-
-<p>June’s swift mind, however, saw instant disadvantages.
-Secretly, she cherished the hope, a slender one,
-no doubt, of being able to discover where the picture
-was hid. Once, however, she left the house that hope
-would vanish. And it was painfully clear that it was
-Uncle Si’s recognition of this fact which now made
-him so determined to be quit of her.</p>
-
-<p>The old serpent was fully alive to what lay at the
-back of her mind. He knew that so long as she slept
-under his roof the picture could never be safe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span></p>
-
-<p>She was shrewd enough to size up the position at
-once. Reading the purpose in the heart of Uncle Si
-she told him plainly that much as she disliked her
-present address she did not propose to change it until
-her lawful property had been restored to her.</p>
-
-<p>“You are going to leave this place within an hour,
-my girl, for good and all.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall not,” said June flatly. “Until you give me
-the picture, I don’t intend to stir.”</p>
-
-<p>“The picture is not yours. You are not a fit person
-to have it. And if you don’t go quietly your box will
-be put into the street.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dare to touch my box again, and I shall go straight
-to the police.”</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Si didn’t care a straw for the police. She had
-not the slightest claim upon him; in fact she was living
-on his charity. As for the picture, it had nothing whatever
-to do with the matter.</p>
-
-<p>At this point it was that William came out in his
-true colours. He had been standing by, unwilling witness
-of these passages. Anxiously concerned, he could
-no longer keep silent.</p>
-
-<p>“Beg your pardon, sir,” he said, stammering painfully,
-and flushing deeply, “but if Miss June leaves
-the house, I’m afraid I’ll have to go as well.”</p>
-
-<p>This was a thunderbolt. S. Gedge Antiques opened
-his mouth in wide astonishment. He gasped like a
-carp. The atmospheric displacement was terrific.
-Slowly the old man took off his “selling” spectacles,
-and replaced them with his “buying” ones. Certainly
-the effect was to make him look a shade less truculent,
-but at the moment there was no other result. “Boy,
-don’t talk like a fool,” was all he could say.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span></p>
-
-<p>William, however, was not to be moved. He never
-found it easy to make up his mind; for him to reach a
-decision in things that mattered was a slow and trying
-process. But the task achieved it was for good or ill.
-His stammers and blushes were a little ludicrous, he
-seemed near to tears, but the open hostility of his
-master could not turn him an inch.</p>
-
-<p>“Never in my born days did I hear the like.” S.
-Gedge Antiques seethed like a vipers’ nest. “Boy,
-you ought to be bled for the simples to let a paltry
-hussy get round you in this way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Give me the picture, Uncle Si,” cried the paltry
-hussy, with a force that made him blink, “and I’ll take
-precious good care you don’t see me again.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man whinnied with rage. But he had not
-the least intention of giving up the picture; nor had
-he the least intention of giving up that which was
-almost as valuable, the services of his right-hand man.
-William was irreplaceable. And the instant his master
-realised that this odd fellow was very much in earnest,
-he saw that there was only one line to take. He must
-temporize. With all the tact he could muster, and on
-occasion the old man could muster a good deal, the
-Old Crocodile proceeded to do so.</p>
-
-<p>The “firing” of his niece should stand in abeyance
-for the time being. He gave solemn warning, however,
-that she must get a job right away, as his mind was
-quite made up that he was not going to find house room
-for the likes of her an hour longer than he could help.
-As for the boy, of whom he had always held such a
-high opinion ever since the day he had first picked him
-out of the gutter and upon whom he had lavished a
-father’s kindness, he was really quite at a loss&mdash;with a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span>
-snuffle of heart-melting pathos&mdash;to know how to put his
-deeply wounded feelings into words.</p>
-
-<p>For June, all the same, the upshot was victory. The
-inevitable packing of her box could be postponed to
-her own good time. But well she knew that the reprieve
-was due to William and to him alone. It was
-his splendidly timed intervention that had enabled her
-to win the day.</p>
-
-<p>The previous evening harsh thoughts of the Sawney
-had crept into her heart. After giving her the picture,
-surely it was his duty to take a stronger line upon the
-rape of it. But that phase of weakness was forgotten
-now. He had come out nobly. At a most critical
-moment he had fought her battle; and he had fought
-it with magical effect.</p>
-
-<p>All was forgiven. He was O. K.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXVI">XXVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>une</span> was dominated now by a single thought. By
-hook or by crook she must get back the picture
-before she left that house. If she failed to do so, she
-would never see it again, and there would be an end
-of all her hopes. Exactly what these hopes were she
-did not venture to ask herself; in any case, they would
-not have been easy to put into words. But she felt
-in a vague way that William’s future and her own
-were bound up in them.</p>
-
-<p>It was clear that the picture was concealed somewhere
-upon the premises, because Mr. Thornton and his
-friend, M. Duponnet, were coming there the next day
-to look at it. June was quick to realize that this fact
-offered a measure of opportunity which, slender as it
-was, must certainly be used. No other was in the least
-likely to come her way.</p>
-
-<p>Three o’clock on Thursday afternoon she had learned
-already was the hour of the appointment. It was now
-the afternoon of Wednesday. No matter what the
-penalty, if flesh and blood could contrive it, she must
-be present at this interview, and see what happened to
-the treasure.</p>
-
-<p>Despair heavy upon her, she lay awake the best part
-of the night searching her mind for a plan of action.
-But the quest seemed hopeless. Uncle Si could so easily
-thwart any scheme she might evolve. And he would
-not have a scruple. She must outwit him somehow,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span>
-but to outwit one of such cunning was a task for a
-brain far stronger and nimbler than hers.</p>
-
-<p>Lying up there in her comfortless bed, wild thoughts
-flocking round her pillow like so many evil spirits, the
-whole sorry affair was as haunting as a bad dream.
-And, interwoven with it, in the most fantastic way, was
-the shop below, and more particularly the Hoodoo,
-the presiding genius, which now stood forth in June’s
-mind as the replica of Uncle Si himself. He was surely
-possessed by a devil, and this heathen joss as surely
-embodied it.</p>
-
-<p>On Thursday morning June rose early. She was in
-a mood of desperation. Little sleep had come to her in
-the long and dreary night hours. But, in spite of feeling
-quite worn out, her determination to “best” Uncle
-Si and regain her own property had not grown less.
-No ray was to be seen anywhere, yet defiant of fate as
-she still was, the time had not yet come to admit even
-to herself that all was lost.</p>
-
-<p>As dustpan and brush in hand she began the day’s
-work, more than one reckless expedient crossed her
-mind. In the last resort she might put the matter in
-the hands of the police. If she could have counted on
-William’s support, she would have been tempted to do
-this, but the rub was, he could not be depended on at
-all. Nobly as he had fought her recent battle, it was
-clear that so far as the picture itself was concerned,
-his sympathies were wholly with Uncle Si. Even if
-he did not deny that the picture was her lawful property
-he had certainly done his best to revoke his gift.</p>
-
-<p>No, she would gain nothing by calling in the police.
-She must find some other way. During the night a
-wild plan had entered her mind. And if in the course<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span>
-of the morning no scheme more hopeful occurred to
-her, she was now resolved to act upon it.</p>
-
-<p>To this end, she began at once to throw dust in the
-eyes of Uncle Si. At the breakfast table he was told
-that she meant to spend the afternoon looking for a
-job if, with a modest eye on her plate, “he had no
-objection.”</p>
-
-<p>The Old Crocodile had not the least objection. With
-gusto he assured her that it was quite the best thing
-she could do. Privately he assured himself that he
-didn’t want her hanging around the place while he was
-transacting business of great importance with Mr.
-Thornton and Monsieur Duponnet. Ever in the forefront
-of his mind was the fact that these gentlemen
-were coming to see him at three o’clock.</p>
-
-<p>About an hour before the time appointed the old fox
-sent William on an errand which would keep him away
-most of the afternoon. And further to ensure that
-the coast should be quite clear, S. Gedge Antiques said
-sharply to his niece, “Go and put on your hat, my girl,
-and make yourself scarce. Get after that job you spoke
-about. I won’t have you hanging around while these
-gentlemen are here.”</p>
-
-<p>June, however, had other views. And these, whatever
-they were, she was at great pains not to disclose.
-First she watched William go innocently forth on a
-long bus ride to Richmond. Next she made sure that
-Uncle Si was composing himself in his armchair for
-his usual “forty winks” after dinner. And then she
-proceeded boldly to develop her audacious design.</p>
-
-<p>To start with, she crept into the front shop and surveyed
-the Hoodoo. The quaintly hideous vase was
-fully six feet tall, its body huge, its mouth wide. Was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span>
-it possible to get inside? There was little doubt that
-if she was able to do so, this curious monster was quite
-large enough to conceal her.</p>
-
-<p>She saw at once that the task before her was no
-light one. But by the side of the Hoodoo, inscrutable
-Providence had placed a genuine antique in the shape
-of a gate-legged table, £4.19.6&mdash;a great bargain. The
-sight of this was encouraging. She climbed onto it.
-And then wedging the Hoodoo most cunningly between
-the table and the wall, and artfully disposing her own
-weight, so that the monster might not tip over, she
-lowered herself with the caution and agility of a cat
-into the roomy interior.</p>
-
-<p>It was almost a feat for an acrobat, but she managed
-it somehow. Keeping tight hold of the rim as she
-swung both legs over, her feet touched bottom with the
-vase still maintaining the perpendicular. The space
-inside was ample, and without even the need to bend,
-the top of her head was invisible. Near the top of the
-vase, moreover, was the monster’s open mouth, a narrow
-slit studded with teeth, which not only afforded a
-means of ventilation, but also through which, to June’s
-devout joy, she was able to peer.</p>
-
-<p>For such a crowning boon on the part of Providence
-she had every reason to feel grateful. So far everything
-was miraculously right. Her daring had met
-with more success than could have been hoped for.
-One problem remained, however, which at that moment
-she did not venture to look in the face. To get into
-the vase was one thing; to get out of it would be quite
-another.</p>
-
-<p>No friendly table could avail her now. In ascending
-that sheer and slippery face of painted metal-work,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span>
-she must not expect help from outside when the time
-came to escape from her prison. Besides one incautious
-movement might cause the whole thing to topple. And
-if topple it did, the results would be dire.</p>
-
-<p>This, however, was not the time to consider that
-aspect of the case. Let her be thankful for a concealment
-so perfect which allowed her to breathe and to
-see without being seen or her presence suspected. For
-such material benefits she must lift up her heart; and
-hope for the best when the time came to get out. With
-a sense of grim satisfaction she set herself “to lie
-doggo,” and await the next turn in a game that was
-full of peril.</p>
-
-<p>It was not long before Uncle Si shambled into the
-shop. June could see him quite clearly, as he came in
-with that furtive air which she had learned to know so
-well. First he took off his spectacles and applied to
-them vigorously a red bandanna handkerchief. Then
-he peered cautiously round to make sure that he was
-alone.</p>
-
-<p>June had not dared to hope that the picture was concealed
-in the shop; and yet it offered every facility.
-There were many nooks and crannies, and the whole
-place was crammed with old pieces of furniture, bric-à-brac,
-curios. But June had felt that S. Gedge Antiques
-was not likely to run the risk of hiding his
-treasure in the midst of these. She thought that his
-bedroom, under lock and key, was the most likely place
-of all.</p>
-
-<p>Howbeit, with a sharp thrill, half torment, half delight,
-she saw that this was not the case. Within a
-few feet of the Hoodoo itself was an old oak chest
-which Uncle Si cautiously drew aside. The very spot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span>
-whereon it had rested contained a loose board. He
-took a small chisel from a drawer in the counter,
-prised up the board and from beneath it took forth
-the buried treasure.</p>
-
-<p>Long and lovingly the old man looked at it, hugging
-it to his breast more than once in the process, and as
-he did so June was reminded irresistibly of the Miser
-Gaspard in “Les Cloches des Corneville,” that famous
-play she had once seen at the Theatre Royal, Blackhampton.
-To hide such a thing in such a place was a
-regular miser’s trick. It was just what she had expected
-of him. Presently a grandfather clock, with a
-Westminster Abbey face, “guaranteed Queen Anne,”
-chimed the hour of three. June could scarcely breathe
-for excitement. Her heart seemed to rise in her throat
-and choke her.</p>
-
-<p>At five minutes past three came Mr. Thornton and
-Monsieur Duponnet. The Frenchman was a small and
-dapper personage, with a keen eye and a neat imperial.
-In manner he was much quieter than tradition exacts
-of a Frenchman, but it was easy to tell that Uncle Si
-was much impressed by him. Louis Quinze-legs, too,
-was full of deference. That gentleman, whose face was
-almost as foxy as that of Uncle Si himself, and about
-whose lips a thin smile flitted perpetually, had an air
-of tacit homage for the smallest remark of M. Duponnet,
-who was clearly a man of great consequence if the
-bearing of Mr. Thornton was anything to go by.</p>
-
-<p>June, at the back of the shop, inside the Hoodoo and
-her keen eyes hidden by its half-open jaws, which, in
-addition to other advantages was partly masked by a
-litter of bric-à-brac, was in a position to gain full
-knowledge of all that passed between these three. To<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span>
-begin with, S. Gedge Antiques ceremoniously handed
-the picture to Louis Quinze-legs who, with a fine gesture,
-handed it to Monsieur Duponnet.</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchman examined the canvas back and front
-through his own private glass, scratched portions of it
-with his nail, pursed his lips, rubbed his nose, and no
-doubt would have shrugged his shoulders had not that
-been such a jejune thing for a Frenchman to do.</p>
-
-<p>With a deference that was quite impressive, Mr.
-Thornton and S. Gedge Antiques waited for M. Duponnet
-to say something.</p>
-
-<p>“Ze tail of ze R. is a little faint, hein!” was what he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>“But it is a tail, Mussewer,” said S. Gedge Antiques
-in a robust voice.</p>
-
-<p>“And it is an R,” said polite Mr. Thornton, as he
-bent over the picture.</p>
-
-<p>“You can bet your life on that,” said S. Gedge
-Antiques.</p>
-
-<p>M. Duponnet did not seem inclined to wager anything
-so valuable as his life. After a little hesitation,
-which involved further minute examination through
-his glass, he was ready to take the ‘R’ for granted. But
-he went on to deplore the fact that the picture was without
-a pedigree.</p>
-
-<p>“A pedigree, Mussewer!” It was now the turn of
-S. Gedge Antiques to rub his nose.</p>
-
-<p>M. Duponnet succinctly explained, with the air of a
-man expounding a commonplace in the world of art,
-that Van Roons were so few, their qualities so rare,
-their monetary value so considerable, that as soon as
-one came into the market its history was eagerly scrutinised.
-And should one suddenly appear that previously<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>
-had not been known to exist it would have to
-run the gauntlet of the most expert criticism.</p>
-
-<p>“May be, Mussewer!” S. Gedge Antiques wagged a
-dour head. “But that’s not going to alter the fact that
-this be-yew-ti-ful thing is a genuine Van Roon.”</p>
-
-<p>In a manner of speaking it would not, agreed M.
-Duponnet, but it might detract considerably from its
-market value.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s as may be.” The old man suddenly assumed
-quite a high tone.</p>
-
-<p>M. Duponnet and Mr. Thornton took the picture to
-the other side of the shop and conferred together.
-So low were their voices that neither Uncle Si nor
-June could hear a word of what passed between them.
-Times and again they held the canvas to the light.
-They laid it on a tallboys, and pored over it; they
-borrowed the microscope of one another and made
-great show of using it; and then finally Mr. Thornton
-crossed the floor and said to Uncle Si, who was
-handling a piece of Waterford glass with the most
-pensive unconcern: “What’s your price, Mr. Gedge?”</p>
-
-<p>“Heh?” said the old man, as if emerging from a
-beautiful dream. “Price? You had better name one.”</p>
-
-<p>Excitement at this point seemed to cause June’s
-heart to stop beating.</p>
-
-<p>“The trouble is,” said Mr. Thornton, “our friend,
-M. Duponnet, is not quite convinced that it is a Van
-Roon.”</p>
-
-<p>“But there’s the signature.”</p>
-
-<p>“It seems to have been touched up a bit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not by me,” said S. Gedge Antiques, austerely.</p>
-
-<p>“We don’t think that for a moment,” said Mr.
-Thornton, in a voice of honey. “But the signature is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span>
-by no means so clear as it might be, and in the absence
-of a pedigree M. Duponnet does not feel justified in
-paying a big price.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a pause while the old man indulged in a
-dramatic change of spectacles. And then he said rather
-sourly, in a tone that M. Duponnet could not fail to
-hear: “Pedigree or no pedigree, I shall have no difficulty
-in selling it. You know as well as I do, Mr.
-Thornton, that American buyers are in the market.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite so, Mr. Gedge,” said Mr. Thornton suavely.
-And then while Uncle Si glared at both gentlemen as
-if they had been caught with their hands in his pocket,
-they conferred again together. This time it was M.
-Duponnet who ended their discussion by saying: “Meester
-Gedge, name your figure!”</p>
-
-<p>“Figure?” said Uncle Si dreamily; and then in his
-odd way he scratched his scrub of whisker with a
-thumbnail and rubbed a forefinger down his long and
-foxlike nose.</p>
-
-<p>“Your price, Meester Gedge?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mussewer!” said the old man solemnly, “I couldn’t
-take less than five thousand pounds, I couldn’t really.”</p>
-
-<p>June held her breath. For some little time past she
-had been convinced that the picture was valuable, but
-she was hardly prepared for this fabulous sum.</p>
-
-<p>M. Duponnet shook his head. “Meester Gedge, if
-only we had its ’istory!”</p>
-
-<p>“If we had its history, Mussewer, I should want at
-least twice the money. Even as it is I am taking a big
-chance. You know that as well as I do.”</p>
-
-<p>This seemed to be true. At all events, M. Duponnet
-and Mr. Thornton again talked earnestly together.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span>
-Once more they fingered that rather dilapidated canvas.
-Head to head they bent over it yet again; and then
-suddenly M. Duponnet looked up and came abruptly
-across to the old man.</p>
-
-<p>“Meester Gedge,” he said, “I can’t go beyond four
-t’ousand pounds. That is my limit!”</p>
-
-<p>“Five, Mussewer Duponny, that is mine,” said Uncle
-Si, with a dark smile.</p>
-
-<p>It was a jejune thing for a French gentleman to do,
-but at this point M. Duponnet really and truly gave his
-shoulders a shrug, and advanced three paces towards
-the shop door. Uncle Si did not stir a muscle. And
-then M. Duponnet faced about and said: “Guineas,
-Meester Gedge, I’ll give four t’ousand guineas, and
-that’s my last word.”</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Si having no pretensions to be considered a
-French gentleman, did not hesitate to give his own
-shoulders a shrug. It was his turn then to confer with
-the discreet and knowledgeable Mr. Thornton, who it
-was clear was acting the difficult part of a go-between.</p>
-
-<p>June heard that gentleman say in an audible whisper:
-“A fair price, Mr. Gedge, for the thing as it stands.
-It hasn’t a pedigree, and to me that signature looks a
-bit doubtful. In the market it may fetch more or it
-may fetch less, but at the same time four thousand
-guineas is a fine insurance.”</p>
-
-<p>Finished dissembler as Uncle Si was, even he did
-not seek to deny the truth of this. There could be no
-gainsaying that four thousand guineas <i>was</i> a fine insurance.
-True, if the picture proved to be a veritable
-Van Roon it might fetch many times that sum. In that
-shrewd mind, no bigger miracle was needed for the
-thing to turn out a <i>chef d’œuvre</i> than that it should<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span>
-prove to be worth the sum offered by M. Duponnet.
-Either contingency seemed too good to be true. Besides,
-S. Gedge Antiques belonged to a conservative
-school, among whose articles of faith was a certain
-trite proverb about a bird in the hand.</p>
-
-<p>It went to the old man’s heart to accept four thousand
-guineas for a work that might be worth so very
-much more. June could hear him breathing heavily.
-In her tense ear that sound dominated even the furious
-beating of her own heart. A kind of dizziness came
-over her, as only too surely she understood that the
-wicked old man was giving in. Before her very eyes
-he was going to surrender her own private property for
-a fabulous sum.</p>
-
-<p>“Four t’ousand guineas, Meester Gedge,” said M.
-Duponnet, with quite an air of nonchalance. But he
-knew well enough that the old man was about to “fall.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s giving it away, Mussewer,” whined Uncle Si.
-“It’s giving it away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Zat I don’t t’ink, Meester Gedge,” said the French
-gentleman, quietly unbuttoning his coat and taking a
-fountain pen and a cheque book from an inner pocket.
-“It’s a risque&mdash;a big risque. It may not be Van Roon
-at all&mdash;and zen where are we?”</p>
-
-<p>“You know as well as I do that it’s a Van Roon,”
-Uncle Si verged almost upon tears.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, Meester Gedge, if you prefer ze big
-chance.” And cheque book in hand the French gentleman
-paused.</p>
-
-<p>June was torn. And she could tell by the strange
-whine in the rasping voice that the Old Crocodile was
-also torn.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment of crisis, Mr. Thornton interposed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span>
-with masterful effect. “In my humble opinion,” he
-said, “it’s a very fair offer for the thing as it stands.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are thinking of your ten per cent. commission,
-my boy,” said S. Gedge Antiques with a gleam of
-malice.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Meester Gedge,” said M. Duponnet, “take it
-or leave it.” And the French gentleman began to fold
-up his cheque book.</p>
-
-<p>With a groan to rend a heart of stone, S. Gedge
-Antiques brought himself suddenly to accept the offer.
-Half suffocated by excitement, June watched M. Duponnet
-cross to the desk and proceed to write out a
-cheque for four thousand guineas. And as she did
-so her heart sank. She was quite sure that she was
-looking upon the picture for the last time.</p>
-
-<p>In jumping to this conclusion, however, she had
-not made full allowance for the business capacity of
-Uncle Si. When M. Duponnet had filled in the cheque
-and handed it to him, the Old Crocodile scrutinised it
-very carefully indeed, and then he said: “Thank you,
-Mussewer Duponny. The bank closes at three. But
-to-morrow morning I’ll take this round myself as soon
-as it opens. And if the manager says it’s all right,
-you can have the picture whenever you like.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Bien!</i>” The Frenchman bowed politely. “Meanwhile,
-take good care of the picture. There are many
-thieves about.” M. Duponnet laughed. “Mind you
-lock it up in a safe place.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can trust Mr. Gedge to do that, I think,” said
-Louis Quinze-legs dryly.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope so, I’m sure,” said the old man with a frosty
-smile.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span></p>
-
-<p>“<i>Soit!</i>” M. Duponnet smiled too. “I’ll call for it
-myself to-morrow morning at twelve.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, Mussewer!”</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques gave his visitors a bow as they
-went up to the shop door, and ushered them ceremoniously
-into the not particularly inviting air of New
-Cross Street.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXVII">XXVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>ust</span> at first June was unable to realise that M.
-Duponnet had not taken the picture away with him.
-The blood seemed to drum against her brain while
-she watched Uncle Si turn over the cheque in his long
-talon fingers and then transfer it to a leather case,
-which he returned to his breast pocket with a deep sigh.
-Afterwards he took up the picture from the table on
-which he had set it down and then June grasped the
-fact that the treasure was still there.</p>
-
-<p>The face which bent over it now was not that of a
-happy man. It was a complex of emotions, deep and
-stern. The price was huge for a thing that had cost
-him nothing, but&mdash;and there it was that the shoe
-pinched!&mdash;if it should prove to be a real Van Roon,
-he might be parting with it for a song.</p>
-
-<p>June could read his thoughts like an open book. He
-wanted to eat his cake and have it too. She would
-have been inclined to pity him had her hatred and her
-scorn been less. In his cunning and his greed he was a
-tragic figure, with a thing of incomparable beauty in
-his hand whose sole effect was to give him the look of
-an evil bird of prey. Utter rascal as she knew him to
-be now, she shivered to think how easy it would be
-for herself to grow just like him. Her very soul was
-fixed upon the recovery of this wonderful thing which,
-in the first place, she had obtained by a trick. And
-did she covet it for its beauty? Or was it for the reason<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span>
-which at this moment made Uncle Si a creature so ill to
-look upon? To such questions there could only be one
-answer.</p>
-
-<p>For the time being, however, these things were
-merged in the speculation far more momentous: What
-will the Old Crocodile do now? She was feeling so
-uncomfortable in her narrow hiding place, which prevented
-all movement, and almost forbade her to breathe,
-that she hoped devoutly the old wretch would lose no
-time in putting back the treasure.</p>
-
-<p>This, alas, was not to be. The picture was still in
-the hand of Uncle Si, who still pored over it like a
-moulting vulture, when a luxurious motor glided up
-to the shop door. Almost at once the shop was invaded
-by two persons, who in the sight of June had a look of
-notable importance.</p>
-
-<p>The first of these, whom June immediately recognised,
-was the tall, fashionable girl whose visit had
-caused her such heart-burning the week before. She
-was now accompanied by a gentleman who beyond a
-doubt was her distinguished father.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, Mr. Gedge!” It was twenty past
-three by the afternoon, but June was ready to take a
-Bible oath that Miss Blue Blood said “good morning.”
-“I’ve persuaded my father to come and look at this
-amazing vase.” And with her <i>en-tout-cas</i> Miss Blue
-Blood pointed straight at the Hoodoo.</p>
-
-<p>Feeling herself to be a rat caught neatly in a trap,
-June at once crouched lower. The Hoodoo being fully
-six feet tall and her own stoop considerable, she was
-able to take comfort from the fact that just then no
-part of her own head was showing. But how long was
-she likely to remain invisible? That was a question for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span>
-the gods. And it was further complicated by the knowledge
-that the Hoodoo’s mouth was open, and that the
-point of Miss Blue Blood’s green umbrella might easily
-find a way through.</p>
-
-<p>A-shiver with fear June tried to subdue her wild
-heart, while Miss Babraham, her father, Sir Arthur,
-and S. Gedge Antiques gathered round the Hoodoo.
-She hardly dared to breathe. The least sound would
-betray her. And in any case, one of the three had
-merely to stand on an adjacent coffin stool and peer
-over the top for the murder to be out.</p>
-
-<p>The tragedy which June so clearly foresaw was not
-permitted to take place at once. Plainly the fates were
-inclined to toy with their victim for a while. Miss
-Blue Blood’s laugh&mdash;how rich and deep it was!&mdash;rang
-in her ears and made them burn as she gave the Hoodoo
-a prod and cried out in her gay Miss-Banks-like manner,
-“Papa, I ask you, did you ever see anything quite
-like it?”</p>
-
-<p>“By George, no!” laughed that connoisseur.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s such a glorious monster,” said his enthusiastic
-daughter standing on tiptoe, “that one can’t even see
-over the top.”</p>
-
-<p>“Puts one in mind,” said Sir Arthur, “of the Arabian
-Nights and the Cave of the Forty Robbers.”</p>
-
-<p>“The long gallery at Homefield is the very place for
-it!”</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder!” The connoisseur tapped the Hoodoo
-with his walking stick and turned to S. Gedge Antiques.
-“Do you happen to know where it came from?” he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“From a Polynesian temple in the South Sea Islands,
-I believe, sir,” said Uncle Si, glibly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What do you want for it?” And Sir Arthur tapped
-the Hoodoo again.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll take thirty pounds, sir.” It was the voice of a
-man bringing himself to part with a valuable tooth.
-“Sixty was the sum I paid for it some years ago.
-But it isn’t everybody’s fancy, and it swallows a small
-place.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur observed with pleasant humour that such
-a monstrosity ought to be taken over by the nation.
-S. Gedge Antiques, with a humour that strove to be
-equally pleasant, concurred.</p>
-
-<p>At this point, to June’s mortal terror, Miss Babraham
-made a second attempt to look over the top.</p>
-
-<p>“Stand on this coffin stool, Miss,” said S. Gedge
-Antiques, politely producing that article from the collection
-of bric-à-brac around the Hoodoo.</p>
-
-<p>June’s heart stood still. The game was up. Sickly
-she closed her eyes. But Providence had one last card
-to play.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you so much,” said Miss Babraham. “But
-it won’t bear my weight, I’m afraid. No, I don’t
-think I’ll risk it. There’s really nothing to see inside.”</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Si agreed that there was really nothing to see
-inside; and June breathed again.</p>
-
-<p>“Thirty pounds isn’t much, papa, for such a glorious
-monstrosity.” Miss Blue Blood had evidently set her
-heart on it.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur, however, expressed a fear that a thing
-of that size, that hue, that contour would kill every
-object in the Long Gallery. Great argument ensued.
-And then to June’s relief, Miss Babraham, her father,
-Sir Arthur and S. Gedge Antiques, arguing still, moved
-away from the Hoodoo.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span></p>
-
-<p>The upshot was that Sir Arthur, overborne at last
-by the force of his daughter’s reasoning, agreed to buy
-the monster, for what in the opinion of the seller, was
-a ridiculously inadequate sum. It was to be carefully
-packed in a crate, and sent down to Homefield near
-Byfleet, Surrey. So much for the Hoodoo. And then
-the eye of a famous connoisseur lit on the picture that
-the old dealer had laid on the gate-legged table.</p>
-
-<p>“What have we here?” said Sir Arthur, fixing his
-eyeglass.</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Si became a sphinx. The connoisseur took
-the picture in his hand, and while he examined it with
-grave curiosity he too became a sphinx. So tense grew
-the silence to June’s ear that again she was troubled
-by the loud beating of her heart.</p>
-
-<p>At last the silence was broken by the light and
-charming note of Miss Babraham. “Why, surely,”
-she said, “that is the funny old picture I saw when I
-was here the other day.”</p>
-
-<p>“We have cleaned it up a bit since then, madam,”
-said Uncle Si in a voice so toneless that June could
-only marvel at the perfect self-command of this arch
-dissembler.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur, it was clear, was tremendously interested.
-He turned the picture over and over, and used the
-microscope very much as M. Duponnet had done.
-Finally he said in a voice nearly as toneless as that
-of Uncle Si himself. “What do you ask for this, Mr.
-Gedge?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not for sale, sir,” was the decisive answer.</p>
-
-<p>The nod of Sir Arthur implied that it was the
-answer he expected. “Looks to me a fine example.”
-A true amateur, he could not repress a little sigh of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span>
-pleasure. There was no concealing the fact that he
-was intrigued.</p>
-
-<p>“Van Roon at his best, sir,” said S. Gedge Antiques.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye-es,” said the connoisseur&mdash;in the tone of the
-connoisseur. “One would be rather inclined to say so.
-If the question is not impertinent,”&mdash;Sir Arthur fixed
-a steady eye upon the face of deep cunning which confronted
-his&mdash;“may I ask where it came from?”</p>
-
-<p>The old man was prepared for the question. His
-answer was pat. “I can’t tell you that, sir,” he said,
-in a tone of mystery.</p>
-
-<p>Again Sir Arthur nodded. That, too, was the answer
-he had expected. In the pause which followed Sir
-Arthur returned to a loving re-examination of the picture;
-and then said S. Gedge Antiques in a voice
-gravely and quietly confidential: “Strictly between ourselves,
-sir, I may say that I have just turned down an
-offer of five thousand guineas.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh&mdash;indeed!”</p>
-
-<p>It was now the turn of the Old Crocodile to gaze
-into the impassive countenance of the famous connoisseur.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXVIII">XXVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">“F</span>ive</span> thousand guineas, sir, I have just refused,”
-said Uncle Si, “for this little thing, as sure as
-God’s in the sky.”</p>
-
-<p>So shocked was June by this adding of blasphemy to
-his other crimes, that she shivered audibly. Miss
-Babraham cocked up her head at the sound. “You’ve
-a cat somewhere, haven’t you?” she said, looking
-around the shop.</p>
-
-<p>“No, madam,” said Uncle Si shortly. So like a
-woman to butt in at such a moment with such a remark!</p>
-
-<p>“In my humble opinion,” said Sir Arthur, gazing
-solemnly at the picture, “this is a finer example of Van
-Roon than the one&mdash;and the only one!&mdash;we have in
-the National Gallery.”</p>
-
-<p>“There, sir, I am with you,” said S. Gedge Antiques
-with unction.</p>
-
-<p>“One would like to know its history.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man became a sphinx once more. “I can
-only tell you, sir, I didn’t buy it as a Van Roon,” he
-said cautiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Really!” Sir Arthur grew more intrigued than ever.
