Left alone, after Thyrza's second visit to him in the library,
Egremont had no mind to continue his task. He idled about for a
while, read half a page in a volume he took out of the box at
hazard, then put on his overcoat and went out by the front door,
which he locked behind him with the key he carried for his own
convenience.
He was wishing that he had not fallen into this piece of folly. As
long as no one but Grail and himself was concerned, it mattered
nothing; to have established a secret intercourse with Thyrza was a
result of his freak for which he was not at all prepared. And he
could not see his way out of the difficulty. He might go and see
Grail, and let him know what he was doing, but that would involve
deliberate concealment of Thyrza's visits. He could not speak of
them; he had no right to do so. If Thyrza on her part told all about
it--why, that would make it, for him, still more unpleasant. And
Thyrza was not likely to do that; he felt assured of it. Precisely;
that meant that henceforth there would be a secret understanding
between himself and Gilbert's wife. Most certainly he desired
nothing of the kind.
A weak way of putting it. Walter dreaded anything of the kind. Two
days--Monday, Tuesday--and in that brief time the whole face of
the future had changed for him. On Sunday evening he had sat
thinking over his future relations with Grail and Thyrza. The fact
that he consciously brought himself to reflect upon the subject of
course proved that it involved certain doubts and difficulties for
him, but in half an hour he believed that he had put his mind in
order. Thyrza interested him--why not say it out, as he was bent on
understanding himself? She interested him more vitally than any girl
he had ever known. Very possibly he saw her in the light of
illusion; should his opportunities grant him a completer knowledge
of her, he might not improbably discover that after all she was but
a pretty girl of the people, attractive in a great measure owing to
her very deficiencies. He would very likely come to laugh at himself
for having thought that her value was above that of Annabel
Newthorpe. But he had to deal with the present, and in the present
Thyrza seemed to him all gold. Had there existed no Gilbert Grail,
he would have been in love with Thyrza.
The plain truth. But Gilbert Grail did exist, and in Walter Egremont
existed a sense of honour, a sense of shame. Should he by word or
deed throw light upon Gilbert Grail's future, he felt that all the
good of his own life would be at an end. He could not face man or
woman again.
It came to this, then. Henceforth he must remember that, however
near his intimacy with Gilbert, there must be no playing at
friendship with Gilbert's wife. Friendship was impossible. That
golden-haired girl had a power over him which, if ever so slightly
and thoughtlessly exercised, might drive him into acts of insanity.
He had seen her three times--this is Sunday night, remember--and
yet the thought of Annabel was like a pale ghost beside his thought
of her. He had till now suspected that his nature was not framed for
passion; a few weeks had taught him that, if he allowed passion to
take hold upon him, no part of his soul could escape the flame.
Two days had passed since then. On two successive mornings he had
been alone with Thyrza; one evening he had spent at a concert, for
the mere sake of being where Thyrza was, and feeling emotions such
as he knew she would feel. 'No playing at friendship with Gilbert's
wife.' And he had himself held out his band to her, had asked her to
address him familiarly, had talked of things which brought them into
closer communion, had--yes--had bidden her keep their interviews a
secret from Gilbert. Had insanity begun?
A piece of folly; nothing else. As he walked towards Westminster, he
viewed the situation, or tried to view it, as it is put in the
second paragraph of this chapter. He had got into a very
disagreeable position; he really must find some becoming way out of
it; Thyrza was a silly girl to come a second time; of course the
appointment for the following morning must not be kept. There was no
harm in it all, none whatever, but--
Bah! The worst had come about; the miserable fate had declared
itself; he was in love with Thyrza Trent!
He entered the Abbey. He seated himself in a shadowed place. Alone?
Whose then was the voice that spoke to him unceasingly, and the hand
which he was holding, which stirred his blood so with its warmth?
'Put aside every thought of the living fact; say that there is no
Gilbert Grail in the world. You and I--you, Thyrza, my sweet-eyed,
my beautiful--sit here side by side and hold each other's hands.
Your voice has become very low and reverent, as befits the place, as
befits the utterance of love such as this you say you bear me. What
can I answer you, my golden one? Only, in voice low as your own,
breathe that the world is barren but for you, that to the last drop
of my heart's blood I love and worship you! A poor girl, a worker
with her hands, untaught--you say that? A woman, pure of soul, with
loveliness for your heritage, with possibilities imaginable in every
ray of your eyes, in every note of the rare music of your voice!'
