On a Sunday afternoon in October, when Abraham Woodstock had lain in
his grave for three months, Waymark met Julian Casti by appointment
in Sloane Square, and they set forth together on a journey to
Peckham. They were going thither by invitation, and, to judge from
the laughter which accompanied their talk, their visit was likely to
afford them entertainment. The merriment on Julian's side was not
very natural; he looked indeed too ill to enjoy mirth of any kind.
As they stood in the Square, waiting for an omnibus, he kept
glancing uneasily about him, especially in the direction whence they
had come. It had the appearance of a habit, but before they had
stood much more than a minute, he started and exclaimed in a low
voice to his companion--
"I told you so. She is just behind there. She has come round by the
back streets, just to see if I'd told her the truth."
"Yes; simply because she could not understand it. She said she
thought it was waste paper, but I saw, I saw."
The 'bus they waited for came up, and they went on their way. On
reaching the neighbourhood of Peckham, they struck off through a
complex of small new streets, apparently familiar to Waymark, and
came at length to a little shop, also very new, the windows of which
displayed a fresh-looking assortment of miscellaneous goods. There
was half a large cheese, marked by the incisions of the
tasting-knife; a boiled ham, garlanded; a cone of brawn; a truncated
pyramid of spiced beef, released from its American tin; also German
sausage and other dainties of the kind. Then there were canisters of
tea and coffee, tins of mustard, a basket of eggs, some onions,
boxes of baking-powder and of blacking; all arranged so as to make
an impression on the passers-by; everything clean and bright. Above
the window stood in imposing gilt letters the name of the
proprietor: O'Gree.
They entered. The shop was very small and did not contain much
stock. The new shelves showed a row of biscuit-tins, but little
else, and from the ceiling hung balls of string. On the counter lay
an inviting round of boiled beef. Odours of provisions and of fresh
paint were strong in the air. Every thing gleamed from resent
scrubbing and polishing; the floor only emphasised its purity by a
little track where a child's shoes had brought in mud from the
street; doubtless it had been washed over since the Sunday morning's
custom had subsided. Wherever the walls would have confessed their
bareness the enterprising tradesman had hung gorgeous advertising
cards. At the sound of the visitors' footsteps, the door leading out
of the shop into the parlour behind opened briskly, a head having
previously appeared over the red curtain, and Mr. O'Gree, in the
glory of Sunday attire, rushed forward with eager hands. His welcome
was obstreperous.
"Waymark, you're a brick! Mr. Casti, I'm rejoiced to receive you in
my establishment! You're neither a minute too soon nor a minute too
late. Mrs. O'Gree only this moment called out from the kitchen that
the kettle was boiling and the crumpets at the point of perfection!
I knew your punctuality of old, Waymark. Mr. Casti, how does it
strike you? Roaring trade, Waymark! Done two shillings and
threepence three farthings this Sunday morning. Look here, me boy,
--ho, ho!"
He drew out the till behind the counter, and jingled his hand in
coppers. Then he rushed about in the wildest fervour from object to
object, opening tins which he had forgotten were empty, making
passes at the beef and the ham with a formidable carving-knife,
demonstrating the use of a sugar-chopper and a coffee-grinder, and,
lastly, calling attention with infinite glee to a bad halfpenny
which he had detected on the previous afternoon, and had forthwith
nailed down to the counter, in terrorem. Then he lifted with much
solemnity a hinged portion of the counter, and requested his
visitors to pass into the back-parlour. Here there was the same
perfect cleanliness, though the furniture was scant and very simple.
The round table was laid for tea, with a spotless cloth, plates of a
very demonstrative pattern, and knives and forks which seemed only
just to have left the ironmonger's shop.
"We pass, you observe, Mr. Casti," cried the ex-teacher, "from the
region of commerce to that of domestic intimacy. Here Mrs. O'Gree
reigns supreme, as indeed she does in the other department, as far
as presiding genius goes. She's in all places at once, like a
birrud! Mr. Casti," in a whisper, "I shall have the pleasure of
introducing you to one of the most remarkable women it was ever your
lot to meet; a phenomenon of--"
The inner door opened, and the lady herself interrupted these
eulogies. Sally was charming. Her trim little body attired in the
trimmest of homely dresses, her sharp little face shining and just a
little red with excitement, her quick movements, her laughing eyes,
her restless hands graced with the new wedding-ring--all made up a
picture of which her husband might well be proud. He stood and gazed
at her in frank admiration; only when she sprang forward to shake
hands with Waymark did he recover himself sufficiently to go through
the ceremony of introducing Julian. It was done with all
stateliness.