-“Well, Mr. Gedge, whatever you bought it as, I think
-there can be no doubt that you’ve made a lucky purchase.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am wondering, sir,” said S. Gedge Antiques,
-“whether the National Gallery would care to acquire<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span>
-this fine example?” It was a sudden inspiration, but
-those measured tones and calculating eyes gave no indication
-of the fact.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur Babraham, in his own capacity of a
-National Gallery trustee, began sensibly to moderate
-his transports. “More unlikely things, Mr. Gedge,”
-at last he brought himself reluctantly to say. “Van
-Roons are very scarce, and if this one is all that he
-appears to be at a first glance, it will be a pity to let
-him leave the country.”</p>
-
-<p>Piously, S. Gedge Antiques thought so, too.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur turned to the picture again. Like M.
-Duponnet he seemed to have difficulty in keeping his
-expert gaze off that fascinating canvas.</p>
-
-<p>“Reminds one,” he said, “of that choice thing that
-was stolen from the Louvre about twenty-five years
-ago. The size is similar and, as I remember it, the
-whole composition is in some ways identical.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man was startled, but not visibly. “Was
-there one stolen from the Loov, sir?” he said, with a
-polite air of asking for information.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, yes! Don’t you remember? There was a
-great stir at the time. It was cut out of its frame.
-The French Government offered a big reward, but the
-work has never been recovered.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, sir.” All at once the Old Crocodile began
-to gambol a little. “Let’s hope this ain’t the boy.”
-He gave a mild snigger. But as his next words proved
-there was more in that snigger than met the ear. “In
-the event of this little jool turning out to be stolen property,
-what, sir, do you suppose would be the position of
-the present owner?”</p>
-
-<p>“Difficult to say, Mr. Gedge.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span></p>
-
-<p>“He’d receive compensation, wouldn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Substantial compensation one would think&mdash;if he
-was able to prove his title.”</p>
-
-<p>If he was able to prove his title! Those blunt little
-words had a sinister sound for S. Gedge Antiques, but
-he did not turn a hair. “No difficulty about that, sir,”
-he said, robustly.</p>
-
-<p>“Quite!” Evidently Sir Arthur had no doubt upon
-the point. “But as the question might arise it may be
-well to have it settled before disposing of the picture.”</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge agreed.</p>
-
-<p>“And in any case, before parting with it,” said Sir
-Arthur, “it will be wise, I think, to take advice.”</p>
-
-<p>Again S. Gedge agreed. “You mean, sir, it may be
-very valuable indeed?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I quite think it may be. At a cursory glance
-it has the look of a fine example of a great master. I
-remember at the time that ‘L’Automne’ disappeared
-from the Louvre, it was said to be worth at least two
-hundred and fifty thousand francs, and since then Van
-Roons have more than doubled in price.”</p>
-
-<p>“In that case, sir”&mdash;there was a tremor of real emotion
-in the voice of the old dealer&mdash;“this be-yew-ti-ful
-thing ought not to be allowed to leave the country.”</p>
-
-<p>“Unfortunately the French authorities may compel
-it to do so.” And the connoisseur sighed as he fingered
-the canvas lovingly.</p>
-
-<p>Affirmed S. Gedge Antiques: “I don’t believe, sir,
-for a moment that it is ‘L’Automne.’”</p>
-
-<p>“One wouldn’t like to say it is,” said the cautious
-Sir Arthur. “And one wouldn’t like to say it isn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’ll be up to the Loov to prove it, anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite. In the meantime, before you let it go, I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span>
-hope you’ll give me an opportunity of looking at it
-again.”</p>
-
-<p>This modest request caused the old man to rub his
-nose. He was not in a position, he said mysteriously, to
-give a promise, but certainly he would do his best to
-meet the wishes of Sir Arthur.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, Mr. Gedge. If this picture is not
-claimed by other people, and of course one doesn’t for
-a moment suggest that it will be, steps might be taken
-to keep it here. We are so poor in Van Roons&mdash;there
-is only one, I believe&mdash;to our shame!&mdash;in this country
-at the present time&mdash;that we can’t afford to let a thing
-like this slip through our fingers. Therefore, as I
-say, before you decide to sell I hope you’ll take advice.”</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques gravely thanked Sir Arthur Babraham.
-He would keep those wise words in mind.
-And in the meantime he would pack <i>That</i> in a crate&mdash;he
-pointed a finger straight at June’s eyes&mdash;and send
-it to Homefield.&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“&mdash;&mdash;near Byfleet, Surrey, I think you said, sir?”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXIX">XXIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> distinguished visitors were bowed into the
-street. And then S. Gedge Antiques, with the
-face of a man whose soul is in torment, returned to
-contemplation of the picture, and also of M. Duponnet’s
-cheque which he took out of his pocket book. It was
-clear that his mind was the prey of a deep problem.
-The bird in the hand was well enough so far as it went,
-but the bird in the bush was horribly tempting.</p>
-
-<p>At last with a heavy sigh the old man returned the
-cheque to his pocket, and then cautiously lifting up the
-loose board, put back the picture whence it came and
-drew the oak chest over the spot. He then shambled
-off to the room next door, which was full of odds and
-ends mingled with a powerful smell of oil and varnish.</p>
-
-<p>June at once made an attempt to get out of prison.
-But she now found her position to be as she had already
-surmised. To enter without help had been no mean
-feat, to escape in the same fashion was impossible.
-Wedged so tightly inside the Hoodoo, there was neither
-play nor purchase for her hands; and frantic as her
-efforts were, they were yet subordinated to the knowledge
-that it would be quite easy for the thing to topple
-over. Should that happen the consequence would certainly
-be alarming and possibly ghastly.</p>
-
-<p>Frantically wriggling in the jaws of the Hoodoo, it
-did not matter what she did, she was firmly held. And
-the fear of Uncle Si, who was pottering about quite<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span>
-close at hand, while imposing silence upon her, intensified
-the growing desperation of her case. She was a
-mouse in a trap.</p>
-
-<p>Too soon did she learn that only one course was
-open to her. She must wait for William’s return. Irksome
-and humiliating as the position was, it was clear
-that she could do nothing without help.</p>
-
-<p>Would William never come? The minutes ticked on
-and her durance grew exceedingly vile. She became
-conscious of pains in her shoulders and feet, she felt
-as if she could hardly draw breath, her head throbbing
-with excitement seemed as if it must burst. It was a
-horrible fix to be in.</p>
-
-<p>Suffering acutely now, she yielded as well as she
-could to the inevitable. There was simply nothing to
-be done. She must wait. It was imprisonment in a
-most unpleasant form and she was frightened by the
-knowledge that it might continue many hours. Even
-when William did return, and there was no saying
-when he would do so, he was quite as likely to enter
-by the back door as by the shop. So terrible was the
-thought that June felt ready to faint at the bare idea.</p>
-
-<p>This was a matter, however, in which fate was not
-so relentless after all. June was doing her best to bear
-up in the face of this new and paralysing fear when
-the shop door opened and lo! William came in.</p>
-
-<p>Great was her joy, and yet it had to be tempered by
-considerations of prudence. She contrived to raise
-her lips to the mouth of the Hoodoo, and to breathe
-his name in a tragic whisper.</p>
-
-<p>As he heard her and turned, she urged in the same
-odd fashion: “For Heaven’s sake&mdash;not a sound!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why&mdash;Miss June!” he gasped. “Where are you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span></p>
-
-<p>She checked him with wild whisperings that yet
-served to draw him to her prison.</p>
-
-<p>He was dumbfounded, quite as much as by her
-fiercely tragic voice as by the amazing predicament in
-which he found her.</p>
-
-<p>“Help me out!” she commanded him. “And don’t
-make the least sound. Uncle Si is next door, and if
-he finds me here, something terrible will happen.”</p>
-
-<p>Such force and such anxiety had one at least of the
-results so much to be desired. They forbade the asking
-of futile questions. Every moment was precious if she
-was to make good her escape.</p>
-
-<p>William in this crisis proved himself a right good
-fellow. His sense of the ludicrous was keen, but he
-stifled it. Moreover, a legitimate curiosity had been
-fully aroused, but he stifled that also as he proceeded
-to carry out these imperious orders. But even with
-such ready and stalwart help, June was to learn again
-that it was no easy matter to escape from the Hoodoo.</p>
-
-<p>Without venturing to speak again, William mounted
-the gate-legged table and offered both hands to the
-prisoner. But the trouble was that she was so tightly
-pinned that she could not raise hers to receive them.
-And it was soon fatally clear that so long as the Hoodoo
-kept the perpendicular it would be impossible for
-any external agent to secure a hold upon the body
-wedged within its jaws.</p>
-
-<p>After several attempts at dislodgement had miserably
-failed, June gasped in a kind of anguish: “Do
-you think you can tip this thing over&mdash;very gently&mdash;without
-making a sound?”</p>
-
-<p>This was trying William highly indeed, but it seemed
-the only thing to be done. Happily he was tall and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span>
-strong; much was said, all the same, for his power of
-muscle and the infinite tact with which it was applied
-that he was able to tilt the Hoodoo on to its end.
-Keeping the vase firmly under control, he then managed
-to regulate its descent to the shop floor so skilfully as
-to avoid a crash.</p>
-
-<p>Such a feat was really a triumph of applied dynamics.
-June, however, was not in a position to render it all
-the homage it deserved, even if she was deeply grateful
-for the address that William brought to bear upon his
-task. Once the Hoodoo had been laid full length on
-the shop floor she was able to wriggle her body and her
-shoulders with what violence she pleased, without the
-fear of disaster. A series of convulsive twists and
-writhings and she was free!</p>
-
-<p>As soon as she knew that she was no longer pinned
-by the jaws of the monster, the action of a strong mind
-was needed to ward off a threat of hysteria. But she
-controlled herself sufficiently to help William restore
-the Hoodoo to the perpendicular; and then she said in
-a whisper of extreme urgency which was barely able
-to mask the sob of nerves overstrung: “Not one word
-now. But go straight into the kitchen&mdash;just as if
-you hadn’t seen me. And remember whatever happens”&mdash;the
-whisper grew fiercer, the sob more imminent&mdash;“if
-Uncle Si asks the question you <i>haven’t</i> seen
-me. I’m supposed to be looking for a job. You
-understand?”</p>
-
-<p>To say that William did understand would have been
-to pay him a most fulsome compliment; yet the stout
-fellow behaved as if the whole of this amazing matter
-was as clear as daylight. Such was June’s fixity of will,
-the sheer force of her personality, that he left the shop<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span>
-at once like a man hypnotised. Excited questions
-trembled upon his lips, but in the face of this imperiousness
-he did not venture to give them play.</p>
-
-<p>He made one attempt&mdash;one half-hearted attempt.</p>
-
-<p>“But Miss June&mdash;&mdash;!”</p>
-
-<p>The only answer of Miss June was to cram one hand
-over his mouth, and with the other to propel him
-towards the door which led to the back premises.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXX">XXX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span>s</span> soon as William had passed out of the shop,
-June stood a moment to gather nerve and energy
-for the task before her. Feeling considerably tossed,
-above all she was devoured by a horrible form of excitement
-whose effect was like nothing so much as a
-bad dream. But this was not a time for dreams. The
-situation was full of peril; not a moment must be lost.</p>
-
-<p>The picture was her immediate concern. She set
-herself at once to the business of moving the oak chest
-aside. This presented no difficulty, for there was
-nothing in it; but the loose board beneath it did.
-Fingers unhelped could not prise it up; they must have
-a chisel. She knew that such an implement was to be
-found in one of the drawers of the desk, but she had
-stealthily to open three or four before she came upon
-the right one.</p>
-
-<p>While all this was going on, she could hear the voices
-of William and Uncle Si in the room next door. It
-seemed that no matter what her caution or her haste,
-she would almost certainly be interrupted before she
-was through with her task. But luck was with her.
-She was able to lift the board, take forth the picture,
-replace the chest and return the chisel to its drawer
-without the voices coming any nearer.</p>
-
-<p>Picture in hand, she tiptoed out of the shop as far
-as the stairs. Through the open door of the inner room<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>
-the back of Uncle Si was visible as she crept by. It
-was taking a grave risk to attempt the stairs at such a
-moment, but she was wrought up to a point when to go
-back and wait was impossible. She must continue to
-chance her luck.</p>
-
-<p>Up the stairs she crept, expecting at every second
-one to hear a harsh voice recall her. To her unspeakable
-relief, however, she was able to gain sanctuary in
-her own room without hindrance. She bolted the door
-against the enemy, although so far as she was aware,
-he was still in the room below in total ignorance of
-what had happened.</p>
-
-<p>Shivering as if in the throes of fever, she sat on the
-edge of her narrow bed. The treasure was hers still.
-She held it to her bosom as a mother holds a child; yet
-the simple act gave rise at once to the problem of problems:
-What must be done with the thing now? There
-could be no security for it under that roof. And not
-to the picture alone did this apply, but also to herself.
-Anything might happen as soon as the old man found
-out that the Van Roon was not, after all, to be his.
-Meanwhile, the future hardly bore thinking about; it
-was like a precipice beyond whose edge she dare not
-look.</p>
-
-<p>One act, however, did not admit of a moment’s
-delay: there and then the treasure must be smuggled
-out of the house and put in a place of safety. Rowelled
-by this thought, June rose from the bed, took a piece
-of brown paper and some string from her box, and
-proceeded to transform the picture into a neat parcel.
-She then slipped off her dress, which was considerably
-the worse for contact with the dusty interior of the
-Hoodoo, performed a hasty toilette, put on her walking-out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span>
-coat and skirt and changed her shoes. Finally,
-she put on the better of the only two hats she possessed,
-slipped her mother’s battered old leather purse into her
-coat pocket, and then, umbrella in one hand, parcel in
-the other, she turned to the hazard of stealing downstairs
-and making good her escape.</p>
-
-<p>In the middle of the twisty stairs, just before their
-sharpest bend would bring her into the view of persons
-below, she stopped to listen. The voices had ceased;
-she could not hear a sound. Two ways lay before her
-of reaching the street: one via the parlour to the
-kitchen and out along the side entry, the other through
-the front door of the shop. Either route might be
-commanded at the moment by the enemy. With nothing
-to guide her, June felt that the only safe course
-just then was to stay where she was. In the strategic
-position she had taken up on the stairs she could not be
-seen from below, yet a quick ear might hope to gain a
-clue to what was going on.</p>
-
-<p>She had not to wait long. From the inner room,
-whose door opposite the foot of the stairs was still half
-open, although its occupant was no more seen, there
-suddenly came the strident tones of Uncle Si. They
-were directed unmistakably kitchenward. “Boy, you’d
-better get the tea ready. Seemin’ly that gell ain’t
-home.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very good, sir,” came a prompt and cheerful response
-from the back premises.</p>
-
-<p>June decided at once that the signs were favourable.
-Now was her chance; the way through the front shop
-was evidently clear. Deftly as a cat she came down
-the remaining stairs and stole past the half-open door
-of what was known as “the lumber room,” where, however,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span>
-old chairs were sometimes fitted with new legs
-and old chests with new panels.</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Si was undoubtedly there. June could hear
-him moving about as she passed the door; indeed she
-was hardly clear of it when she received a most unwelcome
-reminder of this fact. Either he chanced to
-turn round as she crept by, or he caught a glimpse of
-her passing in one of the numerous mirrors that surrounded
-him. For just as she reached the shop
-threshold she heard his irascible bark: “That you,
-niece?”</p>
-
-<p>The road clear ahead, June did not pause to weigh
-consequences. She simply bolted. Even if the old man
-was not likely to guess what her neat parcel contained,
-it would surely be the height of folly to give him the
-chance.</p>
-
-<p>Never in her life had she been quite so thankful as
-when she found herself in the street with the treasure
-safely under her arm.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXI">XXXI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>une</span> went swiftly down New Cross Street to the
-Strand. Until she reached that garish sea of
-traffic she dare not look back lest hot on her heels
-should be Uncle Si. Such a discovery was not at all
-likely she well knew; the feeling was therefore illogical,
-yet she could not rid herself of it until she was merged
-in the ever-flowing tide.</p>
-
-<p>Taking refuge at last in a jeweller’s doorway from
-the maelstrom of passers by, June had now another
-problem to face. The Van Roon must find a home.
-But the question of questions was&mdash;where?</p>
-
-<p>Apart from William and Uncle Si, and her chance
-acquaintance, Mr. Keller, she did not know a soul in
-London. Mr. Keller, however, sprang at once to her
-mind. Yet more than one reservation promptly arose
-in regard to him. She knew really nothing about him
-beyond the fact that he was a man of obviously good
-address, belonging to a class superior to her own. He
-was a man of the world, of a certain breeding and education,
-but whether it would be wise to trust a comparative
-stranger in such a matter seemed exceedingly
-doubtful to a girl of June’s horse sense. Still there
-was no one else to whom she could turn. And recalling
-the circumstances of their first meeting, if one could
-ignore the means by which it had come about, there was
-something oddly compelling, something oddly attractive,
-about this Mr. Keller.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span></p>
-
-<p>In the total absence of other alternatives, June found
-her mind drawn so far in the direction of this man
-of mystery that at last she took from her purse a slip
-of paper on which he had written his name and address:
-“Adolph Keller, No. 4, Haliburton Studios, Manning
-Square, Soho.”</p>
-
-<p>Could she trust him with the care of a Van Roon?
-Now that she had been a witness of its terrible effect
-on Uncle Si, she was forced to ask whether it would
-be right to trust any man with such a talisman. Luckily,
-the world was not peopled exclusively with Uncle Sis.
-She would have to trust somebody with her treasure,
-that was certain; and, after all, there was no reason to
-suspect that Mr. Keller was not an honest man.</p>
-
-<p>She was still in the jeweller’s doorway, wrestling
-with the pros and cons of the tough matter, when a
-passing bus displaying the name Victoria Station
-caught her eye. In a flash came the solution of the
-problem.</p>
-
-<p>Again she entered the sea of traffic, to be borne slowly
-along by the slow tide as far as Charing Cross. Here
-she waited for another bus to Victoria. The solving of
-the riddle was absurdly simple after all. What place
-for her treasure could be safer, more accessible than a
-railway station cloak room?</p>
-
-<p>She boarded Bus 23. But hardly had it turned the
-corner into Whitehall when a thin flicker of elation was
-dashed by the salutary thought that her brain was giving
-out. The cloak room at Charing Cross, from the
-precincts of whose station she had just driven away,
-was equally adapted to her need. Along the entire
-length of Whitehall and Victoria Street she was
-haunted by the idea that she was losing her wits. A<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span>
-prolonged scrutiny of her pale but now collected self
-in a confectioner’s window on the threshold of the
-London and Brighton terminus was called for to reassure
-her. And even then, for a girl so shrewd and
-so practical, there remained the scar of a distressing
-mental lapse.</p>
-
-<p>It did not take long to deposit the parcel in the cloak
-room on the main line down platform. But in the act
-of doing so, occurred a slight incident which was destined
-to have a bearing on certain events to follow.
-When a ticket was handed to her, she could only meet
-the charge of three pence with a ten shilling note.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing smaller, Miss?” asked the clerk.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid I haven’t,” said June, searching her
-purse, and then carefully placing the ticket in its middle
-compartment.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll have to wait while I get change then.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry to trouble you,” June murmured, as the
-clerk went out through a door into an inner office. Ever
-observant and alert, she noticed that the clerk was a
-tallish young man, whose freely curling fair hair put
-her in mind of William, and that he wore a new suit of
-green corduroy.</p>
-
-<p>The likeness to William gave <i>bouquet</i> to her politeness,
-when the young man returned with the change.
-“Sorry to give you so much trouble,” she said again.</p>
-
-<p>“No trouble, miss.” And Green Corduroy handed
-the change across the cloak room counter with a frank
-smile that was not unworthy of William himself.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXII">XXXII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> treasure in a safe place, June had to consider
-what to do next. One fact stood out clear in
-her mind. She must leave at once the sheltering roof
-of S. Gedge Antiques. There was no saying what
-would happen when the Old Crocodile discovered that
-the Van Roon was missing.</p>
-
-<p>The sooner she collected her box and her gear, and
-found another lodging the better. Her best plan would
-be to go back to New Cross Street and get them now.
-Uncle Si was hardly likely as yet to have made the
-discovery. It would be wise, therefore, to take advantage
-of this lull, for at the most it was only a matter
-of a few hours before the truth was known. And when
-known it was, Number Forty-six New Cross Street
-was the very last place in London in which she would
-choose to be.</p>
-
-<p>There was a chance, of course, that “the murder”
-was out already. But she would have to take the risk
-of that. All that she had in the world beyond the six
-paper pounds, nine shillings and ninepence in her purse,
-was in the box in the garret. Her entire resources were
-about seventeen pounds in money, a scanty wardrobe,
-and a few odds and ends of jewellery of little value, but
-if she could get hold of these they might suffice to tide
-her over a sorely anxious time.</p>
-
-<p>In the present state of her nerves, courage was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span>
-needed to return to New Cross Street. But it had to
-be. And it was now or never. If her box was to be
-got away, she must go boldly back at once and claim
-it. How this was to be done without arousing suspicion
-she did not quite know, but the most hopeful method
-was to announce that she had been able to find a job,
-and also good lodgings, and that she did not care to
-lay the burden of her presence upon Uncle Si one
-hour longer than was necessary.</p>
-
-<p>She had been brought up with a strict regard for the
-truth, but fate was driving her so hard that she could
-not afford to have scruples. Hanging by a strap on the
-Underground to Charing Cross, which seemed the
-quickest route, and time was the essence of the matter,
-she rehearsed the part she had now to play. Certainly
-the playing itself would not lack gusto. Nothing life
-so far had given her would yield quite so much pleasure
-as saying good-bye to the Old Crocodile, and ironically
-thanking him for all his kindness. At the same time,
-the job and lodgings story must be pitched in just the
-right key, or his suspicions would be aroused, and then
-something horribly unpleasant might occur.</p>
-
-<p>By the time June had turned out of the Strand into
-New Cross Street, a heavy autumnal dusk had fallen
-upon that bleak thoroughfare. Somehow the dark pall
-struck at her heart. In a sense it was symbolical of the
-business upon which she was engaged. She felt like a
-thief whose instinct welcomes darkness, and whose conscience
-fears it.</p>
-
-<p>Never in her life had she needed such courage as to
-turn up that gloomy and dismal street and accost the
-forbidding threshold of S. Gedge Antiques. The shop
-was still open, for it was hardly more than six o’clock,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span>
-and two gas jets lit the interior in a way that added to
-its dolour.</p>
-
-<p>She stood a moment with the knob of the shop door
-in her hand. All the nerve she could muster was wanted
-to venture within. But she did go in, and she felt a
-keen relief when a hasty glance told her that Uncle
-Si was not there.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXIII">XXXIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>une</span> had a further moment of indecision while she
-thought out what her line must be. She resolved to
-go direct to her room and pack her box. Afterwards
-she must find William and enlist his help in bringing
-it downstairs, and then she would get a taxi and drive
-off with her things before Uncle Si discovered his
-loss. Otherwise...!</p>
-
-<p>Her mind had not time to shape the grisly alternative,
-before the immediate course of events shaped it for
-her. Suddenly she was aware of a presence lurking in
-the dark shadows of the shop interior. It was couchant,
-vengeful, hostile. Almost before June could guess
-what was happening it had sprung upon her.</p>
-
-<p>With astounding force her right wrist was grasped
-and twisted behind her back. She gave a little yelp of
-pain. A second yelp followed, as she struggled to free
-herself, only to find that she was locked in a vice, and
-that to fight against it would be agony.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, where is it?” The low voice hissing in her
-ear was surely that of a maniac. “Where’s the picture?”
-The grip upon her had the strength of ten.
-“Where is it&mdash;eh?” As the question was put, her captor
-shook her fiercely. “Tell me.” He shook her again.
-“Oh, you won’t&mdash;won’t you?” And then she realized
-that there was something in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>She called wildly for William, but there was no
-response.</p>
-
-<p>“No use lifting up your voice. The boy’s out.”</p>
-
-<p>She fought to get free, but with a wrist still locked,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span>
-she was at his mercy. “Now then, where’s that picture?
-Won’t tell me&mdash;eh?” There was madness in
-that depth of rage.</p>
-
-<p>Quite suddenly there came a sickening crash upon
-her shoulders. She let out with her heels and found
-the shin of the enemy, she fought and screamed, yet
-pinned like that, she felt her wrist must break and her
-arm be wrenched from its socket.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is it&mdash;you thief?” The stick crashed again,
-this time in a series of horrible blows. So severe was
-the pain that it seemed to drive through her whole
-being. She began to fear that he meant to kill her; and
-as the stick continued to descend she felt sure that he
-would.</p>
-
-<p>She was a strong, determined girl, but her captor
-had her at a hopeless disadvantage. His strength, besides,
-was that of one possessed. Her cries and struggles
-merely added to his savagery.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me where it is or I’ll knock the life out of you.”</p>
-
-<p>Utterly desperate, she contrived at last to break
-away; and though with the force of a maniac he tried
-to prevent her escape, somehow she managed to get
-into the street. He followed her as far as the shop door,
-brandishing the stick, hurling imprecations upon
-her, and threatening what he would do if she didn’t
-bring the picture back at once.</p>
-
-<p>Bruised and gasping, June reeled into the darkness.
-Feeling more dead than alive, she lingered nearby after
-the old man had gone in, trying to pull her battered self
-together. She badly wanted her box, yet the only hope
-of getting it now was by means of the police. As
-things were, however, it would not be wise to ask their
-help. The old wretch was so clever he might be able<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span>
-to make her out a thief; besides, for the time being she
-had had more than enough of this horrible affair.</p>
-
-<p>Cruelly hurt she moved at last with slow pain
-towards the Strand. By now she had decided that
-her most imperative need was a night’s lodging. Before
-starting to look for one, however, the enticing doors of
-a teashop gave her a renewed sense of weakness.
-Gratefully she went in and sat down, ordering a pot
-of tea and a little bread and butter which she felt too
-ill to eat.</p>
-
-<p>Nearly half an hour she sat in the company of her
-thoughts. Hard, unhappy thoughts they were. Without
-one friend to whom in this crisis she could turn,
-the world which confronted her now was an abyss.
-The feeling of loneliness was desolating, yet, after
-all, far less so than it would have been were she not
-fortified by the memory of a certain slip of paper in
-her purse.</p>
-
-<p>A slow return of fighting power revived a spark of
-natural resolution within her. After all, a potent
-weapon was in her hands. She must think out a careful
-plan of turning it to full account. And at the
-worst she was now beyond the reach of Uncle Si.
-Even if he kept her box and all its contents, weighed
-in the scale of the picture’s fabulous worth, her modest
-possessions amounted to very little.</p>
-
-<p>Stimulated by this conclusion, she began to forget
-her aches. When a waitress came June asked for her
-bill. It was sixpence. She put her hand in the pocket
-of her coat. Her purse was not there.</p>
-
-<p>With a little thrill of fear, she felt in the pocket on
-the other side. The purse was not there either. She
-was stunned. This was a blow far worse than those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span>
-she had just received. She grew so dazed that as
-she got up she swayed against the table, and had to
-hold on by it to save herself from falling.</p>
-
-<p>The waitress who had written out the bill caught a
-glimpse of scared eyes set in a face of chalk.</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t you well?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I&mdash;I’ve lost my purse,” June stammered. “It’s
-fallen out of my pocket, I think.” As with frantic
-futility she plunged her hand in again, she was raked
-by the true meaning of such a fact in all its horror.
-Unless her purse had been stolen on the Underground,
-and it was not very likely, it had almost certainly fallen
-out of her pocket in the course of the struggle with
-Uncle Si.</p>
-
-<p>It was lying now on the shop floor unless the old
-wretch had found it already. And if he had he would
-lose no time in examining its contents. He had only
-to do so for the cloak-room ticket to tell him where
-the Van Roon was deposited, and to provide him with
-a sure means of obtaining it.</p>
-
-<p>“You may have had your pocket picked.”</p>
-
-<p>June did not think so. Yet, being unable to take
-the girl into her confidence, she did not choose to disclose
-her doubts.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I have,” she gasped. And then face to
-face with the extreme peril of the case, her overdriven
-nerves broke out in mutiny. She burst into tears. “I
-don’t know what I’ll do,” she sobbed.</p>
-
-<p>The waitress was full of sympathy. “Your bill is
-only sixpence. Come in and pay to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>Through her tears June thanked her.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tisn’t my bill, although it’s very kind of you.
-There was something very important in my purse.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Where did you have it last?”</p>
-
-<p>“In the booking hall, when I took a ticket from
-Victoria to Charing Cross.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your pocket’s been picked,” said the waitress with
-conviction. “There’s a warning in all the Tubes.”</p>
-
-<p>The comfort was cold, yet comfort it was of a kind.
-June saw a wan ray of hope. After all, there was a
-bare possibility that inexorable Fate was not the thief.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d go to Scotland Yard if I were you,” said the
-waitress. “The police often get back stolen property.
-Last year my sister’s house was burgled, and they
-recovered nearly everything for her.”</p>
-
-<p>June began to pull herself together. It was not
-hope, however, that braced her faculties, but an effort
-of will. Hope there was none of recovering the purse,
-but she was now faced by the stern necessity of getting
-back the picture. In the light of this tragedy it was
-in most serious peril. Delay might be fatal, if indeed
-it had not already proved to be so. She must go at
-once and get possession of the treasure lest it be too
-late.</p>
-
-<p>The waitress was a good Samaritan. Not only could
-the bill wait until the next day, but she went even
-further: “Is your home far from here?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“My home&mdash;far?” said June, dazedly. For the
-moment she did not understand all that was implied
-by the question.</p>
-
-<p>“If you live on the District, and you haven’t a season,
-I don’t mind lending you a shilling to get you
-home.”</p>
-
-<p>June accepted a shilling with earnest thanks. In
-the circumstances, it might be worth untold gold:
-“You can give it me back any time you are passing,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span>
-said the waitress, as June thanked her again and made
-her way unsteadily out into the street.</p>
-
-<p>The chill air of the Strand revived her a little. She
-had decided already that she must go at once to Victoria.
-Every minute would count, and it now occurred
-to her that if she took the Underground, several might
-be saved.</p>
-
-<p>To the Underground in Trafalgar Square she went.
-It was the hour of the evening rush. Queues were
-lining up at all the booking office windows. And at
-the first window she came to, some three persons or so
-ahead of her, was a figure oddly familiar, which, however,
-in her present state of disintegration she did not
-recognize at once. It was clad in a sombre tail coat
-of prehistoric design, jemima boots, frayed shepherd’s
-plaid trousers braced high and a hard square felt hat
-which gave a crowning touch of oppressive respectability.
-Moreover, its progress was assisted by a heavy
-knotted walking stick, at the sight of which June gave
-an involuntary shiver.</p>
-
-<p>An instant later the shiver had developed into a
-long and paralyzing shudder. Uncle Si was just ahead
-of her; in fact she was near enough to hear a harsh
-voice demand almost with menace a ticket to Victoria.</p>
-
-<p>June’s worst fears were realized. The purse had
-fallen from her pocket to the shop floor in the struggle;
-the old wretch had found it, deciphered the precious
-ticket, put two and two together, and was now on his
-way to claim the parcel. All this was crystal clear to
-her swift mind. She felt a strong desire to faint, but
-she fought her weakness. She must go on. Everything
-was as good as lost&mdash;but she must go on.</p>
-
-<p>She took her ticket. And then in the long subway<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span>
-to the platform she raced on ahead of Uncle Si. He
-was so near-sighted that even had he been less absorbed
-in his own affairs he would not have been likely to
-notice her.</p>
-
-<p>June reached the platform well in front of the old
-man. But the train to Victoria was not in. It arrived
-two minutes later; by then, Uncle Si had appeared,
-and they boarded it together. She was careful, however,
-not to enter the same compartment as the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Short as the journey was, June had ample time to
-appreciate that the odds were heavily against her. The
-mere fact that the cloak-room receipt for the parcel
-was in the custody of Uncle Si would confer possession
-upon him; it had only to be presented for the Van
-Roon to be handed over without a question.</p>
-
-<p>The one chance she had now was to get on well
-ahead of the old beast, and convince the clerk that in
-spite of the absence of the ticket the parcel was hers.