Even so. In the meantime, this happens to be Westminster Abbey,
where a working man, one Gilbert Grail, has often walked and sought
solace from the bitterness of his accursed lot, where he has thought
of a young girl who lives above him in the house, and who, as often
as she passes him, is like a gleam of southern sky somehow slipped
into the blank hideousness of a London winter. Hither he has
doubtless come to try and realise that fate has been so merciful to
him that he longs to thank some unknown deity and cry that all is
good. Hither he will come again, with one whom he calls his wife--
'Yes. I have come here direct from the station, because I wished to
make use of you. But it seems to me that the doctor would have been
a more fitting visitor. What has come to you, Walter?'
'It is true. I am not well. But always well enough to desire to
serve you.'
'Though not, seemingly, to bear in mind my first wish. Why have you
not answered my last letter, as I particularly asked you to? If you
were ill, why have you remained here alone? I am angry with you.'
He was reflecting, as absorbedly as if she had not been in the room.
She was his friend, if any man had one; she was of the priceless
women who own both heart and brain. Should he speak out and tell her
everything? If he did so, he was saved. He would leave town. Grail
should come back, after the wedding holiday, and get on with the
arrangement of the library under written directions. Illness would
explain such a step. In a month, all would be right again.
Her eyes were searching him. Did she half know? He had written so
foolishly in the letter about Thyrza. But it was impossible that she
could divine such a thing. The circumstances made it too incredible.
'Tell me,' she went on. 'What has caused your illness?'
No, he could not. She would scorn him. And he could not bear to sink
in her estimation. He could not seem childish before her.
'I have no idea,' he answered. 'Perhaps I have so accustomed myself
to rambling over land and sea, that a year without change is proving
too much for me. I must have the library started, and then be off--
anywhere--a voyage to New Zealand!'
Mrs. Ormonde showed disappointment. She did not believe that this
was the truth, even as he knew it. The truth was glimmering in the
rear of her thoughts, but she would not allow it to come forward; in
plain daylight it was really difficult to entertain. Still, as an
instinct it was there, instinct supported even by certain pieces of
evidence.
'You wish to go away? To go a distance--to be away for some time?'
'Yes.' He did not meet her look. 'I don't think I shall get back my
health till I do that. Don't let us talk of it.'
'But I promise you,' he continued, 'that I will leave town
to-morrow. I promise you. Don't think me unkind that I refuse to
come with you. I will go to Jersey again; it suits me. I'll stay
there till Grail comes back with his wife, and then see if I feel
well enough to come and go on with the work.'
'I want to arrange, if possible, to keep his child with me for some
time, for a year or more. It is not impossible that her disease
might be checked if she lived at Eastbourne, but in London she will
very soon die. I should like to see Mr. Bunce myself, and I thought
you might be able to arrange for a meeting between us. My idea is
this: I shall tell him that the girl can make herself useful in the
house, and that I wish to pay her for her services. The money would
of course go to him, and he might use it to get help in his home.
Bessie, the child, has explained to me all the difficulties in the
way of her remaining with me; they are heightened by her father's
character, as you can understand. Now do you think he would see me?
He might come to my hotel, or he might come here, or if he allows
me, I would go to him.'
'I will arrange it, somehow. Trust me, I will arrange it.'
'You should have said that with a wave of the hand, as omnipotent
people do on the stage.'
'I have no idea. I am not likely ever to see her again.'
'Oh, yes! When you come back from New Zealand. I shall go and see
the Tyrrells this afternoon, I think. I have to dine with friends at
Hampstead. When can I have the result of your inquiries?'
This visit had been happily timed. Sympathy was essential to
Egremont as often as he suffered from the caprices of his
temperament, and in grave trouble it was a danger for him to be left
companionless. He was highly nervous, and the tumult of his
imagination affected his bodily state in a degree uncommon in men,
though often seen in delicately organised women. When Mrs. Ormonde
left him he felt relieved in mind, but physically so brought down
that he stretched himself upon the sofa. He remained there for more
than an hour.
How much better, he was saying to himself, not to have told Mrs.