-She knew, however, only too well that the hope of
-being able to do this was frail indeed&mdash;at all events
-before the holder of the ticket arrived on the scene to
-claim it.</p>
-
-<p>At Victoria, June dashed out of the train even before
-it stopped. Running past the ticket collector at the
-barrier and along the subway she reached the escalator
-yards in front of Uncle Si, and, in spite of being unused
-to this trap for the unwary, for Blackhampton’s more
-primitive civilization knew escalators not, she ascended
-to the street at a pace far beyond the powers of the
-Old Crocodile. By this means, indeed, she counted on
-gaining an advantage of several minutes, since it was
-hardly likely that Uncle Si would trust himself to such
-a contrivance, and in ignorance of the fact that she was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span>
-just ahead, would choose the dignified safety of the
-lift.</p>
-
-<p>So far as it went the thought was reassuring. Alas,
-it did not go far. As June ran through the long station
-to the cloak-room at its farthest end, she had but a very
-slender hope of being able to recover the parcel. She
-had no intention, however, of submitting tamely to fate.
-In this predicament, whatever the cost, she must make
-one last and final effort to get back her treasure.</p>
-
-<p>At the cloak-room counter she took her courage in
-both hands. A man sour and elderly had replaced the
-wearer of the green corduroy, who was nowhere to be
-seen. This was a piece of bad luck, for she had hoped
-that the nice-looking young man might remember her.
-Happily, no other passengers besieged the counter at
-the moment, so that without loss of time June was able
-to describe the parcel and to announce the fact that
-the ticket she had received for it was missing.</p>
-
-<p>Exactly as she had foreseen the clerk raised an objection.
-Without a ticket she couldn’t have the parcel.
-“But I simply must have it,” said June. And spurred
-by the knowledge that there was not one moment to
-lose in arguing the case, she boldly lifted the flap of
-the counter and entered the cloak-room itself.</p>
-
-<p>“No use coming in here,” said the Clerk, crustily.
-“You can’t take nothing away without a ticket.”</p>
-
-<p>“But my purse has been stolen, I tell you,” said June.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I should advise you to go and see the station-master.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t wait to do that.” And with the defiance
-of despair, expecting each moment to hear the voice
-of Uncle Si at her back, June ignored the Clerk, and
-proceeded to gaze up and down the numerous and
-heavily burdened luggage racks for her property.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXIV">XXXIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">“N</span>ot</span> a bit o’ use, don’t I tell you.” The Clerk
-was growing angry.</p>
-
-<p>June pretended not to hear. Her heart beating fast
-she went on with her search for the parcel; yet in the
-midst of it she grew aware that somebody was approaching
-the counter. She dare not pause to look who
-it was, for she knew only too well that it was almost
-bound to be Uncle Si.</p>
-
-<p>The Clerk uttered another snarl of protest as he
-turned away to attend to the new comer. As he did
-so, June breathed a prayer that her eye might fall on
-the parcel in that instant, for her only hope now was
-to seize it and fly. That, however, was not to be. She
-had omitted to notice the place in which it had been
-put, and do as she would she could not find it now.</p>
-
-<p>At this crucial moment, there emerged from the
-inner office her friend of the green corduroy. She
-simply leapt at what was now her one remaining chance.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’m so glad you’ve come,” cried June, in a
-voice that was a little frantic: “You remember my
-bringing a brown paper parcel here, don’t you&mdash;about
-two hours ago?”</p>
-
-<p>The tone, tinged as it was with hysteria, caused
-Green Corduroy to look at June with mild astonishment.
-“I’ve lost the ticket you gave me for it, but I’m
-sure you remember my bringing it.” Her brain seemed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span>
-on fire. “Don’t you remember my giving you a ten
-shilling note? And you had to go and get the change.”</p>
-
-<p>Green Corduroy was a slow-brained youth, but a
-knitting of the brow seemed to induce a hazy recollection
-of the incident. But while the process was going
-on, June gave a glance over her shoulder, and behold
-there was Uncle Si the other side of the counter. A
-second glance told her, moreover, that Crusty Sides
-already had the fatal ticket in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>What must she do? It was not a moment for half
-measures. While she was stirring the memory of
-Green Corduroy, the treasure would be gone. She did
-not hesitate. Observing Crusty Sides wheel, paper in
-hand, with the slow austerity of one of the Company’s
-oldest and most respected servants towards a luggage
-rack near by, June seized the clue. Of a sudden her
-eyes lit on the parcel at the top of the pile. Already
-the responsible fingers of Crusty Sides were straying
-upwards, yet before they could enclose the Van Roon,
-June made a dash for it, and managed to whisk it away
-from under his nose.</p>
-
-<p>Her brain was like quicksilver now. She had a mad
-impulse to rush off with the treasure without further
-explanation; all the same she was able to resist it, for
-she realized that such a course would be too full of
-peril.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;this is it,” she said in an urgent whisper to
-Green Corduroy. And as she spoke, with a presence of
-mind, which in the circumstances was a little uncanny,
-she slipped behind a large pile of boxes out of view of
-Uncle Si.</p>
-
-<p>“Surely you remember my bringing it?”</p>
-
-<p>Green Corduroy seemed to think that he did remember.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span>
-At this point Crusty Sides, with an air of outrage,
-sternly interposed. “But a pawty claims it. And here’s
-his ticket.”</p>
-
-<p>“The ticket’s mine,” said June, in a fierce whisper.
-“It’s been taken from my purse.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’ to do with us, that ain’t,” said Crusty Sides.</p>
-
-<p>“But you <i>do</i> remember my bringing it, don’t you?”
-Beseechingly June turned to Green Corduroy. And he,
-that nice-looking young man, with a frown of ever-deepening
-perplexity, slowly affirmed that he thought
-he did remember.</p>
-
-<p>“The ticket’s what we’ve got to go by,” said Crusty
-Sides, sternly. “Nothin’ else matters to us.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you’ll look at it,” said June to Green Corduroy,
-“you’ll see that it’s made out in your writing.”</p>
-
-<p>Green Corduroy looked and saw that it was. As
-far as he was concerned, that seemed to clinch the
-argument. And even Crusty Sides, a born bureaucrat,
-was rather impressed by it. “You say this here ticket’s
-been taken off on you?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said June in an excited whisper. “By my
-wicked thief of an uncle.”</p>
-
-<p>Instantly she regretted the imprudence of her words.</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle a thief, eh?” proclaimed Crusty Sides, in
-a voice of such carrying power that to June it seemed
-that the Old Crocodile could hardly fail to hear him.</p>
-
-<p>“Anyhow, this gentleman knows that it was I who
-brought the parcel,” she said, determinedly to Green
-Corduroy.</p>
-
-<p>That young man looked her straight in the eye, and
-then declared that he did know. Further, like many
-minds “slow in the uptake,” when once in motion they
-are prone to deep conclusions. “Seems to me, Nobby,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span>
-he weightily affirmed, under the stimulus no doubt of
-being addressed as a gentleman, in the Company’s time,
-by such a good-looking girl, “that as this lady has got
-the parcel, and we have got the ticket for it, she and
-Uncle had better fight it out between ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know about that,” growled Nobby.</p>
-
-<p>Green Corduroy, however, stimulated by the fiery
-anguish of June’s glance, and no doubt still in thrall
-to the fact that she considered him a gentleman, was not
-to be moved from the statesmanlike attitude he had
-taken up. “You let ’em fight it out, Nobby. This lady
-was the one as brought it here.”</p>
-
-<p>“I gave you a ten shilling note, didn’t I?” The voice
-of June was as honeyed as the state of her feelings
-would permit.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and I fetched the change for you, didn’t I?”</p>
-
-<p>Crusty Sides shook a head of confirmed misogyny.
-“Very irregular, that’s all I’ve got to say about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe it is, Nobby. But it’s nothing to do with
-you and me.”</p>
-
-<p>Green Corduroy, with almost the air of a knight
-errant, took the all-important slip of paper from his
-colleague. Flaunting it in gallant fingers, he moved
-up slowly to the counter.</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques, buying spectacles on nose,
-knotted cudgel in hand, was impatiently waiting. “The
-parcel is claimed by the lady who brought it,” June
-heard Green Corduroy announce.</p>
-
-<p>She waited for no more. Following close behind
-Crusty Sides, who also moved up to the counter, she
-slipped quietly through an adjacent door to the main
-line platform before Uncle Si grew fully alive to the
-situation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span></p>
-
-<p>Clasping the parcel to her bosom, she glided swiftly
-down the platform, and out by the booking hall, travelling
-as fast as her legs would take her, without breaking
-into a run, which would have looked like guilt, and
-might have attracted public notice. She did not dare to
-glance back, for she was possessed by a fear that the
-old man and his stick were at her heels.</p>
-
-<p>Once clear of the station itself, she yielded to the
-need of putting as much distance between Uncle Si and
-herself as a start so short would permit. There was
-now hope of throwing him off the track. Thus, as
-soon as she reached the Victoria Street corner, she
-scrambled on to a bus that was in the act of moving
-away.</p>
-
-<p>One seat only was vacant and, as in a state of imminent
-collapse she sank down upon it, she ventured for
-the first time to look behind her. She quite expected to
-find Uncle Si at her elbow already, but with a gasp of
-relief she learned that the old man was nowhere in
-sight.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXV">XXXV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>une</span> did not know in which direction the bus was
-going. And when the conductor came for her
-fare, which he did as soon as the vehicle began to move,
-she was quite at a loss for a destination. There was
-nothing for it but to draw a bow at a venture. She
-asked for Oxford Circus, the only nodal point of the
-metropolis, besides Charing Cross, with which she was
-familiar. By a rare piece of luck, Oxford Circus was
-included in its route, and what remained of the shilling
-the girl at the teashop had given her was sufficient to
-get her there, and leave four pence in hand.</p>
-
-<p>Alighting at Oxford Circus, she stood under a lamp
-to consider what she should do now. There was nowhere
-she could go, there was not one friend to whom
-she could turn. Battered and spent in body and spirit
-by all that had happened to her during the last few
-hours she was now in a flux of terror to which she
-dare not yield.</p>
-
-<p>At first she thought of seeking advice of a policeman,
-but it would have been extremely difficult just then to
-tell her strange story. Its complications were many
-and fantastic; besides, and she trembled at the idea, it
-was by no means clear that she would be able to establish
-her claim to the Van Roon in the eye of the law.</p>
-
-<p>Still, something would have to be done. She must
-find a home of some kind not only for her treasure,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span>
-but for herself. Feeling desperately in need of help,
-she decided as a preliminary measure to spend three
-of her four remaining pence on a cup of tea. She had
-a vague hope that in that magic beverage inspiration
-might lurk.</p>
-
-<p>The hope, as it chanced, was not vain. Near by was
-an A.B.C. shop; and she had hardly sat down at one
-of its marble-topped tables when, by an association of
-ideas, her mysterious acquaintance, Mr. Adolph Keller,
-sprang again into her mind. He had given her his
-address. Alas, the slip of paper on which it was written
-was in her purse, but she had a particularly good memory,
-and by raking it fiercely she was able to recall the
-fact that his place of domicile was Haliburton Studios,
-Manning Square.</p>
-
-<p>She did not like trusting any man on an acquaintance
-so slight, especially as it had come about in so odd a
-fashion, but Mr. Keller had shown himself very
-friendly, and there was no one else to whom she could
-turn. Sipping her cup of tea, in slow and grateful
-weariness, she began to develop this idea. Horse sense,
-Mr. Boultby had always said, was her long suit; therefore
-she well understood the peril of taking a comparative
-stranger into her confidence. But very cogently
-she put to herself the question: What else could she do?</p>
-
-<p>Of sundry policemen, who were very obliging, June
-asked the way to Manning Square. It was in Soho, not
-so very far from Oxford Circus, as she remembered
-Mr. Keller saying, and, in spite of a local fog which
-had come on in the last twenty minutes, the police were
-so helpful that she had no great difficulty in getting
-there. During the short journey her mind was much
-engaged in settling just what she would and would not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span>
-say to Mr. Keller. She decided that as far as might
-be practicable she would leave the picture out of the
-case. It might not be possible to exclude it, but at any
-rate she would begin by offering to sit to him as a
-model, in accordance with his suggestion; and with that
-the pretext of her visit she would see if she could get
-him to lend her a little money to tide over immediate
-needs.</p>
-
-<p>By the time she had come to Manning Square it was
-a few minutes past seven. Two complete circuits had
-to be made of this dingy, ill-smelling gap in the heart
-of Soho, before she came upon Haliburton Studios,
-which were not in the Square itself, but in a dismal
-by-street debouching from it. The tall block of buildings
-which comprised the studios was equally dismal,
-and as June entered a vestibule that shewed no light,
-she felt a sudden chill strike at her heart.</p>
-
-<p>This, however, was not a moment to quail. It was a
-case, if ever there was one, of any port in a storm.
-The hazard of her errand fell upon her like a pall, but
-the knowledge that she had only a penny left with which
-to obtain a night’s lodging was a veritable barb in the
-flesh.</p>
-
-<p>Try as she would she could not recall the number
-of Mr. Keller’s studio; nor was the information to be
-found upon the walls of the vestibule which she was
-not able to see. But while she stood at the foot of a
-winding flight of stone steps, striving to meet the difficulty
-which faced her now, she heard someone coming
-down. At the sound she went back to the door by
-which she had entered, where a lamp contending feebly
-against the fog, would enable her to see anyone who
-passed out of the flats.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span></p>
-
-<p>The person who did so proved to be one of June’s
-own sex, a youngish woman whose fur coat seemed to
-accentuate a note of tawdry and flamboyant finery.
-Even in the semi-darkness June could see that her face
-was rouged.</p>
-
-<p>She had no illusion as to the kind of person she
-addressed:</p>
-
-<p>“You want Mr. Keller’s studio?” The woman
-peered into June’s face in a manner which she felt to
-be decidedly objectionable. “It’s the second door on
-the first landing.” The tone, offhand, and more than a
-little contemptuous, was like a blow in the face.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXVI">XXXVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">I</span>t</span> was not until the woman had passed out of the
-vestibule into the street that June could find courage
-to mount the stone stairs.</p>
-
-<p>The knocker on the second door was so crazy that
-it threatened to break off in her hand. Tact and skill
-were called for to draw sound from it at all; bell there
-was none; but a faint light percolated through the fanlight
-and it was a glimpse of this which heartened June
-to persevere. By dint of application she was able to
-coax a few sounds out of the knocker, a feat which
-at last brought reward. The beam beyond the fanlight
-expanded; there was a shuffle of approaching slippers;
-and then the door came open.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keller, wearing a dressing gown in lieu of a
-coat, stood before her.</p>
-
-<p>“Hulloa!” he said.</p>
-
-<p>Before June could find words of her own she had
-been recognized: “Why&mdash;it’s you!” The gentlemanly
-voice sounded most agreeable. “Walk right in. You’re
-welcome as the flowers in May.”</p>
-
-<p>Tossed by the tempest as Mr. Keller’s visitor still
-was, she could not help contrasting such a welcome with
-the air and manner of Uncle Si.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXVII">XXXVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> geniality of Adolph Keller had a tonic effect
-upon June’s depression. She crossed his threshold
-with a sense of extreme relief, as one who finds a
-refuge from the storm. He closed the door of the
-flat, and then led the way into a spacious room with a
-high ceiling which was fixed up as a studio.</p>
-
-<p>It was not without an air of comfort. The main part
-had been screened off; within a small but seductive
-inner space a bright fire mingled pleasant gleams with
-the radiance of the electric lamp. Two low wicker
-chairs were set invitingly near the hearth, and a table
-piled with books and magazines was between them.
-Amid these, however, space had been found for a
-tobacco jar, a siphon, a glass and a bottle of whisky.
-On the floor was a French novel, which he had laid
-down open to let her in.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keller, evidently, was making himself comfortable
-for the night. The contrast between this snug
-and cheerful room and the rising fog, from which
-June had just escaped, struck her at once as delightful.
-With a little sigh of gratitude, she sank at the cordial
-invitation of her host into the first of the easy chairs.</p>
-
-<p>He remembered her quite well, of course, yet for
-the moment he had forgotten her name, and what to
-June was the more surprising, the appointment she had
-made with him for that very afternoon seemed to have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span>
-passed right out of his mind. Yet she was quick to
-see, for her wits were now working at high pressure,
-that this strange forgetfulness was in her favour. At
-any rate, it was going to help her in the task of keeping,
-as far as possible, the Van Roon out of the case.</p>
-
-<p>“Lyons’, wasn’t it, we met at? One day last week?
-Your name’s&mdash;&mdash;?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m Miss Gedge.” June’s tone was a shade “stand
-off,” for that appeared to be correct in the circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Gedge&mdash;yes&mdash;of course. Stupid of me to
-forget.” He fixed the eye of a man with a sense of
-humour upon this odd visitor. “I’ve a shocking memory
-for names. Very glad to see you, anyhow, Miss
-Gedge.” He took the low chair opposite with the
-calm and easy air of a model host. “And very nice
-of you to come on a damp and foggy night.”</p>
-
-<p>The tone, rather than the words, put it up to June
-to explain her coming. She did so rather awkwardly,
-with a touch of “nerves.” Yet before committing herself
-to any positive statement as to why she was there,
-she was careful to dispose the parcel she carried as far
-beyond the range of his eyes as was possible at the side
-of the wicker chair in which she sat.</p>
-
-<p>“You told me the other day”&mdash;She found it impossible
-to control the queer little tremble in her voice&mdash;“that
-you wanted an artist’s model, and that my hair
-was just the colour you were looking for.”</p>
-
-<p>“By Jove, yes,” he laughed. “Your hair’s topping.”
-The laugh deepened to enthusiasm. “It’s the colour I
-want, to a hayseed.” An eye of veiled appraisement
-passed slowly over her. “And what’s almost as important
-there’s stooks of it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, there is,” said June, doing her best to pick up
-his light tone of intimacy. “It is important, I suppose,
-for an artist’s model to have hair long and thick.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ra-ther!” As he looked at her sideways, out of
-the corner of one eye, his tone seemed to change a
-little; and then he got up alertly from his chair, the
-mantle of the model host again upon him. “I’m afraid
-there’s not much to offer you in the way of refreshment.
-There’s only whisky. If you’ll excuse me a minute,
-I’ll fetch another glass.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, please, not for me,” said June quickly. She
-was very tired and horribly depressed, but she had been
-strictly brought up.</p>
-
-<p>The host seemed a little amused by her vehemence.
-He looked at her keenly with a pair of curious, small,
-near-set eyes, which June liked even less now than when
-she had noticed them first. “Well, have a cigarette,
-anyhow. These are like mother’s milk.” And he
-offered a box of Virginia.</p>
-
-<p>June also declined a cigarette, in the same odd,
-rather fluttered tone which caused him to smile in a
-way that added to her nervousness.</p>
-
-<p>“No? Well, make yourself comfy, anyhow. Draw
-your chair up to the fire.”</p>
-
-<p>She thanked him in a voice which, in spite of itself
-was a little prim, and which assured him that she was
-quite warm enough where she was. The attempted
-lightness and ease had gone; a subtle sense of fear, bred
-of hidden danger yet without any root in fact or logic,
-was rising in her. The position itself was embarrassing,
-yet so far Mr. Keller had shown no wish to presume
-upon it. Up till now he had been easy and
-charming; but June, in spite of worldly inexperience,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span>
-had the intuitions of her sex to guide her; and she felt
-instinctively that there might be a great deal behind
-these graces. She was grateful all the same; they were
-much needed balm for many bruises.</p>
-
-<p>When Mr. Keller sat down again in the wicker chair,
-about two yards away from her, a sense of languor
-crept upon June. The warmth of the fire, the glow of
-the lamp, the notes of a singularly quiet voice were like
-a subtle drug. Alive to danger as she was, its caress
-was hard to resist. Such a position was one of acute
-peril, for she was literally throwing herself upon the
-mercy of a person who was very much an unknown
-quantity, yet what alternative was there?</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t mind a pipe, I hope?” The polite voice from
-the chair opposite was not really ironical; it was merely
-kind and friendly, yet feminine intuition shivering
-upon the dark threshold of a mighty adventure knew
-well enough how easily a tone of that kind could turn to
-something else.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no, I don’t mind at all.” She tried again to get
-the right key, but a laugh she could not control, high-pitched
-and irrelevant, was horribly betraying.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right then.”</p>
-
-<p>For about a minute, Mr. Keller puffed away in a
-sort of whimsical silence. Then he said with a soft
-fall, whose mere sweetness had the power to alarm,
-“Your hair’s jolly. Very jolly indeed!”</p>
-
-<p>June nervously muttered that she was very glad he
-liked it.</p>
-
-<p>“So much of it, don’t you know. Awfully useful
-to me just now. Quantity’s almost as valuable as the
-colour. Does it reach your waist when you let it
-down?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span></p>
-
-<p>June, not without a little pride, said that her hair
-when let down reached below her waist.</p>
-
-<p>“Capital!” said Mr. Keller, with a laugh. “The
-very thing I’m looking for just now. You’ll make a
-stunning Andromeda.”</p>
-
-<p>June had not heard of Andromeda. She had read
-some Dickens, and a little George Eliot, and she could
-remember bits of Shakespeare learned at school, but her
-tastes were not literary. She pretended to know all about
-Andromeda, yet the next words of Mr. Keller were
-a proof that he was not deceived. June did not
-know, however, that he had pierced clean through
-her ignorance.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s the altogether. A classical subject.”</p>
-
-<p>“I like classical subjects myself.” Abruptly June’s
-mind went back to Miss Preece, the revered head mistress
-of the Blackhampton High School where it had
-been her privilege to spend one term. Her voice rose
-a whole octave, in its involuntary desire to approximate
-as closely as possible to that of a real lady.</p>
-
-<p>“So do I.” Mr. Keller’s humorous purr was that
-of a man well pleased. “That’s capital.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t beat classical subjects, can you?” said
-June, making a wild attempt to achieve the conversational.</p>
-
-<p>Again Mr. Keller looked across at her out of those
-near-set eyes of which by now she was rather afraid.
-“No, you can’t,” he said. “So large and so simple, and
-yet they strike so deep. They are life itself. A sort of
-summing up, don’t you know, of all that has been, all
-that can be, all that will be.”</p>
-
-<p>June responded with more composure than she had
-yet shewn that she supposed it was so. It was nice to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span>
-listen to talk of this kind from a man of Mr. Keller’s
-polish. The chair was most comfortable, and how good
-it was to be in front of the bright fire! Her nerves
-were being lulled more and more as if by a drug; the
-sense of her peril amid this sea of danger into which
-she had plunged began to grow less.</p>
-
-<p>“I expect,” said Mr. Keller, in a tone so friendly
-and so casual that it fed the new sense of peace which
-was now upon June, “I expect you are pretty well used
-to the altogether?”</p>
-
-<p>Even if she did not know in the least what was meant
-by “the altogether,” it did not seem to be quite wise to
-confess such ignorance. “Ye-es, I suppose I am.”
-And in a weak attempt to rise to his own agreeable
-plane of intimacy she laughed rather foolishly.</p>
-
-<p>“Capital!” said Adolph Keller. “You are a well
-built girl.” He sipped a little whisky. “Excellent
-shoulders. Figure’s full of fine lines. Bust well
-developed. Plenty of heart room. Everything just
-right.”</p>
-
-<p>She coloured at the literal way in which he catalogued
-her points; even if it was done in the manner
-of an artist and a gentleman, one was a little reminded
-of a dog or a horse.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll fix you up a screen. And then you can get
-ready.” He sipped a little more whisky, and rose
-briskly and cheerfully. “Near the fire; it’s real chillsome
-to-night. And when you pose you can sit on top
-of it if you like.” He opened the lid of the coal box,
-and replenished the fire. “We must take care you don’t
-catch cold. If you feel a draught, you can have a rug
-round your knees. I only want to make a rough sketch
-of the lines of the figure, to begin with; the shoulders<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span>
-chiefly. It won’t take long. Quite sure you won’t have
-a finger?” He pointed to the whisky. “Buck you up
-a bit. You look rather down.”</p>
-
-<p>June was quite sure that she would not have a finger.
-Mr. Keller passed beyond the screen into the studio
-itself to procure a second screen. June felt this activity
-to be alarming. It brought her up against the fact
-that she was there in the capacity of an artist’s model.
-Suddenly it dawned upon her that she was expected to
-take off her clothes.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXVIII">XXXVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">M</span>r. Keller</span> cleared a space near the fire, and
-elaborately arranged a second screen, which
-June did not fail to notice was decorated with nude
-figures.</p>
-
-<p>“There you are,” he said. “That’ll keep you snug.
-And if you sit on a stool by the fire with a rug over
-your knees, you’ll be as warm as a kitten.”</p>
-
-<p>June paled, but she did not speak.</p>
-
-<p>“Begin as soon as you like, the sooner the better.
-Are you quite sure you won’t have just a spot?” Again
-he pointed to the bottle on the table. “You look as if
-you want a drop of something.”</p>
-
-<p>Once more June declined the offer in a voice which
-in her own ear seemed absurdly small and faint.</p>
-
-<p>“Pity,” said Mr. Keller cheerfully, as he looked at
-her. “It’d put some life in you.” And then, as she
-was still inert, he went on in a tone which pleasantly
-mingled gentlemanliness and business, “I always pay
-a sovereign an hour, you know&mdash;for the altogether.”</p>
-
-<p>A light of fear came into June’s large eyes. “Does
-it mean,” she asked, shyly and awkwardly, as she
-looked away from him, “that I shall have to take off
-my clothes?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course,” he said, matter-of-factly. Her
-obvious embarrassment was not lost upon him, but the
-knowledge did not appear in his manner.</p>
-
-<p>June shivered slightly. In that shiver a deep instinct
-spoke for her. “I couldn’t do that,” she said.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” He lit a cigarette. “Aren’t you
-well?”</p>
-
-<p>June was very far from well. She felt within an
-ace of being overcome by all that had happened to her.
-Besides her bruised shoulders were still aching horribly.
-Even without the deep instinct that governed her, it
-would not have been possible to expose them.</p>
-
-<p>“No-no,” she said, “I&mdash;I’m not well.”</p>
-
-<p>As she spoke, she had to fight a powerful desire to
-burst into tears. But her latent fear of this man had
-suddenly grown. Overdriven as she was, however,
-she was yet conscious of a stern need to keep a hold
-upon herself. She knew nothing, less than nothing of
-her host, beyond the fact that he was smooth of speech.
-On the surface he was a gentleman, but as he stood
-looking down at her now she glimpsed in his dark eyes
-that which seemed to countervail everything.</p>
-
-<p>Again she shivered. The sense of helplessness was
-paralyzing. It was as if a chasm had abruptly opened
-right under her feet. She was at his mercy. But she
-must not give one thought, so long as a spark of will
-remained with her, to the possibility of throwing herself
-upon it.</p>
-
-<p>He continued to stand looking at her while she
-fought against a welling weakness that must have been
-only too patent. Then, as if a little puzzled by her, he
-went and fetched a glass from another part of the
-studio. He poured out a small quantity of spirit and
-offered it neat.</p>
-
-<p>“Drink this. It’ll do you good.”</p>
-
-<p>His voice, for the first time, had the grip of authority.
-He held the glass to her lips, but as if containing
-deadly fumes they shrank from contact with it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be a little fool.” The sharp tone was like
-the touch of a whip. “Why don’t you do as you are
-told?”</p>
-
-<p>She had not the strength to resent the command
-even if she was able to muster the power to resist it.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here,” he said, confronted by a limit to patience.
-“Why have you come? What’s the matter
-with you? Tell me.”</p>
-
-<p>She remained mute. There was nothing she could
-tell. A lodging for the night, food, advice, protection
-were what she sought. Dominated completely as she
-was by hard necessity, she yet dare not confide in
-Keller. The subtle change that had come upon him
-since he had fixed up the screen and poured out the
-whisky filled her with an intense longing to get away.
-In spite of a growing weakness, which now threatened
-dire collapse, the subtle feelers of her mind were on
-the track of danger.</p>
-
-<p>With a slow gathering of will that was a form of
-agony, she tried to collect the force to rise from the
-perilous comfort of the low wicker chair. But she was
-not able to rouse herself to action before the effort had
-been nipped by his next remark.</p>
-
-<p>“If you’ve no intention of sitting to me, you’d better
-say in two words why you’ve come here.”</p>
-
-<p>The voice was no longer smooth; there was a cutting
-edge to it, lacerating to June’s ear.</p>
-
-<p>“I wanted you to lend me a sovereign.”</p>
-
-<p>It was the literal truth. But the unguarded words
-slipped from her before she could shape or control them.
-Almost before they were uttered she realized their bitter
-unwisdom.</p>
-
-<p>“You can have a sovereign&mdash;if that’s all you want.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span>
-His tone grew light again. “But it’s only fair and
-reasonable that you should earn it first.”</p>
-
-<p>Strive as she would, she was not able to keep a faint
-dew of tears from filming her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“No need to take off more than your bodice, if that’s
-what’s troubling you.”</p>
-
-<p>With her shoulders on fire, she could not take off her
-bodice, even had she wished to do so.</p>
-
-<p>She sat inert while he continued to stand before her.
-The thread of will she still had, fully concentrated
-though it was on getting away from him, was now unequal
-to the ugly challenge of his voice and eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me go,” she half whimpered.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, in her own despite, her defences had
-begun palpably to fail. The blunder was fatal&mdash;if the
-cry of nature overdriven can be called a blunder. His
-eyes pinned hers. Trembling under the spell of their
-hard cunning she began to perceive that it was now a
-case of the serpent and the bird.</p>
-
-<p>A frown darkened his face as he cast back to the
-first meeting with this girl. He tried to recall their
-conversation in the teashop two days ago. At the
-time it had interested him considerably, but he had
-laughed over it since, and decided to dismiss it from
-his mind. She had told him a cock-and-bull story about
-a picture. He could not recall the details of an absurd
-yarn which had not seemed worth his while to remember.
-At the best it was a bald and unconvincing
-narrative. But it concerned a Rembrandt. No, not a
-Rembrandt. A Van Roon!</p>
-
-<p>With a heightening of curiosity, Adolph Keller
-gazed at the hunted creature now shrinking from his
-eyes. By Jove, she looked as if she had been through<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span>
-it! Something pretty bad must have happened to her
-quite recently. But why had she come to him?</p>
-
-<p>Thoughts of the picture set his active mind to work.
-She had come to him because she was in want of
-money. So much, at least, was clear. To judge by
-the look of her, she had probably, at a moment’s notice,
-been turned out of house and home. A domestic
-servant, no doubt, and no better than she should be,
-although a certain taste about her much-rumpled clothes
-and an attempt at refinement of manner suggested the
-wish to rise above her class.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of this quick mind process, Adolph
-Keller saw the brown paper parcel. It was in the place
-where his visitor had laid it when she had first sat
-down. He noticed that she had cunningly reared it
-by the farther side of her chair, so that it might be
-beyond the immediate range of his eye.</p>
-
-<p>Keller’s pulse quickened, yet he allowed no hint of
-his intriguing discovery to shew in his manner. Once
-again it changed towards his guest. The tone of sharp
-authority vanished. Twisting a dark moustache round
-strong, yet delicate fingers, his air of extreme gentlemanliness
-verged upon the sugary, as he said: “I don’t
-like to see you like this. I don’t really.”</p>
-
-<p>The tone’s unexpectedness, perhaps even more than
-its kindness, moved June to further tears.</p>
-
-<p>“You had better tell me, hadn’t you, just what’s
-upset you?”</p>
-
-<p>She shook miserably. And then, thrown off her
-guard, by this new note of concern, she found the
-courage to venture again: “Please lend me a sovereign
-and let me go. I promise solemnly to pay it back.”</p>
-
-<p>He smiled in a way obviously to reassure. “What’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span>
-your hurry, my dear girl?” Soft, as were the words,
-they yet caused the design to fail.</p>
-
-<p>Their non-effect was clearly visible in the girl’s tragic
-eyes. She was caught in a trap; all his trimmings and
-posturings seemed only to emphasize the fact that she
-had no means of getting out.</p>
-
-<p>Like a powerful drug the brutal truth attacked her
-brain. It was as if its higher nerve centres could no
-longer act. She was completely in the power of this
-man. And only too well did she know that he knew it.</p>
-
-<p>Inevitably as fate, those slim fingers dipped towards
-the side of her chair. “What have we here?” The
-inflexion was lightly playful, yet it drove all the blood
-from her heart. “May I look?” His hand closed on
-the parcel before she could muster one futile finger to
-stay it.</p>
-
-<p>Galvanized, as if by electricity, she sprang up from
-her chair without knowing what she did. “Please&mdash;it’s
-mine!” Without conscious volition she tried weakly to
-defend her property.</p>
-
-<p>He put her off with the cheery playfulness of a teasing
-brother. “Just one little peep,” he said. The treasure
-was yielding its wrappings already to those deft
-fingers. Smiling all the time, he treated the thing as
-a mere joke. And he was able to give the joke full
-effect, because, not for an instant did he expect it to
-turn out anything else.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXIX">XXXIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span>dolph Keller</span> gave a low whistle. He took
-in his breath quickly. The treasure, in its rare
-incredible beauty, had declared itself to his eyes. And
-to the eyes of an artist, wholly unready for the revelation,
-it came in a single devastating flash.</p>
-
-<p>“My God!” he said, in a whisper, half rapture, half
-surprise.</p>
-
-<p>Aglow with excitement he removed the shade from
-the electric lamp. Holding the picture beneath the light,
-an arm’s length away from his eyes, he turned it over
-several times in that fashion of the expert which June
-had now learned to dread. And then humming softly,
-and with his fingers still enclosing it, he passed beyond
-the screen to a table on which lay a microscope.</p>
-
-<p>With a feeling of nausea, June watched everything
-he did. Only too well she knew that the microscope
-would simply feed his excitement. In a fresh spasm of
-weakness, she reeled against the chimneypiece. She
-had now the sensation of having fallen over a precipice
-into a bottomless pit. Already she was sinking down,
-down, down into night and damnation.</p>
-
-<p>Keller soon returned, microscope in hand; and while
-he plied it under the lamp she dare not glance at his
-face. Passively she waited for his next words. The
-power of action had left her.</p>
-
-<p>When, at last, he did speak, his voice was calmer and
-gentler than she looked for. “Tell me,” he said, “how
-did you come by this rather jolly old thing?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span></p>
-
-<p>The tone of playfulness was almost silly. But she
-was not deceived, for striking through it was the oiliness
-of Uncle Si. And she knew that she had only to
-glance at that face shining pale under the lamp, which
-was a thing she dare not do, to carry the resemblance
-farther.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me,” he repeated softly.</p>
-
-<p>A sense of destiny seemed to weigh her down.</p>
-
-<p>“It has been given to me.” Her voice was hardly
-audible.</p>
-
-<p>“Given to you.” He smiled a little, as his mind
-went off in search of the half forgotten fragments of
-their talk two days ago. “Let me see&mdash;your best boy,
-wasn’t it?&mdash;who made you a present of a picture&mdash;by
-a well known R. A.?”</p>
-
-<p>June did not know how to answer, yet she was able
-to realize that an answer of some kind was imperative.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it,” she said. There was nothing else she
-could say.</p>
-
-<p>“I rather like this thing, do you know.” His voice
-was acquiring a sort of growing brightness which
-seemed quite to admit her to his confidence. “It might
-almost have been painted by the snuffy old Scotsman&mdash;one
-MacFarlane by name&mdash;who first shewed me how
-to draw. It’s just in his manner. By Jove!”&mdash;The
-voice of Adolph Keller seemed to glow with humour&mdash;“I
-can almost see that cantankerous whiskyfied old fool
-daubing that water and those trees. But in his day not
-a bad painter, you know, not a bad painter.” And the
-voice of the pupil tailed off in a note of reluctant affection
-of which he seemed half ashamed.</p>
-
-<p>It was June’s turn to say something, but her frozen
-lips could not utter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span></p>
-
-<p>Keller, holding the picture in both hands, gave her
-a side look, which he tried, as far as he could, to conceal.
-In the midst of this scrutiny, he said: “To you,
-I expect, one picture is very much the same as another?”</p>
-
-<p>“I know what I like,” June was able to answer, perhaps
-for no better reason than that by now she understood
-only too well that it hardly mattered what she
-answered.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, anyhow, that’s something,” said Keller, with
-a forced laugh. “Great thing to know your mind in
-these little matters. Nice of your best boy&mdash;was your
-best boy, wasn’t it?&mdash;to give you this. Not that it’s
-worth much to the ordinary buyer. Pictures are like
-lovers, you know. Their beauty, sometimes, is in the
-eye of the beholder.”</p>
-
-<p>It sickened her to hear him lie in this way. The
-deadly sensation of falling, falling, falling came over
-her again. But she let him run on. For one thing
-she lacked the power to check him; and even had the
-power been hers it would have been worse than futile
-to try to do so.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XL">XL</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">“L</span>ook</span> here,” said Adolph Keller, in the midst
-of his prattle. “I’ve taken rather a fancy to
-this bit of a thing. Suppose you let me have it. I’ll give
-you a landscape in exchange; I’ve one or two that
-are not so bad, and you shall have your pick. Moreover,”
-and he fixed June with a steady eye, “you shall
-have your sovereign as well.”</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head tensely. Inclination now wished
-to tell him the fabulous worth of the picture; but prudence
-said no. The calculated way in which he had
-lied was proof enough that he knew its value already.
-She held out her hand. In a voice dry and choking she
-said: “Please give it to me. I ought to be going.”</p>
-
-<p>He gazed at her with the eye of a condor. “Much
-better take what you can get for it, hadn’t you? It’ll
-be a difficult thing to sell, you know. This is quite
-a fair offer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Give it me, please,” June gasped miserably.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be a little fool.”</p>
-
-<p>The tone was like the closing of a door. She knew
-at once that he had not the remotest intention of giving
-it back to her. And what followed immediately upon
-the words made the fact only too clear. He laid the
-picture on a table some little distance away, and then
-pouring out a quantity of spirit he drank it neat. His
-next act was to produce a case from which he took
-forth a pound note.</p>
-
-<p>“Here you are,” he said roughly. “Take this and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span>
-be jolly thankful. And then make yourself scarce, as
-soon as you like.”</p>
-
-<p>It was an intimation that there was going to be no
-more pretence. The tone was that of a cynical bully
-who judged it to be best for both parties that the owner
-of the Van Roon should now be given an unmistakable
-perception of reality.</p>
-
-<p>Overdriven as June was, the knowledge that at the
-very last she was to be robbed of the fruits of her hard-won
-victory was more than she could bear. Faced by
-this man’s cool insolence and mean cunning, she was
-swept by a tide of rage. He knew that she could have
-no proof of ownership, and he was going to reap a full
-advantage from the fact. At that moment, of an unendurable
-bitterness, she was spurred and lashed by the
-same Devil which two hours ago had driven Uncle Si
-to frenzy.</p>
-
-<p>“The picture’s mine,” she cried hoarsely. And then,
-advancing towards the table. “Give it me ... you
-thief!”</p>
-
-<p>At the ugly word he recoiled a step, but the next
-instant he grabbed her by the wrists. In the struggle
-to get free, she felt his evil breath upon her face.
-Many a dram must have gone to so much foulness;
-as his powerful grip slowly fastened upon her there
-came swift knowledge of a new and more urgent peril.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>She was alone with this man in his own flat. Utterly
-without a means of defence as she was, she had been
-mad enough to offer him a physical challenge. In a
-few seconds she would be at his mercy. And then, inflamed
-by drink, and being the kind of beast that he
-was he would insist upon the spoils of the victor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span></p>
-
-<p>Before she was fully alive to what was taking place
-she found herself forced slowly backwards to the wall.
-She knew then that she was fighting for her life, and
-for that which in this unspeakable moment implied so
-much more.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll teach you to come here, you&mdash;&mdash;!” His face was
-that of a maniac.</p>
-
-<p>She gave a shriek of terror and lashed out wildly at
-his shins. Fighting like a tigress, at first she kept him
-at bay. The power of his hands was terrific, but she
-did not scruple to use the weapons nature had given
-her. After a long and horrible minute of claws, teeth
-and feet, in the course of which she bit him savagely,
-it grew reasonably clear to Adolph Keller that if only
-she cares to use it, the female of the species does not
-lack a means of defence.</p>
-
-<p>“You beauty!” he gasped, as he struggled to shift
-his grip upon her.</p>
-
-<p>Goaded by the furies he found his way at last to her
-throat. And then she felt that he was going to kill her.
-Moreover, as his madman’s grip began slowly to distil
-her life through its fingers, he perceived how simple a
-matter it was going to be.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLI">XLI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">K</span>eller’s</span> own defences were almost down, but
-just in the nick of time was he able to realize
-this fact. And man of calculation that he was, even
-in this moment of madness, when each devil in his soul
-conspired for his final overthrow, he was able, by dint
-of underlying coolness of blood to make a powerful
-effort to save himself.</p>
-
-<p>He longed to kill this wretched girl, but as he pressed
-his fingers into the soft and delicate throat, he was
-stayed by thoughts of the price that would have to be
-paid for wreaking an insane passion upon her.</p>
-
-<p>For a wild instant he feared that the premonition had
-come too late; the primordial beast in his heart had
-slipped its chain. Already it had tasted blood. In
-this frenzy of revolt, the fetters imposed by centuries
-of civil life were hardly likely to be submitted to again.</p>
-
-<p>Gasping and helpless June felt that she was dying.
-The clutch upon her was that of the garotte. Her
-eyes began to darken. Clawing the air for the breath
-she could not draw, the end that seemed inevitable
-now was yet far off.</p>
-
-<p>At last, as if responding to her prayer, a kind of
-stupor came upon her. But how tardily! Brain, heart,
-soul, body contended no more against a power beyond
-their own; at last her slow life was ebbing. The end
-of torment indescribable would be akin to joy.</p>
-
-<p>Æons seemed to pass. A flicker of summer lightning,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</span>
-ages off, came and was not. So faint it was and
-so far that it could only be reckoned in terms of
-eternity. More light flickered which, of a sudden, grew
-miraculously near. The vivid sense of pain returned;
-she grew alive to the fact that the harsh glare of the
-electric bulb, which was still unshaded, was beating
-down upon her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Powerful arms were about her, she was being supported.
-The fumes of raw spirit were in her nostrils,
-a glass was pressed against her lips. She fought again
-to get free, only feebly now, for this was but a last
-reaction of a dying will. Yet the final word of all
-was nature’s. When mind itself had ceased to count,
-the life-force grasped wildly at the proffered means of
-life.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank God!” she heard a thick voice mutter. “I
-felt sure you were a goner.”</p>
-
-<p>A livid face, whose eyes seemed to blind her own,
-materialized suddenly before her. “Drink it up, damn
-you!” said the voice hoarsely. “And then get out&mdash;you&mdash;&mdash;!”</p>
-
-<p>It was insult for the sake of insult, and therefore
-the full measure of her victory. But it meant less
-than nothing to June now. She scarcely heard, or
-hearing did not comprehend. Beyond pain and suffering,
-beyond good and evil her torn spirit only craved
-release.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the fire in the glass had kindled her veins
-this desire was met, less, however, by the operation
-of her own will than by the will of Keller. As if she
-had been a noisome reptile whom his flesh abhorred,
-and yet had a superstitious fear of killing, he dragged
-her out of the room, along the short passage as far<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span>
-as the door of the flat. Slipping back the catch, he
-flung her out on to the landing.</p>
-
-<p>As she fetched up against the iron railing opposite
-the door, which guarded the well of the staircase, she
-heard a low hiss: “Take yourself off as soon as you
-like, you&mdash;&mdash;, or you’ll find the police on your track.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLII">XLII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>une</span> had no idea of the time that she lay in a huddle
-against the railing. But it may not have been
-so long in fact as it was in experience. Shattered she
-might be, yet unknown to herself, there was still a
-reserve of fighting power to draw upon.</p>
-
-<p>Cold iron, moreover, and raw air had a magic of
-their own. Clear of that mephitic room and the foul
-presence of Keller, a fine human machine began slowly
-to renew itself. Except for a faint gleam from
-the room out of which she had just come, stealing
-through the fanlight of the door out of which she had
-been flung, there was not a sign of light upon the
-staircase. The entire building appeared to be deserted.
-Its stone-flagged steps were full of echoes as soon as
-she ventured to move upon them; and when clinging
-to the railing for support she had painfully descended
-two she entered a region of total darkness.</p>
-
-<p>It was like going down into a pit. Could she have
-only been sure that death awaited her below, she might
-have been tempted to fling herself into it headlong.
-But she knew that the ground was not far off.</p>
-
-<p>Three or four steps more brought her to the vestibule.
-At the end of it was a door, open to the street.
-Outside this door shone a faint lamp, round which
-weird shadows circled in a ghostly witch-dance. The
-night beyond was a wall of horrors, which she had lost
-the will to face.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span></p>
-
-<p>Met by this pitiless alternative, she recoiled against
-the wall of the vestibule, huddling in its darkest corner,
-behind the stairs. Crouching here, like a hunted thing
-at bay, she fought for the courage to go out and face
-her destiny.</p>
-
-<p>She fought in vain. Half collapsed as she now was,
-a spur was needed to drive her into the grim wilderness
-of the open street. One glance at the crypt outside
-sufficed to tell her that with no point to make for, it
-would be best to stay where she was and hope soon
-to die.</p>
-
-<p>Why had she not had the sense to throw herself
-down the stairs and kill herself? A means would have
-to be found before the night was out. She could bear
-no more. A terrible reaction was upon her. It was
-as if a private door in her mind had suddenly given
-way and a school of awful phantoms had rushed in
-and flooded it.</p>
-
-<p>She was living in a nightmare that was too bad to
-be true. But it was true and there lay its terror.
-Adrift in the dark canyons of that vast city, penniless
-and alone, with the marks of thieves and murderers
-upon her bruised body, and her treasure stolen, there
-was only one thing to look for now.</p>
-
-<p>Death, however, would not be easy to come by. As
-she huddled in cold darkness in the recess behind the
-stairs she felt that her will was going. To enter the
-night and make an end would need courage; but a
-miserable clapping together of the jaws was sign
-enough that the last hope of all was slipping away
-from her.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLIII">XLIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">C</span>owering</span> in body and spirit in that dark corner,
-time, for June, became of no account. Perhaps,
-after all, she might be allowed to die where she
-was. As a kind of inertia crept upon her she was able
-to draw something of comfort from the thought. It
-would be better than the river or being run over in the
-street.</p>
-
-<p>She grew very cold; yet a lowering of the body’s
-temperature induced a heightened consciousness. Aches
-and pains sprang into life; the forces of her mind began
-to reassert themselves; the phantoms about her took
-on new powers of menace. Gradually it became clear
-to June, under the goad of this new and sharper phase
-of suffering, that mere passivity could not induce the
-death she longed for.</p>
-
-<p>No, it was not in that way the end would come.
-She would have to go into the shadow-land beyond the
-lamp, and seek some positive means of destroying herself.
-For that reason she must hold on to the fragment
-of will that now remained to her. It alone could release
-her from the awful pit in which she was now engulfed.</p>
-
-<p>She gathered herself for an effort to move towards
-the fog-encircled light at the entrance to the street.
-But the effort, when made, amounted to nothing. Her
-limbs were paper, all power of volition was gone.</p>
-
-<p>The October raw struck to her blood. She began
-to whimper miserably. To pain of mind was added<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span>
-pain of body, but the delicate apparatus from whose
-harmony sprang the fuse of action was out of gear.
-Something must be done; yet no matter how definite
-the task, any form of doing was beyond her now.</p>
-
-<p>At this dire moment, however, help came. It came,
-moreover, in an unlooked-for way. She heard a door
-slam over head. There was the sound of a match
-being struck, and then came a gingerly shuffle of feet
-on the stone stairs.</p>
-
-<p>Someone was coming down. June cowered still
-lower into the dark recess at the back of the stairway.
-A man was approaching. And by the flicker of the
-match which he threw away as he reached the floor of
-the vestibule she saw that the man was Keller.</p>
-
-<p>Faint and but momentary as was the glimpse afforded,
-June, with every sense strung again to the point
-of intensity, saw that under Keller’s arm was a brown
-paper parcel. The sight of it was like a charm. Some
-fabulous djinnee might have lurked in that neat package,
-who commanded a miraculous power of reaction
-upon the human will.</p>
-
-<p>Keller struck a second match and peered into the
-shadows. June knew that he was looking to see if she
-had lingered there, but the light could not pierce to
-the corner in which she crouched; and it burnt itself
-out, leaving him none the wiser.</p>
-
-<p>Without striking another match Keller moved away
-from her towards the doorway, and as he did so June
-felt a swift release of heart and brain. A thrill of
-new energy ran through her. No sooner had Keller
-passed out of the vestibule, beyond the lamp into the
-fog, than without conscious impulse or design she began
-to follow him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span></p>
-
-<p>It may have been the reasoned act of a lucid being,
-but at first it did not appear to be so. Once, however,
-her limbs were moving, all her faculties, now intensely
-awake, seemed as if by magic to bear them company.
-As soon as she reached the open street, with Keller a
-clear ten yards ahead, the keen air on her face had an
-effect of strong wine. Her nerves felt again the sense
-of motion; the impulse of the natural fighter unfurled
-strong pinions within her. All the virile sense and the
-indomitable will of a sound inheritance rallied to her
-need.</p>
-
-<p>Growing sensibly stronger at every yard, she followed
-Keller round the corner into Manning Square.
-The mist was thick, the lamps poor and few, but as
-well as she could she kept on his track. Lurking pantherlike
-in the deep shadows of the house-walls, she
-had approached within five yards of him by the time he
-had turned the corner into a bye-street. He went a
-few yards along this, and then zigzagged into a squalid
-ill-smelling thoroughfare whose dismal length seemed
-unending.</p>
-
-<p>June had no difficulty in keeping up with these twists
-and winds, for Keller, impeded by the fog, moved
-slowly. For her, however, the fog had its own special
-problem, since there was a danger of losing him if
-he was allowed to get too far ahead; and yet if his
-steps were dogged too closely there was always the
-fear that he might turn round suddenly and see her.</p>
-
-<p>At last the interminable street seemed to be nearing
-its end. For June, whose every faculty was now strung
-up to an unnatural acuteness, saw but a short distance
-in front the brightly lit awning of the Underground
-looming through the fog.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span></p>
-
-<p>In a flash she realized the nature of the peril. Only
-too surely was this the bourn for which Keller was
-making. Once within its precincts and her last remaining
-hope would be gone.</p>
-
-<p>It must be now or never. The spur of occasion
-drove deep in her heart. She knew but too well that
-the hope was tragically small, but wholly desperate as
-she was, with the penalty of failure simply not to be
-met, she would put all to the touch.</p>
-
-<p>Closer and closer she crept up behind the quarry.
-But the entrance to the Tube loomed now so near that
-it began to seem certain that she must lose him before
-she could attempt what she had to do. Abruptly, however,
-within ten yards or so of his goal, Keller stopped.
-He began to search the pockets of his overcoat for a
-box of matches to relight his pipe which had gone out.
-While so doing, and in the preoccupation of the moment,
-he took the parcel from under his right arm,
-and set it rather carelessly beneath his left.</p>
-
-<p>Providence had given June her chance. Like a
-falcon, she swooped forward. Aim and timing incredibly
-true, at the instant Keller struck a match and
-bent over his pipe, her fingers closed on the Van Roon,
-and whisked it out of his unguarded grasp.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLIV">XLIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span>s</span> June turned and ran she heard a wild and
-startled oath. Before her was the eternal fog-laden
-darkness of the narrow street. But now it struck
-her with a thrill of pure terror that the mist was not
-thick enough to conceal her flight. The swift surprise
-of the onset had gained for her a start of a few yards,
-but instantly she knew that it would not suffice.</p>
-
-<p>She ran, all the same, as if her heart would burst.
-But her legs seemed to wear the shackles that afflict
-one in a dream. Her most frantic efforts did not urge
-them on, and yet, in spite of that, they bore her better
-than she knew. Not a soul was in sight. She could
-hear Keller’s boots echo on the damp pavement as they
-pounded behind her. It could only be a matter of
-seconds before his fingers were again on her throat.
-But this time, before robbing her of the Van Roon
-and getting clear, he would have to kill her.</p>
-
-<p>The vow had hardly been made, when at the other
-side of the street she saw a thread of light. It came
-from a house whose door was open. Instinctively she
-turned and made one final dash for it. This was the
-last wild hope there was.</p>
-
-<p>A man, it seemed, was in the act of leaving the house.
-Wearing overcoat and hat, he stood just within the
-doorway peering into the murk before venturing out.
-June flung herself literally upon him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Save me! Save me!” she was able to gasp. “A
-man! A man is after me!”</p>
-
-<p>The house was of the poverty-stricken kind whose
-living room opens on to the street. June had a confused
-vision of a glowing lamp, a bright fire, a dingy
-tablecloth and several people seated around it. Her
-wild impact upon the man who was about to put off
-from its threshold drove him backwards several paces
-into the room. At the same instant a female voice,
-loud and imperious, rose from the table.</p>
-
-<p>“Shut the door, Elbert, can’t yer? The fog’s comin’
-in that thick it’ll put out the perishin’ fire.”</p>
-
-<p>The bewildered Elbert, raked fore and aft by fierce
-women, automatically obeyed the truculent voice at
-his back, even while he gave ground in a collision which
-seemed to rob him of any wit that he might possess.
-With a deft turn of the heel, he dealt the door a kick
-which effectually closed it in the murderous face of
-the halting and hesitating Keller.</p>
-
-<p>June, shuddering in every vein, clung to her protector.</p>
-
-<p>“Gawd-love-us-all!” Cries and commotion arose from
-the table, yet almost at once the imperious voice soared
-above the din. “Set her down, can’t yer, Elbert?
-Didn’t yer see that bloke?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah&mdash;I did,” said Elbert, stolidly pressing his queer
-armful into a chair near the fire.</p>
-
-<p>“Better git after him lively,” said the voice at the
-table. “He’s the one as did in Kitty Lewis last week.”</p>
-
-<p>Elbert, a young man six feet tall and proportionately
-broad of shoulder, was not however a squire of dames.
-With a scared look on a face that even in circumstances
-entirely favourable could hardly rank as a thing of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</span>
-beauty, he moved to the door and slipped a bolt across.
-“Not goin’ near the&mdash;&mdash;” he said, sullenly. “Not
-goin’ to be mixed up wiv it&mdash;not me.”</p>
-
-<p>The voice at the table, whose owner was addressed
-as Maw, proceeded “to tell off” Elbert. He was a
-skunk, he was no man, he was a mean swine. In the
-sight of Maw, who ran to words as well as flesh, Elbert
-was all this and more. She rose majestically, threatening
-to “dot him” if he didn’t “’op in,” and she came
-to June with an enormous bosom striving to burst
-from its anchorage, an apron that had once been white,
-and with her entire person exuding an odour peculiar
-to those of her sex who drink gin out of a teacup.</p>
-
-<p>Three other people were at the table, and they were
-engaged upon a meal of toasted cheese, raw onions and
-beer. Of these, two were girls about sixteen, scared,
-slatternly and anæmic; the third was a toothless hag
-who looked ninety; and as the whole family, headed
-by Maw, suddenly crowded round June, the terrified
-fugitive, shuddering in the chair by the fire, hardly
-knew which of her deliverers was the most repulsive.</p>
-
-<p>June fought with every bit of her strength against
-the threat of total collapse that assailed her now. In
-the desperate hope of warding off disaster, she gathered
-the last broken fragment of will. But nature had
-been driven too hard. For the second time within the
-space of one terrible hour, she lost the sense of where
-she was.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLV">XLV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> faces, with one exception, had receded into
-the background, when June returned slowly and
-painfully to a knowledge of what was happening. Maw
-was bending over her, and holding a cracked cup to
-her lips, and also “telling off” the others with a force
-and a scope of language that added not a little to
-June’s fear.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the smell of its contents had quite as much
-effect upon the sufferer as the cup’s restorative powers.
-It was so distasteful to one who had been taught to
-shun all forms of alcohol, that a sheer disgust helped
-to bring her round.</p>
-
-<p>At first, however, her mind was hardly more than
-a blank. But when, at last, a few links of recognition
-floated up into it out of the immediate past and hitched
-themselves to this strange present, a shock of new
-terror nearly overwhelmed her again. Recollection
-was like a knife stab. The Van Roon! The Van
-Roon! Where was it? Oh, God&mdash;if she had not got
-it after all!</p>
-
-<p>The thought was pain, pure and exquisite. But the
-case did not really call for it. She was clutching the
-Van Roon convulsively to her breast like a child holds
-a doll. As she wakened slowly to this fact her brain
-wonderfully cleared.</p>
-
-<p>The mind must be kept alive, if only to defend this
-talisman for whose sake she had already suffered so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</span>
-outrageously. She did not know where she was, and
-the evil presence holding the foul cup to her lips, and
-those other evil presences filling the background beyond
-gave her an intense apprehension.</p>
-
-<p>Maw, however, in spite of a general air of obscenity,
-meant well. It was not easy for this fact to declare
-itself through that loud voice and ruthless mien; but
-gradually it began to percolate to June’s violated
-nerves, and so gave her a fleck of courage to hold on
-to that sense of identity which still threatened at the
-first moment again to desert her.</p>
-
-<p>“Where was you goin’, deery?”</p>
-
-<p>Rude the tone, but when June’s ear disentangled the
-words, she was able to appreciate that they were spoken
-in the way of kindness. But if the knowledge brought
-a spark of comfort it was quickly dowsed. Where was
-she going? To that grim question there was no possible
-answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Scared out of her life, poor lamb!” said Maw.
-With furtive truculence she announced the fact to the
-rather awed spectators who gathered once more about
-the sufferer.</p>
-
-<p>“Where you come from?”</p>
-
-<p>June’s only answer was a shiver. The frozen silence
-was so full of the uncanny that Maw shook her own
-head dismally and tapped it with a grimy finger.</p>
-
-<p>In the view of Maw, for such a calamity there was
-only one remedy. Once more the cup was pressed to
-June’s lips; once more it was resisted, this time with a
-hint of fierceness reassuring to the onlookers, inasmuch
-that it implied a return of life.</p>
-
-<p>“Looks respectable,” said the cracked voice of the
-crone, who was now at Maw’s elbow.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Where was you goin’?” demanded Maw again.</p>
-
-<p>June was beyond tears, or she would have shed
-them. Now that the facts of the situation in all their
-hopelessness were streaming back to her, a feeling of
-sheer impotence kept her dumb.</p>
-
-<p>“Off her rocker,” said Elbert gloomily.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLVI">XLVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span>mid</span> the silence which followed Elbert’s remark,
-June fought hard to cast her weakness off. She
-wanted no longer to die. The recovery of the talisman
-inhibited, at least for the time being, that desire.
-Acutely aware that the Van Roon was still miraculously
-hers, she felt that come what might she must go on.</p>
-
-<p>But her position was hopeless indeed. She dare not
-venture out of doors, with a murderous thief waiting
-to spring upon her. And if venture she did, there
-was nowhere she could go. Besides, had there been
-any place of refuge for such a weary bundle of frightened
-misery, without money and with a sorry ignorance
-of the fog-bound maze of bricks and mortar in which
-she was now lost, there would have been no means of
-getting to her destination.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, she had no wish to stay with these
-uncouth, ill-looking, evil-smelling people one moment
-longer than was necessary. In a curiously intimate
-way she was reminded of that grim story Oliver Twist,
-which had so powerfully haunted her youth. To her
-distorted mind, this squalid interior was a veritable
-thieves’ kitchen, the crone a female Fagin, the angel
-of the cup, a counterpart of Bill Sikes, and the gloomy,
-beetle-browed Elbert a kind of Artful Dodger grown
-up. She and her treasure could never be safe in such
-a place, yet at the other side of the door nameless
-horrors awaited her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span></p>
-
-<p>In June’s present state it was far beyond her power
-to cope with so dire a problem. Keeping a stony
-silence as those faces, devoured by curiosity, pressed
-ever closer upon her, she half surrendered to her
-weakness again.</p>
-
-<p>Amid the new waves of misery which threatened
-to submerge her, she was wrenched fiercely back to
-sensibility. The Van Roon was torn by a strong
-hand from her grasp. As if a spring had been pressed
-in her heart she rose with a little cry. Maw was in
-the act of handing the picture to Elbert. “There’s a
-label on it, ain’t there?” she said.</p>
-
-<p>Still half stupefied, June clung to the table for support,
-while Elbert, who was evidently the family
-scholar, read out slowly the name and address that
-was written upon the parcel: “Miss Babraham, 39b
-Park Lane, W.”</p>
-
-<p>June was hardly in a state just then to grasp the
-significance of the words. Her mind was wholly given
-up to concern for the treasure which had passed to alien
-hands. And yet the words had significance, even for
-her, as the mind-process they induced soon began to
-reveal.</p>
-
-<p>A locked door of memory, of which she had lost
-the key, seemed to glide back. Thoughts of William,
-of his friend, the tall, beautiful and distinguished
-wearer of the blue crepe de chine, and of Sir Arthur,
-her father, came crowding into her brain. And with
-them came a perceptible easing of spirit, as if they
-had been sped by the kindly hand of that Providence,
-of whom she had never been so much in need.</p>
-
-<p>The recognition of this acted upon her like a charm.
-Girt by the knowledge that she was not alone in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span>
-world after all, and that friends might be at hand if
-only she could reach out to them, her mind began once
-more to function.</p>
-
-<p>Even while Maw and Elbert were occupying themselves
-with the parcel’s address and its specific importance,
-June was fain to inquire of an awaking self
-how such magic words came to be there at such a
-moment. Casting back to recent events, over which
-oblivion had swept, she was able to recall certain
-strands in the subtle woof of Fate. Days ago, years
-they seemed now, Miss Babraham had sent to William
-a picture frame to be restored. The stout brown paper
-in which it had been wrapped appealed to June’s thrifty
-soul, and she had stowed it away in her box for use
-on a future occasion. Her mind’s new, almost dangerous
-clarity, enabled her to remember that upon the
-paper’s inner side was an old Sotheran, Bookseller,
-Piccadilly label which bore the name and address of
-Miss Babraham.</p>
-
-<p>The piecing together of this slender chain gave June
-the thing she needed most. At this signal manifestation
-of what Providence could do, hope revived in her.
-If only she could get to Park Lane&mdash;wherever Park
-Lane might be!&mdash;to Miss Babraham.</p>
-
-<p>As if in answer to the half-formed wish, Maw’s
-dominant voice took up the parable. “Elbert, you’d
-better see this lidy as fur as Park Lane.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLVII">XLVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">E</span>lbert</span> did not welcome the prospect with open
-arms. Nature had not designed him for such a
-task. All the same, Maw was imaged clearly in his
-mind as one whose word was law.</p>
-
-<p>At the best of times, Elbert’s obedience to that word
-was apt to be grudging. And to-night, with murder
-lurking outside in the darkness, he was full of a disgusted
-reluctance at having to face such a prospect.
-Even in circumstances wholly favourable to it, the
-countenance of Elbert was not attractive; to June at
-this moment it was very much the reverse. She felt
-that its owner was not to be trusted an inch.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile her mind was growing very active. Miss
-Babraham’s name and address, that magic omen, was
-like an elixir; it quickened the blood, it strengthened
-the soul. If only she could bear her treasure to Park
-Lane all might yet be well!</p>
-
-<p>Urged by this spur, native wit sprang to her aid.
-The first thing to be done was to get clear of present
-company. She was haunted still by the likeness to
-Fagin’s kitchen; but also there was a recollection of the
-fact that a Tube Station was only a few yards along
-the street. That was the haven wherein salvation lay.</p>
-
-<p>Pressing hard upon the hope, however, was the dismal
-knowledge that only one penny remained in her
-pocket. This sum could not take her to Park Lane,
-unless that Elysium was close at hand. Alas, it was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</span>
-not at all likely. Her ignorance of London was so great,
-moreover, that she would need help to find her way
-there; and in the process of obtaining it in her present
-state of weakness she might be caught by new perils.
-For it was only too likely that Keller was lurking outside
-in the fog, waiting to spring upon her and tear
-the Van Roon from her grasp at the first chance that
-arose.</p>
-
-<p>Beset by such problems, June felt that she was between
-the devil and the deep sea. Perhaps the best
-thing she could do was to dash along the street to the
-Tube, and then put herself in the hands of the nearest
-policeman. But even to attempt such a feat was to
-run a grave risk.</p>
-
-<p>Elbert, in the meantime, scowling and disgruntled,
-was bracing himself under further pressure from Maw
-to brave the perils of the night. June felt, however,
-that it would be wise not to saddle herself with this
-reluctant champion if it could be avoided. To this
-end, she was now able to pluck up the spirit to ask what
-was the best means of getting to Park Lane.</p>
-
-<p>Maw did not know, but Elbert when appealed to
-said that she could take the Tube to Marble Arch, or
-she might turn the corner at the end of the street and
-pick up a bus in Tottenham Court Road.</p>
-
-<p>How much was the fare? Twopence, Elbert
-thought. Alas, June had only a penny. She was painfully
-shy about confessing this difficulty, but there was
-no help for it.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you worry, Miss. Elbert is goin’ to see
-you all the way.” And Maw fixed a savage eye upon
-her son.</p>
-
-<p>Much as June would have preferred to forego the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</span>
-services of this paladin, Maw’s ferocious glance settled
-the matter finally.</p>
-
-<p>“And you’ll carry the pawcel for the lidy,” said
-Maw, as Elbert, scowling more darkly than ever turned
-up the collar of his overcoat.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLVIII">XLVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> Van Roon, at that moment, was in the hand
-of Maw. And although June was on fire to
-get it back, her natural faculties had the authority to
-tell her that undue eagerness would be most unwise.