Ormonde I That would have been a greater folly than anything yet. No
irreparable harm was as yet done; to confess a mere state of mind
would have been to fill his friend with fears wholly groundless, and
to fix a lasting torture in his own memory. It would have been to
render impossible any future work in Lambeth. Yet upon the
continuance of such work practically depended Grail's future. To
Gilbert Grail he had solemn duties to perform. Henceforth the scope
of his efforts would be lessened; instead of exerting himself for a
vague populace, it would really be for Grail alone that he worked.
Grail he must and would aid to the end. It was a task worthy of a
man who was not satisfied with average aims. He would crush this
tyrannous passion in his heart, cost him what struggle it might, and
the reward would be a noble one.
He rose at length with a haggard face. It was long past the hour at
which he usually took his mid-day meal, and he had no appetite for
food. He went to a restaurant, however, and made pretence of eating;
thence into the smoking-room, where he spent the time till five
o'clock, drinking coffee and reading papers. His only object now was
to kill time.
At half-past eight he was in Lambeth. He knew Bunce's address, but
had never before been in Newport Street. It was his habit to
discover places by the aid of a map alone, and, thus guided, he
found the house.
Totty Nancarrow happened to be on the stairs when he knocked; she
had just come in. She ran down to the door. Egremont inquired for
Bunce, and was told he was not at home, and would not be till very
late.
'Do you know when I could be sure to find him here?'
'Yes,' replied Totty, who was able to guess at Egremont's identity,
and examined him with some interest. 'He'll be here to-morrow after
eight. He's on a job in Hammersmith, working late. But to-morrow's
the last day, and he's sure to be back by eight o'clock.'
This was a mishap. It would necessitate another whole day in London.
He called upon Mrs. Ormonde next morning, at the hotel which it was
her wont to use when in town for a day or two. At first she was
strongly opposed to his waiting just on this account.
'I cannot go till I have done this for you,' he said firmly. 'I
shall see Bunce to-night, and go away to-morrow. You must let me
have my way in this.'
And he desired to remain for a weightier reason than the apparent
one. It was this morning, Wednesday, that Thyrza would expect to
find him at the library. She must be disappointed, and he would
prove to himself that he was yet strong enough to resist, that he
had not so lost self-control that his only safety lay in flight.
The strength was that of a man who combats desperately with some
ailment which threatens his life. 'Am I then of those who have no
will power? Will is that whereby men raise themselves above the
multitude; let me give proofs now that my claims are not those of a
charlatan.' He passed six hours in his room.
Thyrza would go to the library at eleven, or a little after. She was
there now. She would find the front door closed against her. She
would go round to the house, and make inquiry of Mrs. Butterfield.
Perhaps she would wait for him.
Yes, she would wait for him. She was sitting in the library, on the
chest which he had offered her for a seat, alone, disappointed.
Disappointed. More than that. Why had she come on Tuesday, the
second morning? Why had she desired to come yet again? Had he read
her face truly?
He knew, he knew with miserable certainty, that she did not love
Grail. She had not known what love was; a child, so merely a child!
But when love once was born in her, would it not be for life and
death?
He was lying on the sofa again, his eyes fixed on the ceiling.
Moisture stood upon his forehead, formed into beads and ran off. His
torment was that of the rack. He believed that Thyrza had at least
begun to love him. Madman that he was, he hoped it! Thyrza's love
was a thing for which one would dare uttermost perdition, the blind
leap once taken. Yes, but that leap he would not take; he was on
firm ground; he knew what honour meant; he acknowledged the sanctity
of obligations between man and man
But if she loved him, was it right that she should wed Grail?
Obligations, forsooth! Was it not his first duty to save her from a
terrible self-sacrifice? What could overrule love? There was time to
intervene; four days more, and it would be too late for ever--for
ever. What hideous things might result from conscientiousness such
as he was now striving to preserve.
'Thyrza! She is waiting there, waiting for me to come to her. She
trembles at every sound, thinking it my footstep. If her anguish
be but the shadow of mine--'
He sprang up, ghastly. He had not closed his eyes through the night,
but had lain, and walked about the room, in torment. Desire,
jealousy, frenzy of first passion, the first passion of his life; no
pang was spared him. Oh, how had it grown so suddenly! He had
imagined love such as this for some stately woman whose walk was
upon the heights of mind--some great artist--some glorious
sovereign of culture. Instead of that, a simple girl who lived by
her needle, who spoke faultily. And he loved her with the love which
comes to a man but once.