-She must be content to await her chance, yet there
-was no saying when that chance would come; for
-Maw was careful to hand personally the parcel to
-Elbert.</p>
-
-<p>Before June set out on her journey one of the girls
-pressed a cup of tea from the family brew upon her.
-It was lukewarm and thrice-stewed, but June was able
-to drink a little and to feel the better for it. She was
-in a high state of tension, all the same, when Elbert
-opened the street door, her treasure under his arm,
-and she followed close behind him into the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Surely Keller must be out there in the fog, waiting
-to attack them. Her heart beat wildly as she marched
-side by side with Elbert along the street towards the
-Tube. Distrust of her cavalier was great. Should he
-guess the value of the thing he bore, as likely as not
-he would play her a trick. But for the moment, at any
-rate, this fear was merged in the sharper one of what
-was concealed by the fantastic shadow shapes of that
-dark thoroughfare. Less than a hundred yards away,
-however, was the Tube Station. And to June’s unspeakable
-relief they gained its light and publicity without
-misadventure. Here, moreover, was her chance.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</span>
-While Elbert searched his pockets for fourpence to
-purchase two tickets for Marble Arch, she insisted on
-relieving him of the parcel. Once restored to her care,
-she clung to it so tenaciously that the puzzled Elbert
-had reluctantly to give up the hope of getting it back
-again.</p>
-
-<p>Going down in the lift to the trains, with the surge
-of fellow passengers guaranteeing a measure of safety,
-June allowed herself to conclude that Elbert, after all,
-might be less of a ruffian than he looked. If he had
-no graces of mind or mansion, he was yet not without
-a sort of rude care for her welfare. By no wish of
-his own was he seeing a distressed damsel to her home,
-yet the process of doing so, once he grew involved in
-it, seemed to minister in some degree to a latent sense
-of chivalry. At all events he had a scowl for anyone
-whose elbows came too near his charge.</p>
-
-<p>Arriving at Marble Arch in due course, the heroic
-Elbert piloted the fugitive out of the station and across
-the road into Park Lane. Here, under a street lamp,
-they paused a moment to examine the label on the parcel
-for the number of the house they sought. Thirty-nine
-was the number, and it proved to be not the least
-imposing home in that plutocratic thoroughfare.</p>
-
-<p>Elbert accompanied June as far as its doorstep. Before
-ringing the bell she said good-bye to her escort
-with all the gratitude she could muster, begging him
-to give her his name and address, so that she might at
-least restore to him the price of her fare. Yet the
-squire of dames saw no necessity for this. His scowl
-was softened a little by her thanks, but his only answer
-was to press the electric button and then, without a
-word, to slink abruptly away into the fog.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLIX">XLIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>une</span> felt a wild excitement, as she stood waiting
-for the answer to her ring. The stress of events
-had buoyed her up, but with Elbert no longer at her
-side and the door of a strange house confronting her,
-trolls were loose once more in her brain. A fresh
-wave of panic surged through her, and again she feared
-that she was going to faint.</p>
-
-<p>The prompt opening of the door by a gravely dignified
-manservant acted as a strong restorative. June
-mustered the force of will to ask if she could see Miss
-Babraham. Such a request, made in a nervous and
-excited manner, gave pause to the footman, who at
-first could not bring himself to invite her into the large
-dimly lighted hall. Finally he did so; closed the door
-against the fog, and then asked her name with an air
-of profound disapproval, which at any other time must
-have proved highly embarrassing.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m Miss Gedge,” said June. “From the second-hand
-shop in New Cross Street. Miss Babraham’ll
-remember me.”</p>
-
-<p>The servant slowly repeated the fragmentary words
-in a low voice of cutting emphasis. “I’m afraid,” he
-said, while his eye descended to June’s shoes and up
-again, “Miss Babraham will not be able to see you to-night.
-However, I’ll inquire.”</p>
-
-<p>Superciliously the footman crossed the hall, to discuss<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</span>
-the matter with an unseen presence in its farthest
-shadows. The conference was brief but unsatisfactory,
-for a moment later the unseen presence slowly
-materialized into the august shape of a butler, who
-seemed at once to diminish the footman into a relative
-nothingness.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps you’ll let me know your business,” said
-the butler, in a tone which implied that she could have
-no business, at any rate with Miss Babraham, at such
-an hour.</p>
-
-<p>June, alas, could not explain the nature of her
-errand. These two men were so imposing, so unsympathetic,
-so harsh, so frightening that had life itself
-depended upon her answers, and in quite a special
-degree she now felt that it did, she was yet unequal to
-the task of making them effective.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Babraham cannot see you now,” said the slow-voiced
-butler, with an air of terrible finality.</p>
-
-<p>“But I must see her. I simply must,” wildly persisted
-June.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s impossible to see her now,” said the butler.</p>
-
-<p>The words caused June to stagger back against the
-wall. In answer to her tragic eyes, the butler said
-reluctantly: “You had better call again some time to-morrow,
-and I’ll send in your name.”</p>
-
-<p>“I&mdash;I must see her now,” June gasped wildly.</p>
-
-<p>The butler was adamant. “You can’t possibly see
-her to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why can’t I?” said June, desperately.</p>
-
-<p>“She is going to a ball.”</p>
-
-<p>The words were like a blow. A vista of the fog
-outside and of herself wandering with her precious
-burden all night long in it homeless, penniless, desolate,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</span>
-came upon her with unnerving force. “But&mdash;please!&mdash;I
-must see her to-night,” she said, with a shudder of
-misery.</p>
-
-<p>Faced by the butler’s pitiless air, June felt her slender
-hope to be ebbing away. She would be turned
-adrift in the night. And what would happen to her
-then? She could not walk the streets till daybreak
-with the Van Roon under her arm. Already she had
-reached the limit of endurance. The dark haze before
-her eyes bore witness to the fact that her strength was
-almost gone. No matter what the attitude of the butler
-towards her she must not think of quitting this place
-of refuge unless she was flung out bodily, for her trials
-here were nought by comparison with those awaiting
-her outside.</p>
-
-<p>June’s defiance was very puzzling to the stern functionary
-who quite plainly was at a loss how to deal
-with it. But in the midst of these uncertainties the
-problem was unexpectedly solved for him. A glamour
-of white satin, jewels and fur appeared on the broad
-staircase. Miss Babraham descended slowly.</p>
-
-<p>Once more was June upheld by a sense of Providence.
-Hope flickered again, a painful, fluctuating gleam. She
-sprang forward to intercept this vision of pure beauty,
-wildly calling the name “Miss Babraham! Miss Babraham!”</p>
-
-<p>The dazzling creature was startled out of her glowing
-self-possession: “Why, who <i>are</i> you?” she cried.</p>
-
-<p>In a gush of strange words, June strove to make
-clear that she was the girl from the antique shop in
-New Cross Street, and that her uncle, its proprietor,
-was a very wicked old man who was trying to steal a
-valuable picture that had been given to her. She<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</span>
-pressed the Van Roon upon the astonished Miss Babraham
-and besought her to take care of it.</p>
-
-<p>After that, June had only a very dim idea of what
-happened. She found herself in a sort of anteroom
-without knowing how she got there, with faces of a
-surprised curiosity around her. Foremost of these was
-the lovely Miss Babraham, a thing of sheer beauty in
-her ball-dress, who asked questions to which June could
-only give confused replies, and issued orders that she
-was not able to follow.</p>
-
-<p>Everything began to grow more and more like a
-wild and terrible dream. Other people appeared on the
-scene, among whom June was just able to recognize the
-tall form of Sir Arthur Babraham. By then, however
-she no longer knew what she was doing or saying, for
-deep blanks were invading her consciousness; even the
-treasure in which her very soul was merged had somehow
-slipped from her mental grasp, and like everything
-else had ceased to have significance.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="L">L</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span>t</span> eleven o’clock the next morning, Sir Arthur
-Babraham, looking worried and distrait, was
-pretending to read the “Times.” If ever a man could
-be said to have “been born with a silver spoon in his
-mouth” it was this soft-voiced, easy-mannered, kindly
-gentleman. The rubs of a hard world had hardly
-touched his unflawed surfaces. He sat on committees,
-it was true, and played Providence at third or fourth
-hand to less happily situated mortals; yet scarcely, if
-at all, had he been brought face to face with the stark
-realities of life.</p>
-
-<p>It is never too late, however, for some new thing
-to occur. The previous evening an experience had
-happened to this worthy man; and he could not rid
-his mind of the fact that it was disconcerting. On a
-table at his elbow was a picture without a frame, and
-more than once his eyes strayed from the newspaper
-to this object, which at a first glance was so insignificant,
-and yet as if cursed with an “obi” it had the
-power to dominate him completely.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of this preoccupation, Laura Babraham
-entered the room. She had returned late from
-the dance, and this was her first appearance that morning.
-Hardly had she saluted her father when her eye
-also fell on the picture, and a look of deep anxiety
-came into her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you heard anything from the hospital?” she
-asked eagerly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I rang them up half an hour ago,” said Sir Arthur.
-“The girl is very ill indeed. I gather from the tone of
-the person with whom I talked that the case is pretty
-serious.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Laura Babraham, in a low voice. “One
-felt sure of that. Never again do I want to see a
-human creature in the state that poor thing was in last
-night. I’ve been haunted by her ever since.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty bad, I must say.” Sir Arthur plucked
-sharply at his moustache. “According to the Hospital,
-she’s been knocked about and generally ill-used. There
-are marks on her throat, and they want my opinion
-as to whether they should communicate with the
-police.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you advise, papa?” said Laura, with a
-growing concern.</p>
-
-<p>“One doesn’t know what to advise.” Sir Arthur’s
-moustache continued to receive harsh treatment. “We
-are faced with rather a problem, it seems to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that it will be a matter for the police
-if she doesn’t get better?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, certainly that. And it may be a matter for
-the police if she does get better.”</p>
-
-<p>Laura Babraham agreed; yet even then she did not
-see the problem in its full complexity. Sir Arthur,
-taking the first step towards her enlightenment, pointed
-to the Van Roon: “My dear, beyond any doubt that
-is a most precious thing. And, ignoring for the moment
-the state in which this young woman turned up
-last night, the question we have to ask ourselves is:
-What is she doing with it at all? And why was she
-ranging the streets alone, in the fog, at that hour?”</p>
-
-<p>“From what one gathered,” said Laura, “the picture<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</span>
-is hers, and her uncle, the old curio man in New Cross
-Street, with whom she lives, is determined to steal it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite. That’s her story, as far as one can get
-at it. But I put it to you, isn’t it far more likely&mdash;prima
-facie at any rate&mdash;that the girl is trying to steal
-it from the old dealer?”</p>
-
-<p>“I believe the poor thing is speaking the truth,” said
-Woman in the person of Miss Laura Babraham.</p>
-
-<p>“You mean, my dear,” said her logical parent, with
-a sad little smile, “that you <i>hope</i> she is speaking the
-truth. With all my heart I hope so, too, even if it
-proves this old man&mdash;Gedge you say his name is&mdash;to be
-a terrible scoundrel. One of them certainly is not
-playing straight&mdash;but prima facie, as I say&mdash;if we call
-in the police, it is almost certain that it is this wretched
-girl who will find herself in prison.”</p>
-
-<p>“There I don’t agree, papa,” said Woman staunchly.
-“The poor thing says that William the assistant
-gave her the picture; and in all the dealings I have had
-with William in the course of the past year, he has
-been honesty itself.”</p>
-
-<p>Her father shook his head gently. “All very well,
-but Master William is the part of the story I like least.
-Is it probable, in the first place, that a young man who
-almost certainly has no money of his own, would be
-able to get possession of such a thing; and, again, assuming
-him to be clever enough to do so, is he going to
-be such a fool as to give it away to this girl? Let us
-look all the facts in the face. To my mind, the more
-one thinks of it the more inevitable the plain solution
-is.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m absolutely convinced that William, at any rate,
-is honest.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</span></p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur frowned and opened his cigar case. “And
-I for my part am convinced,” he said, with a sigh as
-he cut off the end of a Corona, “that our friend
-William is a cunning scoundrel, who has been deep
-enough to get this young woman to do the dirty work
-and run all the risks, because he must know as well as
-anybody that a great deal of money is at stake.”</p>
-
-<p>Laura Babraham had a considerable respect for her
-father’s judgment, yet she knew the value of her own.
-She did not think it was possible to be so deceived;
-her dealings with William had left her with the highest
-regard for his straightforwardness; if he proved to
-be the despicable creature Sir Arthur’s fancy painted
-him, never again would she be able to hold an opinion
-about anyone. Yet her father’s analysis of the case,
-as it presented itself to her clear mind, left her on the
-horns of a dilemma. Either this young man was a
-fool, or he was a rogue. Beset by two evils, she chose
-without hesitation that which to the feminine mind
-appeared the less.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s always struck one as rather simple in some
-ways and too much under the thumb of the old dealer,
-yet he’s really very clever.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur drew mental energy from his Corona.
-“Not clever enough to keep honest, my dear.”</p>
-
-<p>“Please don’t prejudge him. That wicked old man
-is at the back of all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that is just what we have now to find out.”</p>
-
-<p>Laura assented; yet then arose the question as to
-the means by which the truth could be won. It was
-likely to resolve itself into an affair of William’s word
-against the word of his master. Whoever could tell
-the more plausible tale would be believed; and William’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</span>
-friend saw from the outset that Circumstance
-had already weighted the scales heavily against him.
-On the face of it, the story as disclosed by the poor
-girl who was now in the Hospital, was frankly incredible.</p>
-
-<p>Recollection of the pitiful scene of the previous night
-brought to Laura Babraham’s mind her own urgent
-duty in the matter. The girl had begged her not on any
-account to give up the picture. So long as sense and
-coherence remained the unlucky creature had declared
-it to be her own lawful property. Laura had solemnly
-promised to see justice done, and it behooved her now
-to be as good as her word.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose, papa, you have telephoned already to
-Mr. Gedge?”</p>
-
-<p>“The Hospital has, I believe,” said Sir Arthur. “I
-particularly asked them to do so. The old fellow must
-be very anxious about the girl, and perhaps even more
-anxious about his Van Roon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Please don’t say ‘his Van Roon’ before he’s proved
-the ownership.”</p>
-
-<p>“That won’t be difficult, I fear.”</p>
-
-<p>“We must make it as difficult for him as we can,”
-said the tenacious Laura.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur shook his head. As a man of the world,
-he had but scant hope that the mystery would be cleared
-up in the way Laura desired.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LI">LI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span>t</span> Number Forty-six, New Cross Street, the bottom
-seemed to have fallen out of the world.
-June’s flight with the picture, as soon as it became
-known to William, caused him not only intense pain,
-but also deep concern. The news was a tragic shock
-for which he was quite unprepared; and the behaviour
-of his master seemed, if possible, to make it worse.
-The old man was distraught. Now that it was no
-longer necessary to mask his intentions, prudence
-slipped from him like a veil. On his return, baffled
-and furious, from Victoria he at once accused William
-of being in the plot against him.</p>
-
-<p>William, hurt and astonished, was at a loss. He did
-not know all that had happened; he had only the broad
-facts to go upon that June had run off with the picture
-at an instant’s notice, without a word as to her plans
-and leaving no address; and the bitter reproaches of
-his master appeared to him the outpourings of a mind
-not quite sane.</p>
-
-<p>Such indeed they were. The truth was that upon
-one subject S. Gedge Antiques was a little unhinged.
-The love of money, an infirmity which had crept upon
-him year by year had begun to affect reason itself;
-and now that, as it seemed, he had thrown away, by
-his own carelessness, the one really big prize of his
-career, this dark fact came out.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</span></p>
-
-<p>William, who found it very difficult indeed to think
-ill of anyone, could only accept the broad fact that the
-picture had meant even more to the old man than he had
-supposed; therefore this good fellow was inclined to
-pity his master. It was not for a mind such as his,
-which took things on trust, to fill in the details of a
-tragic episode. He did not look for the wherefore and
-the why, yet he was very deeply grieved by what had
-occurred.</p>
-
-<p>The old man could not rid his brain of the illusion
-that William had connived with June. Under the lash
-of an unreasoning rage he did not pause to consider
-the improbability of this, nor did he try to attain a
-broad view of the whole matter; it was almost as if his
-resentment, craving an outlet, must wreak itself upon
-the thing near at hand. Yet in the course of a few
-hours this dangerous obsession was to bring its own
-nemesis.</p>
-
-<p>About twelve o’clock the next day, M. Duponnet
-came to fetch the picture. It had been arranged that
-Mr. Gedge should present the cheque at the Bank in the
-meantime, and if duly approved, as there was every
-reason to expect that it would be, the Van Roon should
-be handed over at once.</p>
-
-<p>To the Frenchman’s surprise, he was now greeted by
-his own cheque, backed by a livid countenance of tragic
-exasperation. The treasure had been stolen.</p>
-
-<p>“Stolen!”</p>
-
-<p>The face of S. Gedge Antiques forbade all scepticism.</p>
-
-<p>“When? By whom?”</p>
-
-<p>Mussewer Duponny might well ask by whom! It
-had been stolen by the girl who did the housework&mdash;the
-old man could not bring himself, in such circumstances,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</span>
-to speak of her as his niece&mdash;and he had not
-the least doubt in his own mind that the youth who
-helped him in the business who, at that moment, was
-in the next room polishing chairs, had put her wise in
-the matter, and was standing in with her.</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques, still in a frenzy of frustration,
-was hardly able to realize the gravity of this charge.
-Had he been in full command of himself, he must have
-weighed such a statement very carefully indeed before
-it was made. But remorselessly driven by his greed,
-he threw discretion to the wind.</p>
-
-<p>The disgruntled purchaser was quick to seize upon
-the accusation. To his mind, at least, its import was
-clear. Even if the seller did not perceive its full implication,
-the buyer of the Van Roon had no difficulty
-in doing so.</p>
-
-<p>“We must call in ze police, hein?”</p>
-
-<p>The words brought the old man up short. He proceeded
-to take his bearings; to find out, as well as his
-rage would let him, just where he stood in the matter.
-Certainly the police did not appeal to him at all. It
-was not a case for publicity, because the picture was
-not his: that was to say, having now reached a point
-where the law of <i>meum</i> and <i>tuum</i> had become curiously
-involved, it might prove exceedingly difficult and
-even more inconvenient to establish a title to the Van
-Roon. No, he preferred to do without the police.</p>
-
-<p>M. Duponnet, however, unfettered by a sense of restraint,
-argued volubly that the police be called in. The
-assistant was guilty or he was not guilty; and in any
-event it would surely be wise to enlist the help of those
-who knew best how to deal with thieves. Nothing
-could have exceeded the buyer’s conviction that this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</span>
-should be done, yet to his chagrin he quite failed to
-communicate it to S. Gedge Antiques.</p>
-
-<p>From that moment, a suspicion began to grow up
-in the Frenchman’s mind that the seller was not laying
-all his cards on the table. Could it be that he was telling
-a cock and bull story? According to Mr. Thornton,
-who was acting as a go-between, this old man had long
-had the name of a shifty customer. Undoubtedly he
-looked one this morning. Jules Duponnet had seldom
-seen a frontispiece he liked less; and the theory now
-gained a footing in his mind that the old fox wanted to
-go back on his bargain.</p>
-
-<p>There were two drawbacks, all the same, to M.
-Duponnet’s theory. In the first place, as no money
-had yet changed hands, it would be quite easy for S.
-Gedge Antiques to undo the bargain by a straightforward
-means; and further, beyond any shadow of doubt,
-the old man was horribly upset by his loss.</p>
-
-<p>“Let us go to ze bureau, Meester Gedge,” he said, as
-conviction renewed itself in the light of these facts.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, no,” cried the old man, whose brain, capable
-at times of a surprising vigour, was now furiously
-at work.</p>
-
-<p>“But why not?”</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques did not reply immediately, but
-at last a dark light broke over the vulpine face. “Why
-not, Mussewer Duponny? I’ll tell you. Because I
-think there may be a better way of dealing with that
-damned young scoundrel yonder.” William’s master
-pointed towards the inner room. “Happen the police’ll
-need all sorts of information we don’t want to give
-them; and my experience is, Mussewer, their methods
-are slow and clumsy, and out of date. They may take<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</span>
-weeks over this job, and long before they are through
-with it, the picture will be in America.”</p>
-
-<p>“You may be right, Meester Gedge. But where’s
-the ’arm in seeing what they can do?”</p>
-
-<p>With the air of one whose faculties have been braced
-by a mental tonic, the old man shook his head decisively.
-“Mussewer Duponny,” he said, in a slow voice
-which gave weight and value to each word, “I’m thinking
-with a little help from yourself and Mr. Thornton I
-can deal with this&mdash;this scoundrel much better than
-the police.”</p>
-
-<p>“At your sairvice, Meester Gedge,” said Jules Duponnet,
-with a dry smile. He could not have been the
-man he was, had he remained insensitive to the depth
-of cunning which now transfigured the face of the old
-dealer. “But for Meester Thornton of course I cannot
-spick.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t, of course,” said the old fox, briskly.
-“But we’ll go right now, and have a word with Mr.
-Thornton on the subject.”</p>
-
-<p>Like one in whom a change sudden and mysterious
-has been wrought, S. Gedge Antiques stepped through
-the house door into the passage, took his hat and coat
-from the peg, and his heavy knotted walking stick out
-of the rickety umbrella stand, put his head into the
-room next door and said, in a harsh tone to the polisher
-of chairs, “Boy, I’m going along as far as Mr. Thornton’s,
-so you’d better keep an eye on the shop.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LII">LII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> old man, contrary to his practice, was a little
-late for the midday meal, and he had a poor
-appetite for it. As he tried to eat the cold mutton and
-the potato William had baked for him, his thoughts
-seemed a long way from his plate. William himself,
-who was too full of trouble to give much attention to
-food, now saw that the old man’s earlier ferocity,
-which had hurt him even more than it had puzzled
-him, had yielded to a depth of melancholy that was
-hardly less disturbing. But the master’s manner, on
-his return from the visit to Mr. Thornton, was far
-more in accordance with his nature, at least as William
-understood that nature; indeed, his voice had recaptured
-the note of pathos which seemed natural to it
-whenever the Van Roon was mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>“I ought to tell you, boy,” he said, in a husky tone,
-towards the end of the meal, “that it looks as if there’ll
-be the dickens to pay over this job. A French detective
-from Paris has been here, and he’s coming again this
-afternoon to have a word with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“With me, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>The old man, whose eyes were furtively devouring
-the face of William, was quick to observe its startled
-look. “Yes, boy, you’re the one he wants to see. The
-Loov authorities have managed to get wind of this
-Van Roon of ours, and they say it’s the feller they’ve
-been looking for since 1898.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</span></p>
-
-<p>Easy to gull William in some respects was, yet, he
-could not help thinking that the French Government
-took a little too much for granted.</p>
-
-<p>“I think so, too&mdash;but there it is,” said the old man.
-“They have to prove the Van Roon is theirs, and that
-won’t be easy, as I told the detective this morning. But
-I understand that the question of identity turns upon
-certain marks, as well as upon similarity of subject.”</p>
-
-<p>William allowed that the subject had an undoubted
-similarity with that of the picture stolen from the
-Louvre, but then, as he explained, every known Van
-Roon had a strong family likeness. In size they varied
-little, and they always depicted trees, water, clouds,
-and in some cases a windmill.</p>
-
-<p>“Ours, I believe, had no windmill.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, only water and trees, and a wonderful bit
-of cloud.”</p>
-
-<p>“I understand,” said the old man mournfully, “that
-the one that was stolen from the Loov had no windmill.”</p>
-
-<p>“The other one in the Louvre has no windmill; there
-are two at Amsterdam that have no windmill; and
-there’s one at The Hague, I believe, that hasn’t a windmill.”</p>
-
-<p>“May be. These are all points in our favour. But,
-as I say, the whole question will turn upon certain
-identification marks, and this French detective is coming
-here this afternoon to examine it. So it seems to
-me that the best thing you can do is to go off at once,
-and get it back from that hussy, because you can take
-it from me, boy, that we are going to be held responsible
-for the picture’s safety by the French police; and
-if when the detective calls again all we have to say is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</span>
-that it has vanished like magic, and we are unable to
-produce it, we may easily find ourselves in the lock-up.”</p>
-
-<p>This speech, worded with care and uttered with
-weight, had the effect of increasing William’s distress.
-Underlying it was the clear assumption that he was in
-league with June, and this was intolerable to him, less
-because of her strangely misguided action, than for the
-reason that the master to whom he had been so long
-devoted found it impossible to believe his word.</p>
-
-<p>“If only I knew where Miss June was, sir&mdash;” he said,
-miserably.</p>
-
-<p>The old man, with the fragment of caution still left
-to him, was able to refrain from giving William the lie.
-It wasn’t easy to forbear, since he was quite unable
-to accept the open and palpable fact that his assistant
-was in complete ignorance of June’s whereabouts. So
-true it is that the gods first tamper with the reason of
-those whom they would destroy!</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques was in the toils of a powerful
-and dangerous obsession. He saw William in terms
-of himself; indeed, he was overtaken by the nemesis
-which dogs the crooked mind. For the old man was
-now incapable of seeing things as they were; the
-monstrous shadow of his own wickedness and folly
-enshrouded others like a pall. One so shrewd as William’s
-master, who had had such opportunities, moreover,
-of gauging the young man’s worth, should have
-been the last person in the world to hold him guilty
-of this elaborate and futile deceit; but the old man was
-in thrall to the Frankenstein his own evil thoughts had
-created.</p>
-
-<p>He was sure that William was lying. Just as in the
-first instance the young man had given the picture to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</span>
-“the hussy”, he was now in collusion with her in an
-audacious attempt to dispose of it. S. Gedge Antiques
-was not in a frame of mind to sift, to analyze, to ask
-questions; it seemed natural and convenient to embrace
-such a theory and, urged by the demon within, he was
-now building blindly upon it.</p>
-
-<p>About three o’clock William was engaged in the lumber
-room putting derelict pieces of furniture to rights,
-when his master came with a long and serious face, and
-said that the French detective wanted to see him. William
-put on his coat and followed the old man into the
-shop where he found two persons awaiting him. With
-only one of these was William acquainted. Mr. Thornton
-was well known to him by sight, but he had not seen
-before the French dealer, M. Duponnet.</p>
-
-<p>With a nice sense of drama on the part of S. Gedge
-Antiques the Frenchman was now made known to
-William as M. Duplay of the Paris police. Midway
-between a snuffle and a groan, the old man, raising his
-eyes in the direction of heaven, besought his assistant to
-tell Mussewer all that he knew as to the picture’s whereabouts.</p>
-
-<p>William, alas, knew no more than his master; and he
-found no difficulty in saying so. He was not believed,
-since the old man had had no scruple in the blackening
-of his character, and the Frenchman, with a skilful assumption
-of the manner of an official, which the others
-solemnly played up to, proceeded to threaten the assistant
-with the terrors of the law.</p>
-
-<p>The French Government was convinced from the
-description, which had been given of the Van Roon by
-those who had seen it, that there could be little doubt
-it was their long missing property. Such being the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</span>
-case, the police were only willing to allow the young
-man another twenty-four hours in which to produce it
-for examination. If he failed to do that within the
-time specified, a warrant would be applied for, and he
-might find himself in prison.</p>
-
-<p>In the face of this intimidation, William stuck to
-his story. He knew no more than the dead where the
-picture was; Miss June, to whom it had been given,
-had suddenly disappeared with it the previous night.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is Mees June?” said the Frenchman sharply.</p>
-
-<p>Miss June was the niece of Mr. Gedge.</p>
-
-<p>“And he gave the picture to her?” The disappointed
-buyer, who felt that his suspicions in the matter
-were being confirmed, looked keenly from the young
-man to the old.</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir,” said William, with the utmost simplicity.
-“I gave it to her myself.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a pause, in which astonishment played its
-part, and then Mr. Thornton gravely interposed: “How
-do you mean you gave her the picture? It isn’t yours
-to give. It is the property of your master.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are forgetting, boy,” said the old man in a
-voice in which oil and vinegar were wonderfully mingled,
-“that I would not allow my niece to have such
-a valuable thing, and that you then made it over to me
-to dispose of to the best advantage.”</p>
-
-<p>“I gave it to Miss June,” persisted the young man
-simply, “but I told her that, as you had set your heart
-upon it, I hoped very much she would let you have it.”</p>
-
-<p>While this odd conversation went on, the two dealers
-exchanged glances. Both were greatly puzzled. They
-were as one in being a little suspicious of the absolute
-bona fides of S. Gedge Antiques. Either this was a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</span>
-very clumsy method of establishing them, or there was
-more behind the picture’s disappearance than met the
-eye.</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques, whose brain was working at
-high pressure, was not slow to read their minds. He
-closed the discussion with a brevity which yet was not
-lacking altogether in persuasion. “There’s no time,
-boy, to go into all that,” he said. “The girl’s gone off
-with the picture, and wherever she’s to be found, you
-must go right away, and get it back from her, and
-bring it here to me, or we may both find ourselves in
-the lock-up. That is so, Mussewer Duplay&mdash;what?”
-And with a lively gesture the old fox turned to the
-Frenchman.</p>
-
-<p>Puzzled that gentleman certainly was, yet he heartily
-agreed. If the Van Roon was not produced within the
-next four and twenty hours, a warrant would be issued.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is the hussy? That’s what we want to
-know,” said the old man. “Tell us what has become
-of her.”</p>
-
-<p>Frankly William did not know. He was not believed,
-at any rate, by his master who by now was deeper
-than ever in the coil of his own crookedness. As for
-the two dealers who, between them, had contrived, as
-they thought, to acquire one of the world’s treasures
-for an absurd sum, they did not know what to think.
-The comedy they were performing at the instance of
-S. Gedge Antiques was designed to bemuse the assistant,
-yet both men had an uneasy feeling at the
-back of their minds that master and man were engaged
-in a piece of flapdoodle for their private benefit. If so,
-the old man was a fool as well as a rogue, and the
-young one was a rogue as well as a fool. Scant was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</span>
-the comfort to be got out of this reflection. They
-seemed very far from the goal on which their hearts
-were set; and impatience of such methods was just
-beginning to show itself in the bearing of Messrs.
-Duponnet and Thornton when the affair took a new
-and remarkable turn.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LIII">LIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span> tall</span> man, quietly dressed, yet wearing a silk
-hat and an eyeglass, with a pleasant air of authority,
-came into the shop. For a moment he stood by
-the door, a rather cool gazed fixed upon the group of
-four; and then, an odd mingling of alertness and caution
-in his manner, he advanced to the proprietor.</p>
-
-<p>“May I have a word with you,” said the visitor,
-with an air of apology for the benefit of the others
-whom he included in a smile which expressed little.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly you may, Sir Arthur,” said S. Gedge
-Antiques, an odd change coming into his tone. Taken
-by surprise, the old man had been slow to reckon up
-the situation. He was not able to detach himself from
-the group, and lead the rather unwelcome visitor out
-of earshot before that gentleman had divulged the business
-which had brought him there.</p>
-
-<p>“You must be anxious about your niece, Mr. Gedge,”
-said Sir Arthur, who saw no need for secrecy.</p>
-
-<p>The old man was very anxious indeed.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve heard from the Hospital, of course?”</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that the old man had heard nothing; and
-Sir Arthur was proceeding to deplore this oversight
-on the part of those whom he had asked over the telephone
-to communicate with Number Forty-six, New
-Cross Street, when William, whose ear had caught the
-sinister word ‘Hospital’ could no longer restrain a
-painful curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>The young man sprang forward with clasped hands<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</span>
-and shining eyes. “Oh, sir, what has happened to
-Miss June?” he cried. “Tell me&mdash;please!”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur, his mission concrete in his mind, brought
-a steady eye to bear upon the young man before he
-slowly replied: “She has had a mental breakdown, and
-we were able to arrange for her to be taken late last
-night to St. Jude’s Hospital.” He then turned to the
-old man, who had either grasped the news more slowly,
-or was less affected by it, and said: “It’s a case for
-careful treatment, in the opinion of the doctor who saw
-her soon after she arrived at my house, and upon
-whose advice she was sent to the Hospital. I am very
-sorry now that I did not communicate with you
-myself!”</p>
-
-<p>It was the young man, however, as Sir Arthur did
-not fail to notice, who seemed really to be troubled by
-what had befallen this unfortunate girl. S. Gedge
-Antiques, for his part, soon shewed that his inmost
-thoughts were centered upon something else.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you tell me, sir,” he said, with an excitement
-he did not try to conceal, “whether the picture she
-took away with her is quite safe?”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur looked hard at the old man before he
-answered: “Mr. Gedge, the picture is perfectly safe.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank God!” The exclamation of S. Gedge Antiques
-was not the less heartfelt for being involuntary.</p>
-
-<p>“And Miss June?” interposed William huskily. “Is
-she?... Is she...?” He was too upset to frame
-his question.</p>
-
-<p>“She is very ill indeed, I’m afraid,” said Sir Arthur,
-in a kind tone, “but she is in the best possible hands.