The evening came at last. Long before it was really time to start
for Lambeth, on his visit to Bunce, he began to walk southwards. He
was at Westminster Bridge by half-past seven; probably it would be
useless to call in Newport Street for another hour. He went down on
to the Lambeth Embankment.
It was his hope that no acquaintance would pass this way. Still
blameless in fact, he could not help a fear of being observed; the
feeling could not have been stronger if he had come with the express
purpose of seeking Thyrza. The air was cold; it blew at moments
piercingly from the river. Where the sun had set, there was still a
swarthy glow upon the clouds; the gas-lamps gave a haggardness to
the banks and the bridges.
He walked at a quick pace; this way, then that. Workmen and women in
numbers were hurrying in both directions. Egremont kept his face
towards the river, that he might see no one. There was no likelihood
that Thyrza would pass. If she did, if she were alone and saw him,
he knew she would come up to him and speak.
The bell at Westminster struck out the hour of eight. He turned off
the Embankment and went on to Lambeth Bridge, stopping at length to
lean on the parapet at the same place where Gilbert had stood and
mused one night when his happiness was almost too great to bear. To
Egremont the darkening scene was in accord with the wearied misery
which made his life one dull pain. London lay beneath the night like
a city of hopeless toil, of aimless conflict, of frustration and
barrenness. His philosophy was a sham, a spinning of cobwebs for
idle hours when the heart is restful and the brain seeks to be
amused. He had no more strength to bear the torture of an
inassuageable desire than any foolish fellow who knew not the name
of culture. He could not look forward to the day of forgetting; he
would not allow himself to believe that he ever could forget.
But it was time now to go on to Newport Street. In Paradise Street,
just before the railway arch, he glanced at the Bowers' shop, and
dreaded lest Bower should meet him. But he saw no one that he knew
before reaching Bunce's abode.
The landlady opened the door. Bunce was at home, and in a moment
came down. He returned his visitor's greeting awkwardly, much
wondering.
'Could I have a few words with you?' Egremont asked. 'I have come on
Mrs. Ormonde's behalf--the lady at the Eastbourne home, you know. I
have a message about your little girl.'
'Something happened?' Bunce inquired, in a startled voice.
Bunce did not willingly invite Egremont into his poor room, but he
felt that he had no choice. He just said: 'Will you come upstairs,
sir?' and led the way.
The two children were playing together on the floor; Bunce had been
on the point of putting Nelly to bed. In spite of his mood, natural
kindness so far prevailed with Egremont that he bent and touched the
child's curls. Bunce, with set lips, stood watching; he saw that
Egremont had not so much as cast an eye round the room, and that,
together with the attention to his child, softened his naturally
suspicious frame of mind.
'It's better than coming back to an empty room every night?'
Egremont said, looking at the man.
'Yes, sir, it's better--though I don't always think so.'
'There's never nothing the matter with me!' exclaimed young Jack,
bluff though shamefaced.
'Nothing except your grammar, you mean, Jack,' replied his father.
'Will you just sit down, sir? I was afraid at first there was
something wrong, when you mentioned Mrs. Ormonde.'
Egremont reassured him, and went on to say that Mrs. Ormonde was
anxious to see him personally whilst she was in town. He felt it
would be better not to explain the nature of the proposal Mrs.
Ormonde was going to make, and affected to know nothing more than
that she wished to speak of the child's health. Bunce had knitted
his brows; his heavy lips took on a fretful sullenness. He knew that
it was impossible to meet Egremont with flat refusals, and the
prospect of being driven into something he intensely disliked worked
him into an inward fume. He gave a great scrape on the floor with
one of his heels as if he would have ploughed a track in the boards.
'I'm sorry,' he began, 'I've got no free time worth speaking of. I'm
much obliged to the lady. But I don't see how I'm to--'
He wanted to blunder out words of angry impatience; his rising
choler brought him to a full stop in the middle of the sentence.
Egremont addressed himself in earnest to the task persuasion. More
was involved than mere benefit to the child's health; it was easy to
see that Bunce's position was a miserable one, and Mrs. Ormonde, if
once she could establish direct relations with the man, would
doubtless find many a little way of being useful to him. He put it
at length as a personal favour. Bunce again ploughed the floor, then
blurted out:
'I'll go, Mr. Egremont. I'm not one to talk to ladies, as you can
see yourself, but I can't help that. I shall have to go as I am.'
'Mrs. Ormonde will gladly come here, if you will let her.'
'Then it will be simplest if you go to my rooms in Great Russell
Street, just by the British Museum. I leave town tomorrow; Mrs.
Ormonde will be quite alone to meet you. Could you be there at nine
o'clock?'
The appointment was made, Egremont leaving one of his cards to
insure recollection of the address. Then he spoke a word or two to
the children, and Bunce led him down to the door. They shook hands.
'I shall see you at the library soon, I hope,' Egremont said. 'You
must give me your best help in making it known.'
The words sounded so hollow in his own ears that, as he turned to go
along the dark street, he could have laughed at himself scornfully.
As Bunce reascended, someone met and passed him, hurrying with light
feet and woman's garments silently.
'That you, Miss Nancarrow?' he asked, for there was no light on the
staircase.
'No,' came a muffled reply. 'Miss Nancarrow isn't in.'
It was the voice of Thyrza Trent. Bunce did not recognise it, for he
knew her too slightly.
She had come to the house not long before Egremont. After a day of
suffering she wished to speak with Totty. Totty was the only one to
whom she could speak now; Gilbert, her own Lyddy--them she
dreaded. Notwithstanding the terms on which she had parted with her
friend on Monday night, she felt an irresistible need of seeing her.
It was one way, moreover, of passing a part of the evening away from
Walnut Tree Walk. But Totty was out, had not yet come home since her
work. Thyrza said she would go upstairs and wait.
She did so. Totty's room was dark and, of course, fireless; but she
cared neither for the darkness nor the cold. She groped her way to a
chair and sat very still. It was a blessed relief to be here, to be
safe from Gilbert and Lyddy for ever so short a time, to sit and
clasp the darkness like something loved. She was making up her mind
to tell Totty everything. Someone she must tell--someone. Not
Lyddy; that would be terrible. But Totty had a kind heart, and would
keep the secret, perchance could advise in some way. Though what
advice could anyone give?
What voice was that? She had heard someone knock at Bunce's door,
then heard Bunce go down. He was coming up again, and someone with
him--someone who spoke in a voice which made her heart leap. She
sprang to the door to listen. Bunce and his companion entered the
opposite room, and shut themselves in. Thyrza opened her door as
softly as possible, leaned forward, listened. Yes, it was his
voice!
What was he doing here? He had not come to the library, had not kept
his promise. Was it not a promise to her? He had said that she
should see him again, should be in the room alone with him, talk
with him for one hour--one poor, short hour; and in the end it was
denied. Why did he come to see Mr. Bunce? But he was well; nothing
had happened to him, which all day had been her dread.
She would not try to overhear their conversation. Enough that he was
safe in that next room, never mind for what purpose he came. She was
near to him again.
She threw up her hands against the door, and leaned her face, her
bosom on it. Her throat was so dry that she felt choking; her heart
--poor heart! could it bear this incessant throbbing pain? She
swallowed tears, and had some little bodily solace.
But if Totty should come! She hoped to be alone as long as he was
there. It was so sweet to be near him, and alone!
And Totty did not come. Of a sudden the opposite door opened. He was
leaving, going forth again she knew not whither--only that it was
away from her.
Then desire became act. She heard the house-door close, and on the
moment sped from the room. She scarcely knew what she said to Bunce
on the stairs. Now she was in the street. Which way? There he was,
there, at but a little distance.
But she must not approach him here, in this street. Any moment Totty
might come--one of the Bowers might pass. She kept at an even
remoteness, following him. Into Paradise Street, into High Street,
out into Lambeth Road, with the bridge in sight. He meant to go
along the Embankment. But it was quieter here. A quickened step,
almost a run, and she was by his side.
They were under the church. As Thyrza spoke, the bells suddenly
broke out with their harsh clanging; they had been ringing for the
last twenty minutes, and were now recommencing after a pause.
Egremont glanced towards the tower, startled and seemingly annoyed.
'I'm very sorry I couldn't come to the library this morning, Miss
Trent,' he said, very formally. 'I was unexpectedly kept away.'
What automaton had taken his place and spoke in this contemptible
tone of conventional politeness?
'Those bells are so loud,' Thyrza said, complainingly. 'I wanted to
--to ask you something. May I go with you a little further--just to
the bridge?'