-Anything that can be done for her will be done&mdash;I am
-sure you can count upon that.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Is she going to die?”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur shook his head. “When I last rang up
-the Hospital, I asked that question, but they will not
-give an opinion. They prefer not to go beyond the
-fact that she is critically ill.”</p>
-
-<p>Tears gathered slowly in William’s eyes. Conscience
-was pricking him sharply. Had he not brought
-this unlucky picture into the house, such a terrible thing
-would not have occurred.</p>
-
-<p>William’s brief talk with the visitor, whose unheralded
-appearance upon the scene was by no means
-welcome to S. Gedge Antiques, gave his master a much
-needed opportunity to decide upon the course of action.
-The two dealers knew now that the Van Roon was safe,
-but as far as William and Sir Arthur were concerned,
-the situation was full of complexity. Much cunning
-would be needed to smooth out the tangle; and to this
-end, as the old man promptly realized, the first thing
-to be done was to induce the Frenchman and his agent
-to quit the shop.</p>
-
-<p>“You hear, Mussewer, that the picture is safe,” he
-said to the buyer, soapily. “I will go at once and get
-it from this gentleman. If you will come in again
-to-morrow morning, it shall be ready for you.”</p>
-
-<p>M. Duponnet seemed inclined to await further developments,
-but S. Gedge Antiques had no scruples
-about dismissing his fellow conspirators. Without
-more ado, he ushered both dealers gently but firmly to
-the door. This new turn in the game had made
-them keenly curious to learn more of the affair, yet
-they realized that they were on thin ice themselves,
-and the peremptory manner of S. Gedge Antiques enforced
-that view. “To-morrow morning, gentlemen&mdash;come<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</span>
-and see me then!” he said, opening the shop door
-determinedly, and waiting for these inconvenient visitors
-to pass out.</p>
-
-<p>This task accomplished, the old man had to deal with
-one more delicate. He had to remove from the minds
-of William and Sir Arthur Babraham all suspicion in
-regard to himself. He came to them with his most
-sanctimonious air: “I can’t tell you, sir,” he assured
-Sir Arthur, “what a relief it is to know that my niece
-is in good hands. But I am afraid she is a very wicked
-girl.” Then he turned abruptly to William, and said
-in a low tone that he wished to have a private conversation
-with Sir Arthur.</p>
-
-<p>For once, however, the young man shewed less than
-his usual docility. He was most eager to learn all
-that had happened to June, and to gain a clue, if possible,
-to her strange conduct; besides the painful change
-in his master now filled him with distrust.</p>
-
-<p>The shrewd judge of the world and its ways upon
-whom the duty had fallen of holding the balance true
-was quick to note the reluctance of the younger man;
-and even if the nature of the case would compel him
-in the end to take the word of the proprietor against
-that of the servant, he was influenced already, in spite
-of himself, by that open simplicity which had had such
-an effect upon his daughter.</p>
-
-<p>“Is there anything, Mr. Gedge, we have to say to one
-another, which this young man may not hear?” said
-Sir Arthur quietly, and then, as the old dealer did not
-immediately reply, he added coolly, “I think not.”
-Turning to William he said: “Please stay with us.
-There are one or two questions I have to put which I
-hope you will be good enough to answer.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</span></p>
-
-<p>This did not suit the book of S. Gedge Antiques,
-but he decided to play a bold game. “I’m very much
-obliged to you for your kindness in taking care of the
-picture,” he said, with a smirk to his visitor. “As you
-know, it is a thing of great value. Had anything happened
-to it, the loss would have been terrible. Perhaps
-you will allow me to go at once and fetch it, for I don’t
-mind telling you, sir, that until I get it back again my
-mind will not be easy.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur looked narrowly at the face of unpleasant
-cunning before him, and then he said very quietly:
-“I am sorry to have to tell you, Mr. Gedge, that your
-niece claims the picture as her property.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man was prepared for a development
-which he had been able to foresee. “I am afraid she
-is a very wicked girl,” he said, in the tone of a known
-good man whose feelings are deeply wounded. “I ask
-you, sir, is it likely that a thing of such immense value
-would belong to her?”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur had to agree that it was not, yet remembering
-his daughter’s deep conviction on the subject,
-he was careful to assert June’s claim.</p>
-
-<p>“Moonshine, I assure you, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur, however, did not regard this as conclusive.
-In the light of what had happened he felt
-it to be his duty to seek a clear proof of the picture’s
-ownership; therefore he now turned to William and
-told him that the girl in the Hospital declared that he
-had given her the Van Roon. A plain statement of fact
-was demanded, and in the face of so direct an appeal
-the young man did not hesitate to give one. Originally
-the picture was his property, but a week ago he had
-given it to his master’s niece.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What have you to say to that, Mr. Gedge?” asked
-Sir Arthur.</p>
-
-<p>The heart of William seemed to miss a beat while he
-waited painfully for the answer to this question. To
-one of his primitive nature, his whole life, past, present
-and future seemed to turn upon the old man’s next
-words; and a kind of slow agony overcame him, as he
-realized what these words were in all their cynical
-wickedness.</p>
-
-<p>“The Van Roon is mine, sir,” said S. Gedge Antiques,
-in a voice, strong, definite and calm. “It was
-bought with my money.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur fixed upon the stupefied William an interrogating
-eye. In his own mind he felt sure that
-this must be the fact of the matter, yet it was hard to
-believe that a young man who seemed to be openness
-itself was deliberately lying. “What do <i>you</i> say?” he
-asked gently.</p>
-
-<p>William was too shocked to say anything. His
-master took a full advantage of the pause which followed.
-“Come, boy,” he said, in a tone of kindly
-expostulation, “you know as well as I do that you were
-given the money to buy a few things down in Suffolk
-in the ordinary way of business on your week’s holiday
-and that this little thing was one of your purchases.”</p>
-
-<p>Sadly the young man shook his head. The cold
-falsehood was heavier upon him than a blow from the
-old man’s fist would have been, yet it roused him to the
-point of blunt denial. Quite simply he set forth the
-true facts.</p>
-
-<p>“The master gave me twenty pounds to attend a sale
-by auction at Loseby Grange, Saxmundham, and I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</span>
-bought things to the value of twenty pounds one and
-ninepence.”</p>
-
-<p>In a voice which was a nice mingling of humour and
-pathos the old man interposed. “This picture, which
-I admit was bought for a song as the saying is, was
-among them.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir,” said William, “I bought this picture with
-my own money from an old woman in a shop at
-Crowdham Market.”</p>
-
-<p>So much for the issue, which now was quite clearly
-defined. Sir Arthur, however, could only regret that
-the supremely difficult task of keeping the scales of justice
-true had developed upon him.</p>
-
-<p>“What did you pay for the picture, may I ask?”</p>
-
-<p>“Five shillings,” said William, unhesitatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Five shillings!”</p>
-
-<p>“It was as black as night when I bought it, sir, with
-a still life, which must have been at least two hundred
-years old daubed over it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Black enough, I allow,” said the old man, “but it
-can’t alter the fact that the picture’s mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let me be quite clear on one point,” said Sir Arthur.
-“You maintain, Mr. Gedge, that the picture was bought
-at a sale with your money, and this young man declares
-it was bought at a shop with his.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is so,” said the old man.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you happen to have kept a list of the things that
-were bought at the sale?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, I’m afraid I haven’t one.”</p>
-
-<p>Here, however, the old man’s memory was at fault,
-and this material fact William went on to prove. Under
-the counter was a file containing a mass of receipted
-bills, and from among these the young man was able<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</span>
-to produce a document which told heavily in his favour.
-It was a list of his purchases at Loseby Grange,
-carefully written out, with the sum paid opposite each
-item, and at the foot of it, immediately beneath the
-figures “£20.1.9” was written in a rather shaky but
-businesslike hand, “Audited and found correct. S.
-Gedge.”</p>
-
-<p>This lucky discovery went some way towards establishing
-William’s case. The paper contained no mention
-of a picture, other than a print after P. Bartolozzi,
-which William took at once from the shop window.
-Finished dissembler as he was, the old man could not
-conceal the fact that he was shaken, but like a desperate
-gambler with a fortune at stake, he hastily changed his
-tactics. He began now to pooh-pooh the receipt, and
-declared that even if his unfortunate memory had
-played him a trick as to where the picture had been
-actually bought, it did not affect the contention that it
-had been purchased with his money.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur Babraham, in his search for the truth,
-could not help contrasting the bearing of the claimants.
-Avarice was engraved deeply upon the yellow parchment
-countenance of S. Gedge Antiques, whereas so
-open was the face of William that it went against the
-grain to accuse its owner of baseness. In spite, of this,
-however, Sir Arthur could not help asking himself
-how it had come about that a young man so poor, who
-was yet clever enough to pick up such a treasure for a
-few shillings had parted with it so lightly.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the answer to that question he felt much
-would depend.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose when you gave this picture away you did
-not realize its great value?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</span></p>
-
-<p>“As a matter of fact, sir, I hardly thought about it
-at all in that way. I only saw that it was a very lovely
-thing, and Miss June saw that it was a very lovely
-thing. She admired it so much that she begged me to
-let her buy it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you take her money?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir. She accepted it as a gift. I asked her not
-to let us think of it as money.”</p>
-
-<p>“Could you afford to do that?” Involuntarily the
-questioner looked at the young man’s threadbare coat
-and shabby trousers, and at once decided that he, of
-all people, certainly could not.</p>
-
-<p>William’s answer, accompanied by a baffling smile,
-gave pause to the man of the world. “I hope, sir, I
-shall always afford the luxury of not setting a price
-on beauty.”</p>
-
-<p>The dark saying brought a frown to the face of Mr.
-Worldly Wiseman, who said in his slow voice: “But
-surely you would not give away a Van Roon to the
-first person who asks for it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not, sir&mdash;if you happen to&mdash;to&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“If you happen to what?”</p>
-
-<p>“To like the person.”</p>
-
-<p>Although the young man blushed when he made this
-confession, such an ingenuousness did his cause no
-harm. Sir Arthur Babraham, all the same, was puzzled
-more than a little by such an attitude of mind. This
-indifference to money was almost uncanny; and yet
-as he compared the face of the assistant with that of the
-master, the difference was tragic. One suffused with
-the light that never was on sea or land, the other dark
-as the image of Baal whose shadow was cast half across
-the shop.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LIV">LIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">D</span>oubt</span> was melting in the mind of Sir Arthur
-Babraham. He was coming now to a perception
-of the truth. To one who lived in the world,
-who saw men and things at an obtuse angle, the story
-as told by this young man verged upon the incredible
-and yet he felt sure it was true. The fellow was an
-Original, an unkind critic might even say that he was
-a trifle “cracked,” but if this visionary who adored
-beauty for its own sake could enact such a piece of
-deceit it would be unwise ever to trust one’s judgment
-again in regard to one’s fellow creatures. And the
-reverse of the medal was shewn just as plainly in the
-face of the old dealer.</p>
-
-<p>Man of affairs as Sir Arthur was, however, he knew
-better than to take a hasty decision upon what, after
-all, might prove to be wrong premises. It was his
-clear duty to see justice done in a strange matter, but
-he would leave to others the task of enforcing it. Thus
-when the old man renewed his demand to be allowed to
-go at once to Park Lane and get the picture, he was
-met by a refusal which if very polite was also final.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Gedge, my daughter holds this picture in trust
-for your niece, who I am informed by the Hospital, has
-been most cruelly used by somebody. She accepts&mdash;we
-both accept&mdash;the story told by your niece as to how
-in the first instance she came to possess this most valuable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</span>
-thing, which by the way this young man has been
-able to confirm. If you persist in trying to establish
-your claim I am afraid you must apply to the law.”</p>
-
-<p>This speech, delivered with judicial weight, was a
-bomb-shell. With a gasp the old man realized that the
-game was up; yet as soon as the first shock had passed
-he could hardly mask his fury. By his own folly the
-chance of a lifetime had been thrown away.</p>
-
-<p>As he was now to find, he was bereft of more than
-the Van Roon. He had lost the trust and affection of
-William. In the first agony of defeat, S. Gedge Antiques
-was far from realizing what the fact would mean,
-but it was brought home to him poignantly two days
-later.</p>
-
-<p>William’s first act, when Sir Arthur had left the
-shop, was to go to the Hospital. Here he was received
-by a member of its staff who told him that the
-patient was too ill to see anyone, and that even if she
-recovered, her mind might be permanently affected.
-The doctor who discussed the case with the young man
-allowed himself this frankness, because he was very
-anxious for light to be thrown on it. The girl had
-been cruelly knocked about, there were heavy bruises
-on her body and marks on her throat which suggested
-that she had had to fight for her life; and this was borne
-out by the delirium through which she was passing. In
-the main it seemed to be inspired by terror of a man
-whom she spoke of continually as Uncle Si.</p>
-
-<p>The visitor was questioned closely as to the identity
-of the mysterious Uncle Si. He was pressed to say all
-that he knew about him, for the Hospital had to consider
-whether this was not a matter for the police.</p>
-
-<p>William was shocked and rather terrified by the turn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</span>
-things had taken. The scales had been torn from his
-eyes with a force that left him bewildered. He had
-trusted his master in the way he trusted all the world,
-and now disillusion had come in a series of flashes
-which left him half blind, he felt life could never be
-the same. His own world of the higher reality was
-after all no more than the paradise of a fool. Perversely
-he had shut his eyes to the wickedness of men
-and their weak folly and in consequence he now found
-himself poised on the lip of a chasm.</p>
-
-<p>Two days after the terrible discovery which had
-changed his attitude to life, he told his master that he
-was going to leave him. It was a heavy blow. Not
-for a moment had such a thing entered the old man’s
-calculations. He had got into the habit of regarding
-this good simple fellow as having so little mind of his
-own that for all practical purposes he was now a part
-of himself.</p>
-
-<p>So inconceivable was it to S. Gedge Antiques that
-one wedded to him by years of faithful service could
-take such a step, that it was hard to believe the young
-man meant what he said. He must be joking. But
-the wish was the anxious parent of the thought, for
-even if the old man’s sight was failing, he was yet able
-to see the disdain in the eyes of William.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t part with you, boy,” he said bleakly.</p>
-
-<p>That, indeed, was the open truth. To part with
-this absolutely honest and dependable fellow who had
-grown used to his ways, for whom no day’s work was
-too long, for whom no task was too exacting, who
-was always obliging and cheerful, whose keen young
-sight and almost uncanny “nose” for a good thing had
-become quite indispensable to one who was no longer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</span>
-the man he had been; for S. Gedge Antiques to lose
-this paragon was simply not to be thought of.</p>
-
-<p>“Boy don’t talk foolishly. I’ll raise your wages five
-shillings a week from the first of the New Year.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man could not see the look of slow horror
-that crept into the eyes of William; yet in spite of his
-other infirmity, he did not fail to catch the note of
-grim pain in the stifled, “I’ll have to leave you, sir.
-I can’t stay here.”</p>
-
-<p>Obtuse the old man was, yet he now perceived the
-finality of these broken words. As he realized all they
-meant to him, the sharp pain was like the stab of a
-knife. William was not merely indispensable. His
-master loved him. And he had killed the thing he
-loved.</p>
-
-<p>“Boy, I can’t let you go.” Human weakness fell
-upon the old man like a shadow; this second blow was
-even more terrible than the loss of the Van Roon which
-was still a nightmare in his thoughts. “I’m old. I’m
-getting deaf and my eyes are going.” He who had had
-no spark of pity for others did not scruple to ask it for
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>William was a rock. Primitive as he was, now that
-he could respect his master no more, he must cease to
-serve him. The revelation of that master’s baseness
-had stricken him to the heart; for the time being it
-had taken the savour out of life itself.</p>
-
-<p>One hope, one frail hope remained to S. Gedge Antiques,
-even when he knew at last that his assistant
-was “through” with him. In times so difficult the
-young man might not be able to get another job; yet
-he had only to mention it to discover it was not a staff
-on which he would be able to lean.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</span></p>
-
-<p>William, it seemed, had got another job already.</p>
-
-<p>“At how much a week?” Habit was so strong,
-there was no concealing the sneer in the tone of surprised
-inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>Three pounds a week was to be William’s salary.
-The old man could only gasp. It brought home to him,
-as perhaps nothing else could have done, the real worth
-of the treasure he was about to lose. It was four times
-the rate at which he had thought well to reward these
-priceless services.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is being fool enough to give you that money?”
-he sneered, the ruling passion still strong in him.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Hutton, sir, at the top of the street,” was the
-mournful answer.</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques dug a savage tooth in his lower
-lip. Joseph Hutton was a young and “pushful” rival
-whom on instinct he hated. “Fellow’s a fool to go
-spoiling the market,” he snarled.</p>
-
-<p>Alas, the old man knew but too well that as far as
-William was concerned, it was not at all a question of
-spoiling the market. That aspect of the matter would
-never arise in his mind.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LV">LV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">E</span>very</span> day for a fortnight William went to the
-Hospital, only to be denied a sight of the patient.
-June was fighting for life. And even when the crisis
-was passed and it began to appear that the fight would
-be successful, she had to face an issue just as critical
-and yet more terrible, for the fear remained that she
-would lose her reason.</p>
-
-<p>In this time of darkness William was most unhappy.
-But as far as he was concerned, events moved quickly.
-He said good-bye to his master, removed his belongings
-from Number Forty-six, New Cross Street, and entered
-the employ of a neighbouring dealer, a man of
-far more liberal mind than S. Gedge Antiques; one
-who, moreover, well understood the value of such a
-servant.</p>
-
-<p>For William, it was a terrible wrench. He was like
-a plant whose roots have been torn from the soil. With
-the ardour of a simple character he had loved his
-master, trusting and believing in him to an extent only
-possible to those endowed with rare felicity of nature.
-In spite of himself he was now forced to accept the
-hard and bitter truth that the old man upon whom he
-had lavished affection was not only a miser, but something
-worse. When the passion which ruled his life
-was fully roused he was tempted to anything.</p>
-
-<p>Life, felt William, could never be the same again.
-There was still the beauty of the visible universe, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</span>
-pageantry of the seasons to adore; the harmony and
-colour of the world’s design might still entrance the
-senses of an artist, but not again must he surrender his
-being entire to the joy of abounding in these wonders.
-It was the duty of every man who dwelt upon the earth,
-however humbly, to learn something of the hearts of
-others. One could only live apart, it seemed, at one’s
-peril.</p>
-
-<p>While in the lower depths and beginning to despair
-of seeing June again, he called as usual at the Hospital
-one afternoon, to be greeted by the long-hoped-for
-news that the patient had taken a turn for the better.
-Moreover she had begged to be allowed to see him; and
-this permission was now given.</p>
-
-<p>Carrying the daily bunch of flowers, by means of
-which June had already recognized his care for her,
-he was led along the ward to the bed in which she lay.
-The change in her appearance startled him. Little remained
-of the whimsical yet high-spirited and practical
-girl who had mocked his inefficiency in regard to the
-world and its ways. To see those great eyes with the
-horror still in them and that meagre face, dead white
-amid the snow of its pillows, was to feel a tragic tightening
-of the heart.</p>
-
-<p>Tears ran down June’s cheeks at the sight of the
-flowers. “I don’t deserve your goodness,” she said.
-“You can’t guess how wicked I am.”</p>
-
-<p>As she extended to him her thin arms he found it
-hard to rein back his own tears. What suffering he
-had unwittingly brought upon this poor thing. But it
-was impossible to keep track of her mind which even
-now was in the thrall of an awful nightmare. God
-knew in what darkness it was still plunged.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</span></p>
-
-<p>Shuddering convulsively at the memories his voice
-and his presence brought to her, the words that came
-to her lips tore his heart. “Am I struck? Am I like
-the Hoodoo? Am I like Uncle Si?”</p>
-
-<p>To him, just then, this wildness was hardly more
-than a symptom of a mind deranged. His great distress
-did not allow him to pursue its implication, nor
-could he understand the nadir of the soul from which it
-sprang. Yet many times in the days to follow he was
-haunted by those words. They came to him in his
-waking hours and often in lieu of sleep at night.</p>
-
-<p>Returning from this short and unhappy interview
-to his new home at Number 116, New Cross Street,
-he found a surprise in store. A visitor had called to
-see him and, at the moment of his arrival, was on the
-point of going away.</p>
-
-<p>His late master, looking very grey and frail, had
-come to beg him to return. He declared that he was
-now too old to carry on alone. Sight and hearing were
-growing worse. He had another quarrel with the
-char and had been obliged to send her permanently
-away, although the truth of the matter was that an
-oppressed female had risen at last against his tyranny
-and had found a better place.</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques was now a figure for pity, but
-William, fresh from the lacerating presence of the niece
-whom he had so cruelly thrown out of doors, had none
-to give.</p>
-
-<p>The whine and snuffle of their last meeting, at whose
-remembrance rose the gorge of an honest man, were
-no more. Instead of the crocodile tricks were now the
-slow tears of a soul in agony. The truth was, this
-childless and friendless old man, who in the grip of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</span>
-passion that had eaten away his life, had never been
-able to spare a thought for his kind, simply could not
-do without the one human being he had learned to love.</p>
-
-<p>Their relations, as the old miser had discovered, were
-much closer than those of servant and master. William
-stood for youth, for the seeing mind, for cheerful, selfless
-giving, for life itself. The tones of his voice,
-his kindly readiness, his tolerance for an old man’s
-megrims; even the sound of this good fellow moving
-furniture in the next room and the sense of him about
-the place had grown to mean so much that, now they
-were withdrawn, all other things grew null.</p>
-
-<p>The old man felt now that he could not go on, and
-at any other moment, the force of his appeal might
-have touched the gentle nature to whom it was made.
-But the stars in their courses fought against S. Gedge
-Antiques. He was a figure to move the heart, as he
-stood in the shop of a rival dealer, the slow tears staining
-his thin cheeks, but William had the shadow of that
-other figure upon him. The wreck of youth, of reason
-itself, seemed infinitely more tragic than the falling
-of the temple upon the priest of Baal whose wickedness
-had brought the thing to pass.</p>
-
-<p>William denied his master. And yet hearing him
-out to the bitter end, he was unable to withhold a little
-pity. All feeling for the old man was dead; the bedside
-from which he had just come had finally destroyed the
-last spark of his affection, yet being the creature he
-was, he could not sit in judgment.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll pay you twice what you are getting now if
-you’ll return to me,” said the old man. “As I say, I
-can’t go on.” He peered into that face of ever-deepening
-distress. “What do you say, boy?” He took the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</span>
-hand of the young man in his own, as a father might
-take that of a beloved son. “I’ll give you anything&mdash;if
-you’ll come back. I haven’t long to live. Return
-to-night and I’ll leave you the business. Now what do
-you say?”</p>
-
-<p>Had it been human to forgive at such a moment, S.
-Gedge Antiques would have been forgiven. But William
-could only stand dumb and unresponsive before
-the master he had loved.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m a warm man.” The voice of the old dealer
-who had made money his god, sank to a whisper becoming
-a theme so sacred. “My investments have turned
-out well. There’s no saying what I <i>am</i> worth&mdash;but
-this I’ll tell you in strict confidence&mdash;I own property.”
-The hushed tone was barely audible. “In fact I own
-nearly half my own side of this street. Now what do
-you say? Promise to come back to me to-night and
-I’ll go right now and see my lawyer.”</p>
-
-<p>The young man stood the image of unhappiness.</p>
-
-<p>“Only speak the word and you shall inherit every
-stick and stone.”</p>
-
-<p>It was a moment to rend the heart of both, but the
-word was not spoken. For the second time that afternoon
-William was hard set to rein back his tears; but
-he had not the power to yield to this appeal.</p>
-
-<p>Overborne by the knowledge that the hand of Fate
-was upon him, S. Gedge Antiques, leaning heavily on
-his knotted stick, moved feebly towards the dark street.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LVI">LVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">W</span>illiam</span> continued his daily visits to the Hospital,
-but he was not allowed to see June. Life
-itself was no longer in immediate danger, but she had
-had a relapse and the doctors were still afraid that
-the mental injury would be permanent. Time alone
-could prove if such was the case or no, but the mood
-induced by the interview with William, and the strange
-words she had used to him, which seemed to belong to
-some fixed and secret obsession, were not a good sign.</p>
-
-<p>Following his visit there had been a rise of temperature.
-And this meant further weakening of a terror-haunted
-mind. Even if the need for anxiety was less
-acute, full recovery at best would be slow and more than
-ever doubtful.</p>
-
-<p>June was still menaced by the shadow when an event
-occurred which intensified William’s distress. One
-morning, about a week after he had rejected his master’s
-last appeal, an inspector of police came to see him.
-Neighbours of S. Gedge Antiques had called attention
-to the fact that the shop had remained closed for several
-days, and as it was known that the old man had
-lately been living alone, the circumstance had given
-rise to a certain amount of suspicion. William’s name
-had been mentioned as lately in his employ and he was
-asked to throw what light he could on the mystery.</p>
-
-<p>“The neighbours think we ought to enter the shop<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</span>
-and see if anything has happened,” said the police inspector.</p>
-
-<p>William thought so too. Remembering the last meeting
-with his master, which had left a scar he would
-carry to the grave, a kind of prophetic foreknowledge
-came to him now of a new development to this tragedy.</p>
-
-<p>It was not convenient just then to leave the shop as
-he happened to be in sole charge of it, therefore he was
-unable to accompany the inspector down the street.
-But half an hour later, on the return of his new employer,
-curiosity forced him to put on his hat and go
-forth to see if the thing he feared had come to pass.</p>
-
-<p>The police, already, had made an entry of Number
-Forty-six. Moreover a knot of people was assembled
-about the familiar door, which was half open. Its shutters
-were still up, but two constables were guarding the
-precincts. William caught the words “Murder&mdash;Suicide&mdash;Robbery”
-as he came up with the throng.</p>
-
-<p>In a state of painful excitement, he made his way
-to the door.</p>
-
-<p>S. Gedge Antiques, it seemed, had been found lying
-dead on the shop floor. The young man wished to pass
-in, but the police had instructions to allow no one to
-enter. A doctor summoned by telephone, had not yet
-come.</p>
-
-<p>William was still discussing the matter, when the
-inspector whose acquaintance he had made already,
-hearing voices at the door, came from the shop interior
-to see if it was the doctor who had at last arrived. He
-recognized William at once and invited him in.</p>
-
-<p>Outside was a murky November day, but with the
-windows still shuttered, it was necessary for three
-rather ineffectual gas-jets to be lit in the shop. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</span>
-light they gave was weird and fitful, but it sufficed to
-enable the young man to see what had occurred.</p>
-
-<p>As yet the body had not been touched. In accordance
-with custom in such cases, it had to lie just as it
-was until viewed by a doctor, for if moved by unskilful
-hands, some possible clue as to the cause of death might
-be obliterated.</p>
-
-<p>The old man was lying supine, before the Hoodoo.
-One glance at that face, so drawn, so thwarted, and
-yet so pitiful in its ghastliness, was enough to convince
-William that death had come directly from the hand of
-God. With a shiver he recalled the words of a strange
-and terrible clairvoyance, of late so often in his ears.
-“Am I struck? Am I like Uncle Si? Am I like the
-Hoodoo?”</p>
-
-<p>As the old man lay now, in all the starkness of his
-soul, with only the essence shewing in that tragic face,
-William was overcome by his likeness to the image. It
-was as if, at the last, his very nature had gone out to
-some false god who had perverted him. That splay-footed
-monster, so large of maw, an emblem of bestial
-greed, was too plainly a symbol of the mammon of unrighteousness
-to which the master had devoted his life.</p>
-
-<p>Consumed by pity, William turned away from a
-sight which he was no longer able to bear.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LVII">LVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">S</span>pring</span> came, and June who had had to fight for
-life and then for reason, won slowly to a final
-sense of victory. This came to her on a delicious April
-day, when the earth waking from its long sleep, was renewed
-with the joy of procreation. Her own nature,
-which had passed through so many months of darkness,
-was quickened to response in this magic hour.</p>
-
-<p>The force of the emotion owed much, no doubt, to
-the spirit of environment. Life had begun again for
-June under conditions different from any she had
-known. Powerful friends had been gained for her by
-a singularly romantic story. Of certain things that had
-happened she could not bring herself to tell; but when
-as much of the truth came out as could be derived from
-facts precariously pieced together, she became a real
-heroine in the sight of Sir Arthur Babraham and his
-daughter.</p>
-
-<p>But for her courage and keen wit a great work of
-art might have passed out of the country without anyone
-being the wiser. These staunch friends were determined
-that justice should be done in the matter, and
-kindly folk that they were, did not spare themselves in
-the long and difficult task of restoring her to health.</p>
-
-<p>The middle of April saw her installed in the gardener’s
-cottage at Homefield in the care of a motherly
-and genial housewife. Here she almost dared to be
-happy. The phantoms of the long night were being<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</span>
-dispersed at last in an atmosphere of sunny and cordial
-well-being.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Babraham, who walked across the park from
-the house every morning to see her, had become a sort
-of fairy godmother whose mission was to see that she
-did not worry about anything. She must give her days
-and nights to the duty of getting well. And she was
-going to be rich.</p>
-
-<p>Riches, alas, for June, had the fairy godmother but
-known, were the fly in the ointment. They could only
-arise from one source, and around it must always hover
-the black storm clouds. She had no real right to the
-money which was coming to her, and although she
-had no means apart from it, she felt that she must
-never accept a single penny. It was morbidly unpractical
-perhaps, but there the feeling was.</p>
-
-<p>When June had been at Homefield about a week,
-Miss Babraham found her one morning in the sunny
-embrasure of the pleasant little sitting room improving
-her mind by a happy return to her favourite “Mill on
-the Floss.” In passing out of its mental eclipse, the
-angle of June’s vision had shifted a little; her approach
-to new phases of experience was rather more
-sympathetic than it had been. Before “that” had happened,
-she had been inclined, as became a self-respecting
-member of the Democracy which is apt to deride
-what it does not comprehend, to be a little contemptuous
-of “Miss Blue Blood,” a creature born to more than
-a fair share of life’s good things. But now that she
-knew more about this happy-natured girl, she felt
-a tolerance of which, at first, she was just a little
-ashamed. Envy was giving place to something else.
-Her graces and her air of fine breeding, which June’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</span>
-own caste was inclined to resent, were not the obvious
-fruits of expensive clothes; in fact, they owed far less
-than June had supposed to the length of the purse behind
-them.</p>
-
-<p>The kindness, the charm, the sympathy were more
-than skin deep. In the first place, no doubt their possessor
-had been born under a lucky star; much of her
-quality was rooted inevitably in the fact that she was
-her father’s daughter yet the invalid could not gainsay
-that “Miss Blue Blood” had manners of the heart.
-Now that June saw her in her own setting among her
-own people this golden truth shone clear. And in the
-many talks June had with her good hostess, Mrs.
-Chrystal, the wife of Sir Arthur’s head gardener, one
-radiant fact rose bright and free: there was none like
-Miss Babraham. Her peer was not to be found on the
-wide earth.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt there were spots on this sun as there are
-spots on other suns, but June agreed that as far as
-Miss Babraham was concerned these blemishes were
-hidden from mortal eye. And each day gave cogency
-to such a view. This morning, for example, the distinguished
-visitor was brimming with kindliness. She
-talked simply and sincerely, without patronage or frills
-upon the subjects in which June was now interested.
-She had read <i>all</i> George Eliot and gave as the sum of
-her experience that the “Mill on the Floss” was the
-story she liked best, although her father preferred
-“Adam Bede” or “Silas Marner.”</p>
-
-<p>“Before my illness,” said June, “I was getting to
-think that all novels were silly and a waste of time.
-But I see now that you can learn a lot about life from
-a good one.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</span></p>
-
-<p>She was in a very serious mood. Like most people
-who have not the gift of “taking things in their stride”
-new orientations were a heavy business. At school, as
-a little girl, she had shed many tears over her arithmetic.
-The process of mind improvement was not to
-be undertaken lightly. She could never be a Miss Babraham,
-but her ambition, in the words of her favourite
-song, was to be as like her as she was able to be.</p>
-
-<p>Like true poets, however, Miss Babrahams were
-born. Such graces came from an inner harmony of
-nature. All the best fairies must have flocked to her
-christening. One minor gift she had which June allowed
-herself to covet, since it might fall within the
-scope of common mortals; it was the way in which her
-maid arranged her hair. June’s own famous mane,
-which indirectly had brought such suffering upon her,
-had mercifully been spared; it had not even been
-“bobbed,” and with careful tendence might again
-achieve its old magnificence. As shyly she confessed
-this ambition, which sprang less from vanity than
-simple pride in her one “asset,” Miss Babraham assured
-her that nothing could be nicer than her own way
-of doing it.</p>
-
-<p>From hair and the art of treating it they passed to
-other intimate topics; frocks and the hang of them;
-the knack of putting things on, in which Miss Babraham’s
-gift of style filled June with envy since that, alas,
-she would never be able to copy; and above all, her
-friend’s wonderful faculty of looking her best on all
-occasions.</p>
-
-<p>As the good fairy, after a stay of a full hour, rose
-to go, she said, “If to-morrow morning is as fine as this
-morning, do you think you could come over to us?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</span>
-You know the way. It’s an easy walk of less than half
-a mile.”</p>
-
-<p>June was sure she could.</p>
-
-<p>“Please do, if you won’t find it trying. Come about
-eleven. And I hope,” said the good fairy, casting
-back her charming smile as she was about to pass out
-of the sitting-room door, “there may be a pleasant little
-surprise for you.”</p>
-
-<p>During the last few weeks June had known in abundance
-the agreeably unexpected. And though at intervals
-during the rest of the fair spring day, her mind
-toyed with this new “surprise,” she was not able to
-guess what it was going to be.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LVIII">LVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">E</span>leven</span> o’clock the next morning saw June,
-dressed very carefully indeed, before the portals
-of the House. She had come well. Excitement had
-made her feel quite strong again; moreover she had
-been promised a reward for the effort she was making.
-Apart from that besides, it was the biggest feat of her
-social life, so far, to press the bell of such a noble
-door.</p>
-
-<p>The servant who answered it was not too proud to
-shew by his air of prompt courtesy that her coming
-was anticipated. She was led across a glorious hall&mdash;all
-black oak, family portraits, heads of deer and suits
-of armour, with an open gallery running round the top,
-like a scene on the movies&mdash;up a wide staircase, laid
-with a carpet thick and subtle to the tread, along a
-corridor into a room of great length whose glass roof
-gave a wonderful light. Many pictures hung upon its
-walls. June was thrilled at the moment she found herself
-in it, for this she felt sure, was the famous Long
-Gallery.</p>
-
-<p>The thrill was not confined, however, to the room.
-When she entered, June thought it was empty, but a
-look round disclosed at the far end a tall young man
-in a familiar attitude of rapt absorption. Only one
-person since the world began could have been so lost to
-the present in sheer force of contemplating a mere
-relic of the past.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was a rare bit of contrivance, all the same, on the
-part of Miss Babraham. Here, before June, was the
-Sawney, raised to his highest power. The fairy godmother
-had made a pass with her magic wand and
-William the amazing stood before her in the flesh.</p>
-
-<p>He was too far from the door and too rapt in adoration
-of the masterpiece at which he was gazing, to have
-heard June come in. And so, before he saw her, she
-had time to grow nervous and this was a pity. For so
-effectively had the mine been sprung that she had need
-just now of all her courage.</p>
-
-<p>A good deal of water had recently flowed under the
-bridge. It was as if a hundred years had passed since
-she had dared to label him a Sawney. He had grown
-up and she had grown down. So far away was the
-time of their equality, if such a time had ever really
-been, that she was just a shade in awe of him now.</p>
-
-<p>Many hours had he spent by her bed. It was perhaps
-due to him that she had emerged at last from the chasm
-which so long and so grimly threatened to engulf her.
-His royal yet gentle nature had a true power of healing.
-The look in his eyes, the music of his voice, the
-poetry of his thoughts, the charm of his mere presence,
-had borne him to a plane far above that of common
-people like herself. If Miss Babraham was a fairy
-godmother, this young man was surely the true prince.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond anyone she had ever known he had a perception
-of those large and deep things of sky and earth,
-which alone, as it seemed to her now, made life worth
-while. He was the prophet of the beautiful in deed
-as in word. During the long night through which she
-had passed, the sense of her inferiority had been not
-the least of her sorrows.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</span></p>
-
-<p>That sense returned upon her now as she stood timidly
-by the door through which she had come, watching
-the beams of an April sun, almost as shy as herself,
-weave an aureole for him. Here was the god of her
-dreams; she who lately had known no god and who
-long ago had taught herself to despise all forms of
-dreaming.</p>
-
-<p>At last he turned and saw her.</p>
-
-<p>“You!” He sprang towards her with an eager cry.</p>
-
-<p>Brilliant stage management. But by fate’s perversity,
-the players, somehow, were not quite equal to
-their parts. June’s shy timidity communicated itself
-at once to this sensitive plant. There was not a ghost
-of a reason why he should not have taken her in his
-arms, for he had come to love her tenderly. The act
-had been devised for him, the deed expected, but this
-young man was less wise in some things than in others.
-Deep as he could look into hidden mysteries, there was
-certainly one mystery whose heart he could not read.</p>
-
-<p>June’s odd confusion summoned a mistaken chivalry.
-Broken in spirit, poor soul, by what she had been
-through, she could no longer defend herself; he must
-be, therefore, very gentle. It would have been easier
-to tackle the Miss June of New Cross Street, the
-rather imperious and sharp-tongued niece of his late
-employer, than this quivering storm-beaten flower.</p>
-
-<p>With all his genius it was to be feared he would always
-be a Sawney.</p>
-
-<p>“How are you getting on Miss June?” he said lamely.
-“You look very thin, but you’ve got quite a colour.”</p>
-
-<p>Something of the gawklike New Cross Street manner,
-which compared ill with Miss Babraham’s tact and
-finesse was in this greeting. Phœbus Apollo took a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</span>
-sudden nose-dive. He came, in fact, within an ace
-of a crash.</p>
-
-<p>June’s cheeks grew flame-colour. An idiot less
-divine would have given her a kiss and have had done
-with it, but in some ways he was a shocking dunce.</p>
-
-<p>“I expect you are surprised to see me here, aren’t
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>She could but stammer that she was very much
-surprised.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir Arthur has asked me to re-hang some of these.”
-A rather proud wave of the hand towards those august
-walls shewed that he was human. “And he has commissioned
-me”&mdash;She heard again that dying fall which
-always touched her ear with ecstasy&mdash;“to go over this
-Jan Vermeer most carefully with warm water and
-cotton wool.”</p>
-
-<p>June knitted her brow in order to accompany his
-finger in its mystical course.</p>
-
-<p>“A Jan what?” she said, achieving a frown. Had
-it been possible at this early stage of convalescence to
-achieve a note of reproof, that authentic touch would
-not have been lacking.</p>
-
-<p>William’s the blame for a lost opportunity. But life
-is full of <i>gaffes</i> on the part of those who ought to know
-better. The ability of William was beyond dispute.
-Miss Babraham had acclaimed it, whereby she was no
-more than the mouthpiece of her father, that famous
-connoisseur who said openly that the discoverer of the
-Van Roon was a genius. To Sir Arthur it was miraculous
-that a tiro should expose the treasure to the view in
-a fashion so accomplished. It hardly seemed possible
-to remove the burdens of overgrowth laid by time and
-the vandal fingers of inferior artists upon that delicate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</span>
-surface without damage to the fabric. Yet experts had
-declared the thing to be not a penny the worse for all
-the processes it had been through; and on the strength
-of this amazing skill, the owner of Homefield had decided
-to entrust to those inspired hands, one of his
-cherished Vermeers.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LIX">LIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>ogether</span> they went round the Long Gallery,
-gazing at the treasure on its walls, which to him
-meant so much, to her so little. She tried to see it with
-his eyes or if this could not be, at least get some clue
-to the quality which made quite ordinary looking objects
-the things they were.</p>
-
-<p>Who could have believed that an old and dirty thing
-which she had heard even Uncle Si describe as a daub,
-would turn out to be a fortune? Other fortunes were
-here to gaze upon, but why they were so precious would
-always be for June a mystery of mysteries. Even with
-William’s help it was a subject on which she could
-never be really wise. She had now a great desire to
-reach out after Culture; the “Mill on the Floss” was
-most stimulating to the mind; but just now she felt, in
-Blackhampton phrase, that already “she had bitten
-off more than she could chew.”</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it was the presence of William which had
-induced a mood of great complexity. Old unhappy
-things were flooding back. And as they walked slowly
-round the Gallery, an object at its extreme end suddenly
-sprang into view, which brought her up with
-an icy gasp. The Hoodoo was grinning at her.</p>
-
-<p>In its new setting the monster was merely grotesque.
-Retrieved from the morose interior of Number Forty-six,
-New Cross Street, which it had darkened so long
-with its malice, it was no longer an active embodiment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</span>
-of evil. The force of its ugliness was less, yet for
-June, in a subtle way, the implication of its presence
-was more.</p>
-
-<p>It was as if the Fates were saying to her: “We are
-watching you, my girl. This young man, whom now
-you dare to love, have you not tricked him out of his
-patrimony by your pretended worship of beauty?
-Share his ecstasy, if you please, of his Peter This and
-his Mathew That, but don’t forget that Our eye is still
-upon you. What you have already received you will
-long remember, but you may get another dose if you
-are not careful.”</p>
-
-<p>Hearing words to this sinister effect in the secret
-places of her soul, June could only shiver. William,
-now as conscious of the invalid’s frailty as of the imperious
-challenge of beauty, led her at once to a seat
-without seeking the cause of her distress.</p>
-
-<p>He saw she was still very weak and hastened therefore
-to set her down on a chair of the Empire, heedless
-of the fact that she was almost cheek by jowl with the
-Hoodoo.</p>
-
-<p>“Mustn’t tire yourself,” he said in a voice of rare
-sympathy which did but add to the feeling of misery
-that crept upon her. “I’m afraid you’ve walked a bit
-too far.”</p>
-
-<p>Again June shivered. The old unhappy things were
-threatening once more to submerge her. “How I wish
-That had not come here,” she said dismally. There
-was no need to point at the Image; she was sure that
-he knew what she meant.</p>
-
-<p>But amazing young man that he was, this was trying
-him a little too highly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you mean the James,” he said pointing to a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</span>
-windmill opposite. “He isn’t a Mathew, is he? I’m
-so glad, Miss June, you think that too, because with
-you to back me, I may be able to break it to Sir
-Arthur, that this isn’t quite the place for him.”</p>
-
-<p>Divine humility! Mad confusion! Had she but felt
-a little stronger, a little less unhappy, she really could
-have shaken him.</p>
-
-<p>“I mean the Hoodoo,” she said woefully.</p>
-
-<p>Her wild bird’s heart went quick and high as she
-saw him turn casually and enfold That with a slow
-smile. “Right again,” he said, his head a little to one
-side in pure connoisseurship, a trick she had learned
-to watch for. “I quite agree with you&mdash;the old fool
-swallows more than his share of this beautiful light.”</p>
-
-<p>June was not thinking of the beautiful light. She
-was trembling in spirit; but one of his nature could
-not be expected to know what demons from the abyss
-were invading her. “How I wish it was somewhere
-else.”</p>
-
-<p>His laugh of gay agreement was suddenly checked
-as he caught the look in her eyes and in the next
-instant he saw the old man lying dead at the foot of
-the Hoodoo.</p>
-
-<p>It was like the passing of a cloud across the sun.
-Life for him, also, had found another notation in these
-terrible months. He had been through a hard school.
-Certain lines in his face were deeper and there were
-hollows under his eyes. Never again must he allow the
-ideal to run so far ahead of the real. Yet in this harsh
-moment the power of his nature kept him up.</p>
-
-<p>He was able to pierce to the true reason for June’s
-deadly pallor. It was not wholly due to the fact that
-she was still weak or that she had walked too far.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</span>
-Trolls even now were in her brain. With his instinct
-for healing he must do his utmost to cast them out.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll try to persuade Miss Babraham to have him
-put in the garden.”</p>
-
-<p>Scarcely had he spoken the words when the fairy
-godmother, accompanied by Sir Arthur Babraham,
-entered the Long Gallery.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LX">LX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">“S</span>o</span> here you are!”</p>
-
-<p>But the light note of Miss Babraham’s greeting
-changed to a quick concern as a feminine eye saw
-at a glance that June was looking “done.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now don’t get up, please. I am going to be quite
-angry with myself if your walk has made you over-tired.”</p>
-
-<p>June, a new shyness upon her, which the presence
-of Sir Arthur made much worse, found it very difficult
-to speak.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you are cultivating a taste for chicken and
-new laid eggs,” said the kindly gentleman. “And for
-a glass of wine to your meals&mdash;which I always say is
-what has made Old England the country she is.”
-Finding his jolly laugh was less effective than usual,
-he pointed to the Hoodoo in the tactful hope of putting
-an embarrassed girl at her ease. “There’s an old friend
-I’m sure you recognize.” June’s distress, however,
-grew rapidly worse and Sir Arthur made a fresh cast.
-“I’m not sure all the same,” he said to William in a
-laughing aside, “that the old fellow can be allowed to
-stay here. Tell me, what is your candid opinion?”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve been wondering, sir, if he wouldn’t look
-better in the garden.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Babraham caught gaily at the suggestion.
-“The very place for the jar of Knossos. And perhaps
-Miss June and Mr. William will plant a myrtle in it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</span></p>
-
-<p>“A myrtle,” said Sir Arthur. “In that chap&mdash;a
-myrtle?” He plucked at his moustache and looked
-at the laughing Laura. “Why&mdash;pray&mdash;a myrtle?”</p>
-
-<p>“Papa, how dense you are!”</p>
-
-<p>A hit clean and fair, which after a very little thought
-Sir Arthur was man enough to own. His one excuse,
-and a poor one, was that in certain things the sex to
-which he had the misfortune to belong, was notoriously
-“slow in the uptake.”</p>
-
-<p>It was now William’s turn to acclaim the idea.
-Blushing deeply said that quaint and whimsical young
-man: “Yes, Miss Babraham, with your permission we
-will plant a myrtle in the jar of Knossos.”</p>
-
-<p>In the laugh which followed June did not share;
-just now her feeling was that she would never be able
-to laugh again.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur, still tactful, now conceived it to be his
-duty to cheer the poor girl up. “By the way,” he said,
-“has my daughter told you what we propose to do with
-your Van Roon? Of course with your permission.”</p>
-
-<p>June simply longed for the power to say that it was
-not for her to give the permission as the Van Roon
-was not hers. But she was living just now in a kind of
-dream in which action and speech had no part. The
-only thing she could do was to listen passively to the
-voice of Sir Arthur, while it leisurely unfolded a tale
-of fairyland.</p>
-
-<p>“I must tell you,” he said, “subject to your approval&mdash;always,
-of course, subject to <i>that</i>&mdash;we have formed a
-sort of committee to deal with this picture of yours.
-It has given rise to a rather curious position. We think&mdash;three
-or four of us&mdash;that it ought to be acquired for
-the nation; but of course there’s the question of price.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</span>
-If the work is put up at auction, it may fetch more
-than we should feel justified in paying. Sentiment of
-course; but nowadays sentiment plays a big part in
-these matters. On the other hand, having regard to the
-obscurity of its origin, it might be knocked down for
-considerably less than it is intrinsically worth. All the
-same we are quite convinced that it is a very choice
-example of a great master, and that the place for it is
-the National Gallery, where another Van Roon is badly
-needed. Now I hope you see the dilemma. If the
-nation enters the market a definite buyer, the thing may
-soar to a preposterous sum. At the same time, we
-don’t want the nation to acquire it for less than its real
-value. So the question in a nutshell is, will you accept
-a private arbitration or do you prefer to run the risk of
-getting comparatively little in the hope of obtaining an
-extra ten thousand pounds or so?”</p>
-
-<p>June followed the argument as closely as she could,
-and at the end of it burst into wild tears.</p>
-
-<p>“The picture is not mine,” she sobbed. “It doesn’t
-belong to me.”</p>
-
-<p>It was a moment of keen embarrassment. Sir
-Arthur, who had doubted from the first, was hardly to
-be blamed for beginning to doubt again. Such an
-outburst was the oddest confirmation of his first suspicion,
-which conspiring Circumstance had enabled him
-perhaps too easily to forget. But Laura’s faith was
-quite unshaken. For her the question of ownership
-had been settled once and for all. The poor thing was
-overwrought, overdriven; it was so like the tactless
-father of hers, to worry the girl with all kinds of tiresome
-details when he should have known that she was
-not strong enough to grapple with them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Come, papa,” said Laura Babraham with reproof in
-a clear grey eye. “If we don’t go at once and look at
-that herbaceous border we shall certainly be late for
-luncheon.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LXI">LXI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">L</span>eft</span> to themselves once more, it became William’s
-task to comfort June’s distress. Like Sir Arthur,
-he too, it seemed, could be tactful. Instead of discussing
-the question of the Van Roon’s ownership or the
-unlucky presence of the Hoodoo, he began gently to
-discourse of Mathew Maris.</p>
-
-<p>As far as June was concerned he might as well have
-discoursed of the moon. In the first place she had
-never heard of Mathew Maris; and in the second she
-was consumed by a desire to settle forever the question
-of the Van Roon which was now tormenting her like a
-fire. This was a dynamic moment, when great decisions
-are reached with startling abruptness and half a
-lifetime may be lived in half a minute.</p>
-
-<p>Mathew Maris was not for June just now. Suddenly
-she broke again into wild sobs.</p>
-
-<p>“I cheated you, I tricked you over that picture.”</p>
-
-<p>Again, good honest fellow, he tried to change the
-current of this mind distraught. But it was not to
-be.</p>
-
-<p>“You gave it me, didn’t you, because I made you
-think I had fallen in love with it? But I hadn’t. It
-meant nothing to me&mdash;not in that way.”</p>
-
-<p>He stood an image of dismay, but he had to
-listen.</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you suppose I did that? I’ll tell you. I
-overheard Uncle Si talking to a dealer. You remember,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</span>
-don’t you, the funny crooked little man in the knitted
-comforter and the brown billycock whom I used to call
-Foxy Face? One morning when you were out he
-offered Uncle Si five pounds for it and Uncle Si said
-it might be worth a good deal more. That’s why I
-decided to get hold of it if I could, before Uncle Si
-got it from you. And that’s why I cracked it up and
-made you think I could see all sorts of wonders in it,
-when all the time I saw no more beauty in it than there
-is in That.” And she pointed to the Hoodoo.</p>
-
-<p>William gave a little gasp. June heard the gasp.
-And in the mad unhappiness of that moment she determined
-to spare herself nothing. She would strip
-herself bare so that the whip might be better laid on.</p>
-
-<p>“Beauty means no more to me than it does to that
-Thing there. All your talk about Hobbemas and
-Marises and Vermeers and Cromes are to me just
-sloppy. They bore me stiff every time. I hate the
-sight of all these things.” The wave of a wildly
-tragic hand included all the masterpieces in the Long
-Gallery. “I hate them! I hate them! So now you
-know the mean and dirty liar that I am.”</p>
-
-<p>No longer able to bear the sound of her strange and
-terrible words he turned sickly away. It was almost
-as if they had opened a vein in his heart. He remembered
-again the cry that had haunted him after his
-seeing her first at the Hospital. “Am I struck? Am I
-like Uncle Si? Am I like the Hoodoo?”</p>
-
-<p>Poor soul! It was not for him to judge her. He
-could only think of her sufferings. And it was cruel
-indeed to realize what they must be now.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s why I don’t want the money. And that’s
-why I don’t mean to have it. I burn when I think of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</span>
-it. Now you know how low down I am. I hope you
-like the way I’ve cheated you.”</p>
-
-<p>He sought to take her hand, but she withdrew it
-fiercely. His very goodness almost made her hate him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LXII">LXII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">B</span>y</span> the advice of Miss Babraham they planted a
-myrtle in the jar of Knossos. Some days later
-the Hoodoo was haled into a convenient corner of the
-Italian garden. Here, by the marge of a tiny rock-strewn
-lake, the momentous rite was performed with a
-high solemnity. Much displacement of mould and a
-considerable wheelbarrowing of the same was necessary
-and Mr. Chrystal, the head gardener, had to advise
-in the use of the trowel, an art in which neither
-June nor William was quite so adept as they might
-have been. But at last, after some honest digging and
-shovelling on the part of William who was not afraid
-to take off his coat to the job, and timely help from
-Mr. Chrystal’s George who was uncannily wise, although
-to be sure he had the experience of a lifetime
-and a fairly long one to bring to bear on such matters,
-the thing was done.</p>
-
-<p>June and William then retired to the fragrant shade
-of a budding lime, feeling rather hot, yet not dissatisfied
-with their labours. It was a perfect morning.
-Larks were hovering in the bright air. Blackbirds and
-thrushes were trying out their grace-notes, and once
-June thought she heard a nightingale.</p>
-
-<p>For a little they reclined in poetic comfort in two
-wicker chairs. Fauns in marble, and Cupid, complete
-with bow and arrows lurked hard by. At last June
-broke a delicious silence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You must put your coat on,” she said suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>“But&mdash;&mdash;” said William who really had delved and
-shovelled to some purpose.</p>
-
-<p>June was not to be Butted&mdash;not this golden day.</p>
-
-<p>“If you don’t you might get a bad chill,” she said
-severely.</p>
-
-<p>William rose and did her bidding. And in the midst
-of that simple act, a certain piece of confidential information,
-which Sir Arthur and Miss Laura had been
-kind enough to supply at frequent intervals during the
-last few days, recurred forcibly to his mind. It was to
-the effect that “Miss Gedge was so practical she would
-make an ideal wife for an artist.”</p>
-
-<p>As far as the major premise was concerned it was
-less irrelevant than at first it might seem, for William
-had recently decided that an artist was what he was
-going to be. In the very act of putting on his coat
-he now recalled the high and sacred mystery to which
-his life was vowed. And further he recalled that before
-entering the garden he had taken the precaution
-of slipping a neat little sketching book and pencil into
-his coat pocket. Thus, upon sitting down, in solemn
-silence he took them forth and proceeded to draw.</p>
-
-<p>June it was who broke the silence, after some little
-while.</p>
-
-<p>“If you are drawing that myrtle,” she said, “it looks
-a bit potty to me stuck up there. There’s nothing
-to it.”</p>
-
-<p>She was more her true self this happy morning than
-for many a tragic month.</p>
-
-<p>“It’ll grow,” said the artist.</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t seem much if it doesn’t in that great jar.
-It was Miss Babraham’s idea to stick it there, so it’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</span>
-all right of course. She said it was an emblem of
-what was it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of marriage,” said the artist with an air of innocent
-abstraction.</p>
-
-<p>“Then she ought to have planted it herself&mdash;if she
-<i>is</i> going to be married.”</p>
-
-<p>“On the first of July. They’ve fixed the day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” said June. “Have you seen her young man?”</p>
-
-<p>“He came to lunch yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is he?”</p>
-
-<p>“The Honourable Barrington, a gentleman in the
-Blues.”</p>
-
-<p>June frowned portentously. “I hope he’ll be good
-enough for her.” But she didn’t sound very hopeful.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s a very nice gentleman.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ought to be if he’s going to marry <i>her</i>. But what
-I should like to know is, why was she so set on you and
-me planting that myrtle when she ought to have planted
-it herself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t know, I’m sure, Miss June,” said the artist,
-not so much as glancing up from his work.</p>
-
-<p>Once a Sawney always a Sawney. Perennially, it
-seemed, was she up against the relentless workings of
-that natural law. Marriage, money, commonsense, the
-really big things of life, meant so little to him compared
-with windmills and myrtles, and things of that kind.
-Like her beloved Miss Babraham, this dear and charming
-fellow was almost too good to be true, but day by
-day the conviction was growing upon her that he really
-did need somebody practical to look after him. And
-she was not alone in thinking so. Miss Babraham,
-who knew so much about everything, had already expressed
-that opinion to her quite strongly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</span></p>
-
-<p>Here he was, in the middle of a perfect morning,
-with all sorts of really beautiful things about him, and
-larks and blackbirds quiring, and the sun on the water
-and the Surrey hills, wasting his time seemingly, by
-drawing that rather paltry looking little plant stuck up
-there on the top of the Hoodoo. Even if it was the
-emblem of marriage she could not help a subtle feeling
-of annoyance that he should not use his precious time a
-bit better.</p>
-
-<p>However, the cream of the joke was to follow.</p>
-
-<p>The artist it was who quaintly burst this fresh bubble
-of silence. “Talk as much as you like, Miss June,” he
-said with something a little odd, a little unexpected in
-his manner, “but I hope you’ll keep your hands in your
-lap just as they are now, and if you don’t mind will
-you please bring your chin round a bit&mdash;on to a level
-with my finger.”</p>
-
-<p>“Please get on with that myrtle.” Before, however,
-the fiat was really pronounced, she abruptly stopped.
-Could such a thing be? Was it possible that he was
-not drawing the myrtle at all?</p>
-
-<p>It was more than possible.</p>
-
-<p>And that was the cream of the whole matter!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LXIII">LXIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">“I</span>’m</span> not half as good looking as that,” said June.</p>
-
-<p>“All depends, don’t you know, on the angle
-at which one happens to get you,” said William.</p>
-
-<p>It was the tone of a gentleman in the Blues speaking
-to Miss Babraham. Yet it came so pat and so natural
-from the lips of an artist, that in spite of herself, June
-could not help being a little awed by it. She didn’t
-agree, yet she didn’t disagree; that is to say, as Miss
-Babraham would have done, she agreed to disagree
-without contradicting the artist flatly.</p>
-
-<p>Besides it is the whole duty of an artist to know just
-how people look in all circumstances. Everybody looks
-better at some moments than at others. June had no
-pretensions to be considered an artist herself, but at
-that moment she knew just how William looked. In
-his new suit, neat rather than smart and smart rather
-than neat&mdash;all depends don’t you know on the angle
-at which one happened to get it!&mdash;with his mop of fair
-hair brushed away from his fine forehead, and his
-yellow tie, and the curves of that sensitive mouth, and
-those wonderful eyes and those slim fingers, he looked
-fitted by nature to marry a real lady. Indeed, in the
-course of the last few days, a suspicion had crossed
-June’s mind that Miss Babraham thought so too; thus
-the apparition of the Honourable Barrington and the
-definite fixing of the day had taken a load off her
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>For all that other loads were still upon it. Since her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</span>
-nerve-storm in the Long Gallery a week had passed.
-She was feeling much better now, day by day she was
-growing stronger; nevertheless she was troubled about
-many things.</p>
-
-<p>Foremost of these was the question so vital to a
-practical mind, of ways and means. They both had
-to live. And if William had really made up his mind
-to be an artist, he would need money and plenty of
-it for leisure and study and foreign travel. She was
-rather glad, if only for this reason, that he had been
-able to take such a bold decision. He would be the
-more likely to accept that which really belonged to
-him: the price of the Van Roon.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur had now informed her that the sum the
-committee proposed to offer for the Van Roon could
-be invested to produce a thousand a year free of tax,
-and he strongly urged its acceptance, as she would be
-relieved of all money difficulties for the rest of her
-life. To June it sounded fabulous. She knew in her
-heart, besides, that she would never be able to take this
-income for her own use. Every penny was William’s
-and the task now before her was to bring home to
-him this fact.</p>
-
-<p>It did not take long to prove to her this morning that
-she was attempting the impossible. The thousand a
-year, he declared, was hers and nothing would induce
-him to touch a penny. Yielding in some ways, in others
-as she had discovered already, for all his gentleness
-he was a rock.</p>
-
-<p>Desperation now drove June to confess that she had
-never intended to take the money. Even at the moment
-she had filched the Van Roon from him with her
-wicked pretences, at the back of her mind had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</span>
-the wish to save him from himself. Always she had
-regarded herself as the Van Roon’s trustee, so that he
-should not be victimized by the cunning of Uncle Si,
-just as Sir Arthur was its trustee now, so that neither
-of them should be robbed by the cunning of the world.</p>
-
-<p>She found all too soon, however, that it was vain
-to argue with him. What he had given, he had given.
-As far as he was concerned, that was the end of the
-whole matter.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well then,” said June vexedly, “if you won’t,
-you won’t. And I shall present that picture to the
-nation in your name, and then you won’t have a penny
-to live on and you’ll have to go on working in a shop
-all your life for a small wage to make other people
-rich, instead of being able to study and travel and make
-yourself a great artist.”</p>
-
-<p>She felt sure the half nelson was on him now. Even
-he, dreamer that he was, must really bend to the force
-of pure reasoning! Beyond a doubt she had got him.
-But he was not playing quite fair it seemed. With
-one of his little dancing blushes that would have been
-deadly in a girl, he was forced to own that he had not
-put all his cards on the table.</p>
-
-<p>To June’s sheer amazement he was keeping a little
-matter of twelve hundred a year or so up his sleeve.</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t know you had a rich aunt,” said June
-amazedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Not my rich aunt. Your rich uncle.” The odd
-creature grew tawnier, more girl-like than ever.</p>
-
-<p>June lacking a clue as yet could only frown. “Come
-again. I don’t get you.” It was not the Miss Babraham
-idiom, but with her patience giving out and a
-new strength and sanity in her veins, she was in danger<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</span>
-of forgetting, just for a moment, that she was an
-honoured guest in the most famous Italian garden in
-Surrey.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless in the very height of the eclipse a light
-shone. One of the advantages of a mind really practical
-is, that when it turns to financial matters, it works
-automatically at very high pressure. June’s brow was
-cleft with the harrow of thought. “Do you mean to
-say,” she figured slowly out, “that Uncle Si has left
-you all his property?”</p>
-
-<p>“His lawyers say so.” The voice of William had
-a slight tremor.</p>
-
-<p>“If his lawyers say so it is so,” said June with imperious
-finality.</p>
-
-<p>A pause of which a thrush, a blackbird and an entire
-orchestra of skylarks took great advantage, came upon
-these inheritors in spite of themselves; and then June
-pensively remarked, a little in the manner of “Mr.
-Leopold” asking the Head Cashier what Consols had
-opened at this morning, “he must have bought some
-property very lucky.”</p>
-
-<p>Quite simply William stated that such was the fact.
-“The lawyers say that in 1895 he bought what they call
-a block in New Cross Street, including Number 46,
-and that it’s been going up and up ever since, so that
-now it’s worth about eight times what he gave for it.”</p>
-
-<p>In sheer incredulity June stared at him. She must
-be living in fairyland. And then the sun flamed out
-from the merest apology for a cloud which was all the
-April sky could boast at that moment and there came
-an answering gleam from the burnished image before
-her eyes in which they had lately planted a myrtle.</p>
-
-<p>“Much good it did him,” she said with a heavy sigh.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</span></p>
-
-<p>William never told June the story of the old man
-lying dead before the Hoodoo, nor had he disclosed his
-own indirect share in that tragic end. He did not do
-so now, for this was not the time to enter into such an
-unhappy matter. Yet without coming to details, June
-seemed with that power of clairvoyance she had lately
-acquired, to divine the whole pitiful business. “Miserable
-old miser,” she said in a voice the birds could not
-hear. “He must have died like a dog.”</p>
-
-<p>William’s tragic eyes could only be interpreted by
-his own heart.</p>
-
-<p>A look so forlorn led June to notice the new lines
-in his face and his smouldering depth of eye. “I believe
-you were the only living thing he ever cared for,
-and yet it used to make my blood boil the way he&mdash;&mdash;”
-The anguish in his eyes brought her up short.</p>
-
-<p>In went the sun, as quickly as it had come out.