He said nothing, but looked at her and walked on. They entered the
bridge. Egremont still advanced, and Thyrza kept by him, till they
were nearly on the Westminster side of the river. Very few people
passed them, and no vehicles disturbed the quiet of the dark road
along the waterside. On the one hand was a black mass of wharfs, a
few barges moored in front; on the other, at a little distance, the
gloomy shape of Millbank prison. The jangle of the bells was
softened.
'They certainly might be more musical,' Egremont said, with a forced
laugh. 'I should not care to live in one of the houses just under
the church.'
'I waited this morning. Oh, it didn't matter; but I was afraid--I
thought you might have had some accident, Mr. Egremont.'
'No. It was business that prevented me from coming. But you wish to
ask me something, Miss Trent?'
'If you will be there to-morrow--that was all. I like helping. I
like looking at the books, and putting them up--if you would let
me.'
The nearest lamp showed him her face. What held him from making that
pale loveliness his own? His heart throbbed as terribly as hers; he
with difficulty heard when she spoke, so loud was the rush of blood
in his ears.
But he had begun the fight with himself. He could not turn away
abruptly and leave her standing there; if the victory were to be
won, it must be by sheer wrestle with the temptation, for her sake
as well as his own. To let her so much as suspect his feeling were
as bad as to utter it; nay, infinitely worse, for it would mean that
he must not see her after to-night. He and she would then be each
other's peril in a far direr sense than now.
'Yes, I am going out of England for a week or two--perhaps for
longer.'
It was wrong--all wrong. In spite of himself he could not but admit
a note of pathos. The automatic voice of politeness would not come
at his bidding. He should have left her on the other side of the
bridge, where the harsh bells allowed no delicacies of tone.
The monosyllable fell from her like a whisper of despair. But the
utterance of Grail's name had brought Egremont the last impulse he
needed.
'When I come back,' he said, 'I shall find you in your new home. As
I shan't see you again, let me say now how much I hope that you will
live there a long time and very happily. Good-bye, Miss Trent.'
Surely that was formal and automatic enough. Not one more word, not
one more glance at her face. He had touched her hand, had raised his
hat, was gone.
She stood gazing after him until, in a minute or two, he was lost in
the dark street behind the wharfs. So suddenly! He had scarcely said
good-bye--so poor a good-bye! She had vexed him with her
importunities; he wished to show her that she had not behaved in the
way that pleased him. Scarcely a good-bye!
She went to the end of the bridge, and there crept into a dark place
whither no eye could follow her. Her strength was at an end. She
fell to her knees; her head lay against something hard and cold; a
sob convulsed her, and then in the very anguish of desolation she
wept. The darkness folded her; she could lie here on the ground and
abandon herself to misery. She wept her soul from her eyes.
But for Egremont the struggle was not over. He had scarcely passed
out of her sight when fear held his steps. Thyrza must not he left
there alone. That face of hers, looking like marble, threatened
despair. How could he leave her so far from home, in the night, by
the river?
He went back. He knew what such return meant. It was defeat after
all. He knew what his first word to her would be.
He sought her now, sought her that she might never leave him again.
The flood of passion was too strong; that moment of supreme
restraint had but massed the waters into overwhelming power. It was
the thought of danger to her that had ended all pity for Gilbert.
She was not in sight. Could she have passed the bridge so quickly?
He ran forward. True, it must be more than five minutes since he had
left her, much more, perhaps, for he could not judge how long he had
stood battling with him. self behind the wharfs.
A policeman stood at the end of the bridge. Egremont asked him if a
young girl had just passed. Yes, such a one had gone by a minute or
two ago.
He ran on, past the church, into High Street. But would she go this
way? A girl crossed the road a little way ahead, into Paradise
Street. He overtook her, only to be disappointed.
At the end of Newport Street a man stood, waiting. It was Gilbert
Grail; he had come in the hope of meeting Thyrza, who, Lydia had
told him, was gone to see Totty Nancarrow. He was greatly anxious
about her.
Egremont, coming up at a swift pace recognised Gilbert and stopped.
They shook hands. Grail was silent, Egremont began to stammer words.
He had been to see Bunce, just now, for such and such reasons, with
such and such results. But he could not stop, he had an engagement.
Good-night!
The shame of it! He found himself in Lambeth Walk, no longer
searching, anxious only to get away from the sight of men. Thyrza
must be home by this time. That speech with Gilbert had chilled him,
and now he was hot with self-contempt. He made his way out into
Westminster Bridge Road, thence walked to his own part of the town.