-<i>La Signora Aprile e volubile</i>, in England at any rate,
-whatever her mood in more genial climes. June shivered
-slightly as if a chill breath in the gentle wind had
-touched her. She glanced at the new wrist watch,
-whose acceptance William had craved two days before
-she left the Hospital. Nearly one o’clock already and
-it would never do to shew disrespect to Mrs. Chrystal’s
-famous chicken-broth.</p>
-
-<p>They got up together, yet as they did so they felt
-that the best of the spring day was fled. Now that the
-sun had gone in, the Hoodoo yonder was monarch
-once more of all he looked upon.</p>
-
-<p>What a thing life was! Yet by now both were wise
-enough not to think too much about it. God knew it
-could be ugly, but dwelling upon its complexities only
-made them seem worse.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</span></p>
-
-<p>Besides there was no time for deep thoughts. It
-was six minutes to one. Luncheon at the House, where
-William, as became a man of acknowledged genius, was
-an honoured guest, was sharp at the hour. The honoured
-guest would only just have time to wash his
-hands and brush his hair. And so he was not able to
-accompany June along the rectangular path which led
-from the main avenue direct to Mrs. Chrystal’s.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover she didn’t want him to. She understood
-his hurry. Also he understood hers. Besides each
-craved a moment, after all, to consider life and just
-where they stood in it.</p>
-
-<p>“I have to rest this afternoon,” said June. “And I
-suppose you have to get on with the cleaning of the
-Mathew Thingamy. But if it’s as fine to-morrow
-morning as it has been to-day, let us meet under this
-tree about eleven. And then you can put in the last
-touches while I read “Pride and Prejudice” by Jane
-Austen that Miss Babraham’s lent me. Seems a bit old-fashioned,
-but it’s classic of course. I dare say it’ll
-improve as it gets better.”</p>
-
-<p>Whereon June took the bypath abruptly, and William,
-his six minutes reduced to four, stepped out towards
-the House. Life and its complexities did not
-get therefore, much of a show at the moment, yet both
-of them must have been giving these high matters some
-little thought, for as June reached the eucalyptus tree
-she halted and half-turned and looked just for one instant
-back. And she found that William, now on a
-level with the second Cupid on the main gravel, and his
-four minutes reduced to three and a quarter, had also
-halted, and half-turned to follow her example.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LXIV">LXIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>une</span> always maintained that the Idea was William’s.
-He, on the other hand, always maintained that the
-Idea was hers. But whatever the truth of the matter
-in its centrality, there was really no doubt that it was
-Miss Babraham who thought of the car. To her alone
-belonged that minor yet still substantial glory. As for
-the luncheon basket, although that honour was claimed
-for her as well, it may have owed something to Sir
-Arthur, for June and William were agreed that the
-weighty and practical genius of that man of the world
-was visible in this important detail.</p>
-
-<p>It was just after nine on as promising a morning of
-early May as the much and justly derided climate of
-Britain was able to produce for a signal occasion, when
-Mr. Mitchell the chauffeur in his livery of Robin Hood
-green, with buff collar and cuffs, arrived at Mrs.
-Chrystal’s door with Sir Arthur’s touring car. Inside,
-as if to the manner born, sat William in a
-fleecy grey ulster which June had no idea he possessed&mdash;and
-for that matter it was Sir Arthur who possessed
-it&mdash;and almost the last word in hats, which if you happened
-to catch its wearer in profile, as June chanced
-to do at the moment the car drew up, made him look
-uncommonly distinguished.</p>
-
-<p>But so much depends, don’t you know, in these little
-matters upon the angle&mdash;etc.</p>
-
-<p>“What time do you expect to be back, Mr. Mitchell?”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</span>
-asked Mrs. Chrystal from her doorstep, as that hero,
-a wisdom-bitten veteran of the Great War, which had
-ended before William began&mdash;that is to say Class 1920
-was never called up&mdash;ushered June into the chariot
-with rare solemnity.</p>
-
-<p>“Back did you say, ma’am?” said Mr. Mitchell closing
-the door gently upon the travellers. “There you
-have me. We’ve to go as fur as the heart o’ Suffolk
-and back again.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chrystal knew that. Hence the question.</p>
-
-<p>“Accordin’ to this map,” Mr. Mitchell pointed to
-the canvas back of Road Guide Number 6, Series 14,
-which was on the vacant seat beside his own, “Crowdham
-Market may take a bit o’ findin’. Still if the
-roads are all right, I dessay we’ll be home by the risin’
-o’ the moon.”</p>
-
-<p>“My reason for asking is that I’m wondering about
-the young lady’s supper. However, I’ll expect you
-when I see you, because as you say Crowdham Market
-may be a funny place to get at.”</p>
-
-<p>In the opinion of June, who heard this conversation,
-Mrs. Chrystal was fully justified in thinking so. They
-were about to start on a journey to Cloud Cuckoo
-Land.</p>
-
-<p>A very romantic journey it was. Up hill and down
-dale they went, by devious lanes and unsuspected ways
-across a noble sweep of country. Zephyrs played gently
-upon their faces; the sun shone, the birds sang; the
-smooth-gliding car made little dust and less noise; they
-sat side by side; it was a royal progress.</p>
-
-<p>The Idea itself was William’s, June always maintained,
-that they should go to Crowdham Market and
-find the poor old woman who kept the tumbledown<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</span>
-shop, where perhaps as much out of pity as anything,
-he had given five shillings for the Van Roon. They
-could well afford to make her comfortable for life with
-an annuity, the precise amount of which Sir Arthur
-might be asked to fix if they could not themselves
-agree upon it. Indeed the whole question of the Van
-Roon’s fabulous proceeds was still vexed. Neither
-would move an inch. June still vowed she would not
-touch the money. William vowed that he would not
-touch it either, but he had gone so far as to suggest that
-he should buy the thing back from her with a part of the
-property her uncle had left him. To this property he
-somehow felt he had no lawful claim; yet by means of
-it he would be able to add, free gratis and for nothing,
-one masterpiece the more to “his treasure house” in
-Trafalgar Square.</p>
-
-<p>June, with the frankness for which she was famous,
-did not hesitate to denounce the scheme as crazy. Even
-the Sir Arthur Babrahams of the world, who were
-simply rolling in money, thought twice about giving
-fortunes away. What did he suppose was going to
-become of his career as an artist if he stripped himself
-of the means of pursuing it?</p>
-
-<p>That, of course, was where she had him. And as
-they sat side by side on this golden journey to East
-Anglia, they divided the forenoon between admiring
-the scenery and discussing the problem in all its aspects.</p>
-
-<p>“You talk of France and Spain and Italy.” The
-note of scorn was mellowed considerably by the romance
-of the occasion. “You talk of studying the pictures
-in the Louvre and the Prado and the Uffizi Gallery.”
-She had really got to grips with Culture now.
-With an indomitable will, an inflexible ambition and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</span>
-a brand new course of memory training to help her;
-she was not only learning to remember outlandish
-words, but how and when and in what order to use
-them. “You talk of Rembrandt and Titian and
-Velasky, but I’m thinking those foreign landladies’ll
-get your size before you can say Knife. My opinion
-is you’ll need somebody <i>always</i> with you to see that
-they don’t take it off you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Take what off me, Miss June?” inquired His
-Innocence.</p>
-
-<p>There was a question!</p>
-
-<p>“Your pram, of course, your teddy bear, and your
-feeding bottle.” She added the opprobrious term “You
-Gaby!” not however for the ear of this Dreamer, but
-for the benefit of the pleasant town of Malden, on
-whose outskirts they were already.</p>
-
-<p>“When you get to Paris and find yourself in the
-Prado studying Paul Very-uneasy, you’ll be lucky if
-you get away with as much as a bootlace. Mr. Boultby
-used to say French landladies were awful.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did he,” said the Dreamer; and then with a sudden
-animation: “Do you see that water wagtail on the lip
-of that pool?”</p>
-
-<p>June pointedly ignored the water wagtail.</p>
-
-<p>“You ought to have somebody to look after you
-when you go to Paris&mdash;somebody who understands
-the value of money.”</p>
-
-<p>“The less value money has for an artist the better,”
-said William the sententious.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Boultby would call that poppycock,” said June,
-equally sententious.</p>
-
-<p>What William really meant to say was that the less
-an artist thought about money the better for his art,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</span>
-that an artist painted better for love than for filthy
-lucre and so on, that the great masters were born poor
-as a rule and often died poor and that nothing was so
-likely as money to distract the mind from the quest
-of beauty.</p>
-
-<p>These, to be sure, were not his exact words. His
-thoughts were clothed more neatly in the William way.
-But such was the sum and substance of what they came
-down to, and June was so pained by his line of argument
-that the contents of the luncheon basket on the
-opposite seat were needed to sustain her.</p>
-
-<p>After patiently reasoning with such wrong-headedness,
-she looked at her watch and found it was one
-o’clock. As there was never a sign at present of
-Crowdham Market, they decided to begin on what the
-gods had provided. Egg and tomato sandwiches were
-at the top of the basket with a layer of ham underneath,
-and below that a most authentic cake with
-almonds in it; all of which were delicious.</p>
-
-<p>The meal, if anything, was even better than the
-conversation, though that also was on an extremely
-high level. They were very honourable in their dealings
-with the luncheon basket. Share and share alike
-was the order of the day, with a third share of everything
-religiously laid by for Mr. Mitchell whenever he
-might feel justified in slowing up to eat it. Even a
-full third of the basket’s crowning glory was laid by
-for Mr. Mitchell&mdash;to wit, a large vacuum flask of
-coffee, piping hot.</p>
-
-<p>It was a few minutes after two when they reached
-Crowdham Market and drew up at the Unicorn Inn.
-Here, six months ago, William had discussed the great
-drought with Miss Ferris, the landlady’s daughter, one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</span>
-of those high-coloured girls who June could see at a
-glance was a minx.</p>
-
-<p>Promising to be back in an hour, which was all that
-Mr. Mitchell could allow if they were to be home before
-the rising of the moon, June and William, feeling more
-romantic than ever before in their lives, set out on a
-pilgrimage up the High Street. It was the only street
-in the town which aspired to a sense of importance;
-the point in fact towards which all meaner streets converged.
-One of these it was they had now to find.</p>
-
-<p>Alas, from the outset there was a grave doubt in the
-mind of William in the matter of his bearings. To the
-best of his recollection the old woman’s shop was either
-the second or third turning up, then to the left, then
-across, and then to the left again into an obscure alley
-of which he had forgotten the name. That was like
-him. In June’s private opinion, it was also like him,
-although <i>lèse-majesté</i> of course, to let him know it, to
-take her to look for a serendipity shop in a bottle of
-hay.</p>
-
-<p>William knew neither the name of the old woman,
-nor the byway that had contained her, and in the
-course of half an hour’s meandering it grew clear to
-the practical mind of June that she was in serious
-danger of having to go without her annuity. Having
-come so far it would be humiliating to return with a
-tale of total defeat; yet up till now these emotions had
-been held in check by the romance of the case.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mitchell’s hour was all but sped, when William
-stopped abruptly. Light had come. He had hit the
-trail.</p>
-
-<p>At the corner of the lane into which for the third
-time they had penetrated, was an enticing little shop<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</span>
-called Middleton’s Dairy. The sight of it brought back
-to William’s mind a recollection. Immediately the picture
-had been acquired, he went into that shop to get
-a bun and a glass of milk. Pausing a moment to
-wrestle with his sense of locality, he gazed down the
-street. The old woman’s store would be just opposite.</p>
-
-<p>Only a glance was needed to show that the old
-woman’s store was not just opposite. The housebreakers
-had been recently at work and the decrepit block
-of which her premises formed a part was razed to the
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>Faced by the problem of what had happened to the
-old woman the only thing now was to enter Middleton’s
-Dairy and enquire. They were cordially received
-by a girl who in June’s opinion showed too many teeth
-when she smiled to be really good looking; who, also,
-in June’s opinion, wore corsets that didn’t suit her
-figure, and whose hair would have looked better had
-it been bobbed.</p>
-
-<p>Like Miss Ferris, the landlady’s daughter, this girl
-seemed to remember William quite well, which was
-rather odd June felt, since he had only been once in
-the town previously and then for but a few hours. The
-inference to be drawn from the fact was that William
-was William, and that in an outlandish one-horse place
-like Crowdham Market, young men of his quality were
-necessarily at a premium.</p>
-
-<p>But at the moment that was neither here nor there.
-And with equal truth the formula applied to the old
-woman. However, in regard to her it seemed, they
-were now in the way of getting information.</p>
-
-<p>After William, with a certain particularity had described
-the old creature and her shop to the girl who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</span>
-kept on showing her teeth while he did so, he was informed
-that she was known among the neighbours as
-Mother Stark. And the poor old thing, the girl understood,
-had been turned out of house and home because
-she could no longer pay her rates and taxes.</p>
-
-<p>“Half her side of the Lane’s pulled down,” said
-June, who now came into the conversation on a note
-of slight asperity.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes,” said Miss Smiler, to William rather than
-to June, “the site has been bought by a company.”</p>
-
-<p>“Putting a museum on it I suppose,” said June.</p>
-
-<p>“No, not a museum,” said Miss Smiler in a level
-voice ignoring June’s irony either because she did not
-see it, or because she did, which in any case perhaps
-was just as well for her.</p>
-
-<p>“A chicken run?” June surmised with a disdainful
-eye upon a nice basket of new laid eggs, five for a
-shilling.</p>
-
-<p>No, the site had not been acquired for a chicken run.
-Miss Smiler understood they were going to build a
-picture house.</p>
-
-<p>June gazed solemnly at William. And her gaze was
-frankly and faithfully returned. A picture house on
-the spot where a Van Roon had lain hidden and unknown
-for who knew how many years!</p>
-
-<p>What a world it was! Could Mother Stark but have
-guessed she would not have needed a Company to take
-over her premises.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s become of her? Can you tell us?” said
-June.</p>
-
-<p>“Had to go to the Workhouse, I believe, poor soul,”
-said the girl, who had a good heart.</p>
-
-<p>June looked at William. William looked at June.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Is the Workhouse far from here&mdash;please can you
-tell us?” It was William who asked the question.</p>
-
-<p>The Workhouse, it seemed, was not far. In fact
-it was quite near. To get there you had only to go to
-the end of the lane, turn to the left, cross the recreation
-ground and the footbridge over the canal, and keep on
-bearing to the left and you couldn’t miss it.</p>
-
-<p>“Will it take long?” The question was June’s. And
-a glance at her wrist accompanied it.</p>
-
-<p>“Not more than five minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you very much indeed. We are greatly
-obliged to you.” William it was who brought the conversation
-to a climax with a lift of the hat.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LXV">LXV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>here</span> was only one thing to be done now. Mr.
-Mitchell’s hour was up, but there was no help for
-it. The Workhouse, as the girl had said&mdash;she might,
-in June’s opinion have had a claim to good looks if she
-had not suffered from “a rush of teeth to the head”&mdash;was
-not more than five minutes away if you followed
-her instructions.</p>
-
-<p>As June had the matter in hand, the instructions
-were followed to the letter and they arrived at the
-Workhouse without delay. But as the pile, dark and
-grim, came into view at the far side of the canal, an
-odd emotion suddenly brought them up with a round
-turn.</p>
-
-<p>A long moment they gazed at the bleak and frowning
-thing before their eyes. And then June said with a
-laugh, “I’m thinking that’s where you’ll be one day,
-if you don’t find someone who isn’t a genius to look
-after you.”</p>
-
-<p>The words came from the heart, yet William did
-not appear to hear them. “Reminds one,” he murmured
-half to himself, “of that little thing of Duclaux’s
-called The Poor House.”</p>
-
-<p>June’s puzzlement was revealed by a frown.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s an exhibition of his pictures just now at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</span>
-the Bond Street Gallery. Wonderful line. A great
-sense of mass effect.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t tell me,” said June, “there’s beauty in a
-thing like that&mdash;in that old Workhouse?”</p>
-
-<p>“Duclaux would say so, with that dark cloud cutting
-across the gable. And that bend of the Canal in the
-foreground is not without value.” He smiled his rare
-smile which never had looked so divine. But June was
-a little afraid of it now. She kept her eyes the other
-way.</p>
-
-<p>“Canal,” she said with brevity. “Not without value.
-I should say so. As we say at Blackhampton, ‘where
-there’s muck there’s money.’”</p>
-
-<p>She glanced at her wrist again. Another ten minutes
-credited now to Mr. Mitchell’s account.</p>
-
-<p>“Duclaux, I suppose, would see it this way.” The
-queer fellow stepped back two paces, put up his hand
-to shade his eyes and adjust his vision to look at the
-Workhouse.</p>
-
-<p>This was Pure Pottiness, the concentrated essence in
-tabloid form. However, Miss Babraham had already
-impressed upon June the deep truth that genius must
-be allowed a margin.</p>
-
-<p>A little faint of heart she rang the bell of the gloomy
-and forbidding door. The summons was heeded,
-tardily and with reluctance, by its janitor, a surly
-male.</p>
-
-<p>“Can we see Mrs. Stark?” asked June.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh?” said the janitor. He must have been deaf
-indeed not to have heard the question in its cool clarity.
-June repeated it; whereon the keeper of the door looked
-her slowly up and down, turning over the name in his
-mind as he did so.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Mother Stark she was called,” said June, for his
-further enlightenment. “She sold all kinds of old rubbish
-at a shop that used to be opposite Middleton’s
-Dairy at the top of Love Lane.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mother Stark you say!” Light was coming to the
-janitor. “No, you can’t see her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not? The matter’s important.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s been in her grave this two month&mdash;that’s why
-not,” said the janitor.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” said June; and then after brief commerce with
-the eye of William: “Has she any relations or friends?”</p>
-
-<p>The answer was no. Mother Stark had had a parish
-burial.</p>
-
-<p>William thanked Diogenes with that courtesy which
-was never-failing and inimitable; and then after one
-more swift glance at each other, they turned away,
-feeling somehow, a little overcome, yet upheld by the
-knowledge of being through at last with the matter of
-the poor old thing’s annuity.</p>
-
-<p>Returning in their tracks across the canal footbridge,
-across the recreation ground, up the lane, past the site
-of the new picture house, past Middleton’s Dairy, they
-entered the High Street, without haste, in spite of
-Mr. Mitchell, and with a gravity new and strange,
-as if they both felt now the hand of destiny upon
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Heedless of all the Mr. Mitchells in the universe,
-they walked very slowly to draw out the last exquisite
-drop of a moment of bliss that, no matter what life
-had in store, they could never forget. And then for
-some mystic reason, June’s brain grew incandescent. It
-became a thing of dew and fire. Ideas formed within
-it, broke from it, took shape in the ambient air. She<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</span>
-might have been treading the upper spaces of Elysium,
-except that no girl’s feet were ever planted more firmly
-or more shrewdly upon the pavement of High Street,
-Crowdham Market.</p>
-
-<p>Four doors from the Unicorn Inn was the most
-fashionable jeweller’s shop in the town, perhaps for
-the reason that there was no other; and as they came
-level with the window a spark flashed from its depths
-and met an instant answer in the eye of June. Nearly
-an hour behind the schedule they were now, yet they
-lingered one moment more, while June drew William’s
-attention to a coincidence. The vital spark it seemed,
-owed its being to a gem set in a ring which was almost
-a replica of the one worn by Miss Babraham in honor
-of its giver, who of course was a gentleman in the
-Blues.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s as like Miss Babraham’s engagement ring as
-one pea is like another pea,” said June in a soft voice.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of their friendship, William had been
-guilty of many silences of a disgraceful impersonality;
-and he was now guilty of one more. He glanced at
-the ring with a wistful eye, sighed a little, and then
-with slow reluctance moved on. June accompanied
-him to the very threshold of the Unicorn Inn. And
-upon its doorstep of all places, within hearing of the
-Office, wherein lurked Miss Ferris, the landlady’s
-daughter, he faced about, and then by way of an after-thought,
-his head apparently still full of Duclaux, began
-to stammer.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss June if I go back and get that ring will you&mdash;will
-you promise&mdash;to&mdash;to&mdash;&mdash;?”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Ferris was in the Office; the top of her coiffure
-was to be seen above the frosted glass. And the Office<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</span>
-door was wide open; June, therefore, gave her answer
-in a very low and gentle voice.</p>
-
-<p>Her answer, for all that, did not lack pith. “If only
-you’ll cut out the Miss, I’ll wear it like Miss Babraham&mdash;on
-my heart finger.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LXVI">LXVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">B</span>ack</span> they went to the jeweller’s four doors up.
-To the expert eye of William, the ring on inspection
-was so little like Miss Babraham’s that he seemed
-to have a qualm about buying it. He had a fancy for
-moonstones and diamonds, but Crowdham Market’s
-only jeweller did not run to these. June was firm, besides,
-that the ring in her hand was cheap at nine
-guineas, and as no one could call it vulgar, it was
-quite good enough.</p>
-
-<p>William was sure it was nothing like good enough.
-“But when we get to London, you shall have moonstones
-and diamonds.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’ll be lovely,” said June; and a deep thrill ran
-in her heart as she realized that her dreams were coming
-true.</p>
-
-<p>William took a wad of Bradburys from his breast
-pocket. He was now a man of property, with a rent
-roll of twelve hundred a year, but even a most careful
-counting would not let them muster more than seven.
-June, however, as became the lawful owner of an Old
-Master, whom to acquire for the nation a committee
-had been lately formed, was equal to the occasion.
-For she promptly took a wad from the vanity bag
-which now graced her travels instead of her mother’s
-old purse, and made up the sum.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, the jeweller, a man of ripe experience,
-had put two and two together.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Will you wear it, madam, or will you have it
-packed in the box?”</p>
-
-<p>An unconventional question, no doubt, but places
-like Crowdham Market are close to nature and get
-down to bedrock by short cuts.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll wear it,” June answered. “And I’ll have the
-box as well. It’ll do for my dressing table to keep
-pins in.”</p>
-
-<p>The jeweller, one of the old school, bowed to June
-as he handed her the box and also the change. And
-then, a jeweller with a fine technique, he smiled at
-William in a Masonic manner and handed him the
-ring.</p>
-
-<p>June, as cool as if she was on parade, removed a
-white kid glove from her left hand. “That’s the heart
-finger,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>If she blushed a little, the jeweller was too busy
-writing out the receipt at the other end of the shop to
-be aware of the fact.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LXVII">LXVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>hey</span> decided to ask Miss Ferris, the landlady’s
-daughter, for a cup of tea, before they set out
-on the journey home. June felt she could afford to
-take the risk, since by now the situation was well in
-hand. Mr. Mitchell raised no objection. Himself an
-ampler man for a noble lunch, he had been recounting
-tales of Araby and lands of fair renown in the privacy
-of the Office. His suit of Robin Hood green and a
-certain gallantry of bearing had made considerable impact
-in an amazingly short time, not upon Miss
-Ferris merely, but upon her widowed mother, the sole
-proprietress of the Unicorn Inn, who in the words of
-the local manager of the East Anglia and Overtons
-Bank “was the warmest woman in Crowdham Market.”</p>
-
-<p>While Mr. Mitchell (Sergeant, R.E., D.C.M. with
-clasp), and the widow were in the garden admiring the
-early pansies, June and William sat down to tea in the
-coffee room. Even there the contiguity of Miss Ferris
-had rather a tendency to cramp June’s style. High-coloured
-girl, she was a little inclined to take liberties
-as she passed around the table. And when June, in
-her sweetest and best Miss Babraham manner, asked
-if they might have some crab apple jam, she caught the
-glint of the ring on June’s heart finger in a way so
-direct that she murmured something about having to
-look out for her eyesight&mdash;or words equally ill-bred&mdash;and
-nearly dropped the tea pot.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</span></p>
-
-<p>By the time they got under way and the nose of the
-car was set for the pleasant land of Surrey, a doubt
-infected the mind of Mr. Mitchell as to whether they
-would make Homefield before midnight. Neither
-June nor William seemed to care very much whether
-they did or whether they didn’t. The car was most
-comfortable, the sense of romance hot upon them still,
-the presence of each other vital and delicious in their
-consciousness. Mile passed upon mile. The endless
-spool of road continued to unwind itself, a little wind
-breathed gentle nothings, Mr. Mitchell sat four-square
-in front, the birds still sang, but the sun was going
-down.</p>
-
-<p>Saying very little, they lived never-to-be-forgotten
-hours. Now and again William pointed to a bird or a
-tree, the fold of a hill, the form of a cloud, the gleam
-of a distant water. Yet for the most part the nearness
-of each other was all sufficing. June began to nestle
-closer; the chill of night came on. Saying less than
-ever now, moonstones and diamonds stole upon her
-thoughts. She was haunted by a lovely fear that she
-could not live up to them. And then softly and more
-soft, she began to breathe with a rhythmical rise and
-fall, slowly deepening to a faint crescendo that blended
-with the motions of the car.</p>
-
-<p>East by west of nowhere came the high moment
-when the sun was not, and the moon not yet. Somewhere
-over Surrey a star was dancing. Very shyly
-and gently he ventured to give her a kiss. She stirred
-ever so little. A bird spoke from a brake, a note clear
-and wonderful, yet the month was young for the
-nightingale. But this was Cloud Cuckoo Land, a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</span>
-divine country in which the nightingale may be heard
-at odd seasons.</p>
-
-<p>Psyche stirred again. With a reverence chaste and
-simple he gave her a second kiss, deep and slow. The
-solemn sacrament was fire to the soul of an artist. And
-then he gave a little gasp. The high gods in his brain
-whispered that the moon was coming.</p>
-
-<p>The moon was coming.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, there she was, the sovereign lady! He sat very
-still, praying, praying that he might surprise some holy
-secret, hidden even from Duclaux.</p>
-
-<p>She was very wonderful to-night. Her loveliness
-was more than he could bear. There was a touch of
-intimacy in her magic; the country over which she
-shone was elfland. He seemed to hear a faint familiar
-sound of horns. Or it might have been the swift
-gliding of the car.</p>
-
-<p>In the quietness of the spirit’s ecstasy he could have
-wept.</p>
-
-<p>Might it be given to Duclaux to see her, lovely lady,
-just as he could see her now!</p>
-
-<p>But he mustn’t dare to breathe or the vision would
-be forever lost.</p>
-
-<p class="center no-indent">THE END</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="adblock">
-<p class="ph2">NOVELS BY J. C. SNAITH</p>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE VAN ROON</b></p>
-
-<p>A remarkable novel, human to its very core, which
-tells of how a painting by an old master, newly discovered,
-became a cause of love and hate among a
-curious and delightful group of characters.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE COUNCIL OF SEVEN</b></p>
-
-<p>International mystery in which seven men come to
-grips with a war-preaching newspaper-syndicate. The
-hero, typical Snaith character, fights boldly against
-strangling intrigue.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE UNDEFEATED</b></p>
-
-<p>“It is distinctly a big novel&mdash;a book of vision and of
-understanding, of truth and beauty.”&mdash;<i>New York Times.</i></p>
-
-<p>“The simplest and straightest work imaginable and
-mightily impressive.”&mdash;<i>Washington Star.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE SAILOR</b></p>
-
-<p>“It is a book that overwhelms the reader by the
-poignant and magnificent message that it carries. It
-is a book that is unforgettable.”&mdash;<i>Springfield Union.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Interpretative, creative work of a very high order.”&mdash;<i>New
-York Times.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE ADVENTUROUS LADY</b></p>
-
-<p>A sparkling social comedy, top-full of delightful situations
-and characters, seasoned with incomparable
-humor and youthful buoyancy.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE TIME SPIRIT</b></p>
-
-<p>“The verbal fencing, sparkling colloquy and keen,
-swift repartee alone raise the story far above the dead
-level of society fiction.”&mdash;<i>Philadelphia North American.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE COMING</b></p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Snaith handles his theme delicately, poetically,
-with a fine and sensitive reverence.”&mdash;<i>Independent.</i></p>
-
-<p>“It is a daring performance of impressive and triumphant
-strength.”&mdash;<i>New York Tribune.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<p class="center no-indent">D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br />
-New York &ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp; London<br />
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="adblock">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak">A CHOICE SHELF OF NOVELS</p>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<p class="no-indent"><b>ABBÉ PIERRE</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">By JAY WILLIAM HUDSON</p>
-
-<p>This charming novel of life in quaint Gascony is
-proving that a novel that is a work of truest art can
-be a best seller of the widest popularity.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>WAY OF REVELATION</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">By WILFRID EWART</p>
-
-<p>A realistic novel of the great war which presents with
-startling truth and accuracy the effect of the conflict
-upon a group of intensely interesting characters.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE MERCY OF ALLAH</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">By HILAIRE BELLOC, Author of “The Path to
-Rome,” etc.</p>
-
-<p>A brilliant and highly entertaining satire on modern
-business, which tells of how Mahmoud, by the Mercy
-of Allah and his own keen wits, accumulated a vast
-fortune.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE RICH LITTLE POOR BOY</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">By ELEANOR GATES, Author of “The Poor Little
-Rich Girl,” etc.</p>
-
-<p>A whimsical, humorous fantasy of a poor little boy’s
-search for happiness.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>MOTHER</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">By MAXIM GORKY. Introduction by Charles Edward
-Russell.</p>
-
-<p>Wide interest is being displayed in Gorky’s story of
-Russia before the Revolution.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<p class="center no-indent">D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br />
-New York &ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp; London<br />
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="adblock">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak">AMONG THE NEWEST NOVELS</p>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE HOUSE OF MOHUN</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">By GEORGE GIBBS, Author of “Youth Triumphant,”
-etc.</p>
-
-<p>A distinguished novel depicting present day society
-and its most striking feature, the “flapper.” A story
-of splendid dramatic qualities.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE COVERED WAGON</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">By EMERSON HOUGH, Author of “The Magnificent
-Adventure,” “The Story of the Cowboy,” etc.</p>
-
-<p>A novel of the first water, clear and clean, is this
-thrilling story of the pioneers, the men and women who
-laid the foundation of the great west.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>HOMESTEAD RANCH</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">By ELIZABETH G. YOUNG</p>
-
-<p>The <i>New York Times</i> says that “Homestead Ranch”
-is one of the season’s “two best real wild and woolly
-western yarns.” The <i>Boston Herald</i> says, “So delightful
-that we recommend it as one of the best western
-stories of the year.”</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>SACRIFICE</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">By STEPHEN FRENCH WHITMAN, Author of
-“Predestined,” etc.</p>
-
-<p>How a woman, spoiled child of New York society,
-faced the dangers of the African jungle trail. “One
-feels ever the white heat of emotional conflict.”&mdash;<i>Philadelphia
-Public Ledger.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>DOUBLE-CROSSED</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">By W. DOUGLAS NEWTON, Author of “Low Ceilings,”
-etc.</p>
-
-<p>“An excellently written and handled tale of adventure
-and thrills in the dark spruce valleys of Canada.”&mdash;<i>New
-York Times.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>JANE JOURNEYS ON</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">By RUTH COMFORT MITCHELL, Author of “Play
-the Game,” etc.</p>
-
-<p>The cheerful story of a delightful heroine’s adventures
-from Vermont to Mexico.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<p class="center no-indent">D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br />
-New York &ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp; London<br />
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak"><span class="smcap">Transcriber’s Notes:</span></p>
-
-
-<p>On page 10, finger-nail has been changed to finger nail.</p>
-
-<p>On page 15, packing-case has been changed to packing case.</p>
-
-<p>On page 31, “top if” has been changed to “top of”.</p>
-
-<p>On page 70, “was not be” has been changed to “was not to be”.</p>
-
-<p>On page 73, “severity that” has been changed to “severity than”.</p>
-
-<p>On page 75, once side has been changed to one side.</p>
-
-<p>On page 111, none-such has been changed to non-such.</p>
-
-<p>On pages 154 and 194, Jane has been changed to June.</p>
-
-<p>On page 189, shop-door has been changed to shop door.</p>
-
-<p>On page 258, that has been changed to than.</p>
-
-<p>On page 319, being has been changed to been.</p>
-
-<p>On page 321, Jane Eliot has been changed to Jane Austen.</p>
-
-<p>Minor, quiet corrections have been made to punctuation,
-to conform to common usage.</p>
-
-<p>All other hyphenation, variant and archaic spellings
-and accented dialogue have been retained.</p></div>
-</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VAN ROON ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
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