"An improvement this on the masters' room, eh, Waymark?" cried Mr.
O'Gree. Then, suddenly interrupting him self, "And that reminds me!
We've got a lodger."
"And who d'ye think? Who d'ye think? You wouldn't guess if you went
on till Christmas. Ho, ho, ho! I'm hanged if I tell you. Wait and
see!"
"Shall I call him down?" asked Sally, who in the meantime had
brought in the tea-pot, and the crumpets, and a dish of slices from
the round of beef on the counter, and boiled eggs, and sundry other
dainties.
O'Gree, unable to speak for mirth, nodded his head, and presently
Sally returned, followed by--Mr. Egger. Waymark scarcely
recognised his old friend, so much had the latter changed: instead
of the old woe-begone look, Egger's face wore a joyous smile, and
his outer man was so vastly improved that he had evidently fallen on
a more lucrative profession. Waymark remembered O'Gree's chance
meeting with the Swiss, but had heard nothing of him since; nor
indeed had O'Gree till a day or two ago.
"How do things go?" Waymark inquired heartily. "Found a better
school?"
"No, no, my friend," returned Egger, in his very bad English. "At
the school I made my possible; I did till I could no more. I have
made like Mr. O'Gree; it is to say, quite a change in my life. I am
waiter at a restaurant. And see me; am I not the better quite? No
fear!" This cockneyism came in with comical effect. "I have enough
to eat and to drink, and money in my pocket. The school may go to ----"
O'Gree coughed violently to cover the last word, and looked
reproachfully at his old colleague. Poor Egger, who had been carried
away by his joyous fervour, was abashed, and glanced timidly at
Sally, who replied by giving him half a dozen thick rounds of German
sausage. On his requesting mustard, she fetched some from the shop
and mixed it, but, in doing so, had the misfortune to pour too much
water.
"There!" she exclaimed; "I've doubted the miller's eye."
O'Gree laughed when he saw Waymark looking for an explanation.
"That's a piece of Weymouth," he remarked. "Mrs. O'Gree comes from
the south-west of England," he added, leaning towards Casti. "She's
constantly teaching me new and interesting things. Now, if I was to
spill the salt here--"
He put his Ii and on the salt-cellar, as if to do so, but Sally
rapped his knuckles with a fork.
"None of your nonsense, sir! Give Mr. Casti some more meat,
instead."
It was a merry party. The noise of talk grew so loud that it was
only the keenness of habitual attention on Sally's part which
enabled her to observe that a customer was knocking on the counter.
She darted out, but returned with a disappointed look on her face.
"Now, look here, Waymark," cried O'Gree, rising in indignation from
his seat. "Look here, Mr. Casti. The one drop of bitterness in our
cup is--pickles; the one thing that threatens to poison our
happiness is--pickles. We're always being asked for pickles; just
as if the people knew about it, and came on purpose!"
"Knew About what?" asked Waymark, in astonishment.
"Why, that we mayn't sell 'em! A few doors off there's a scoundrel
of a grocer. Now, his landlord's the same as ours, and when we took
this shop there was one condition attached. Because the grocer sells
pickles, and makes a good thing of them, we had to undertake that,
in that branch of commerce, we wouldn't compete with him. Pickles
are forbidden."
Waymark burst into a most unsympathetic roar of laughter, but with
O'Gree the grievance was evidently a serious one, and it was some
few moments before he recovered his equanimity. Indeed it was not
quite restored till the entrance of another customer, who purchased
two ounces of butter. When, in the dead silence which ensued, Sally
was heard weighing out the order, O'Gree's face beamed; and when
there followed the chink of coins in the till, he brought his fist
down with a triumphant crash upon the table.
When tea was over, O'Gree managed to get Waymark apart from the
rest, and showed him a small photograph of Sally which had recently
been taken.
"Sally's great ambition," he whispered, "is to be taken
cabinet-size, and in a snow-storm. You've seen the kind of thing in
the shop-windows? We'll manage that before long, but this will do
for the present. You don't see a face like that every day; eh,
Waymark?"
Sally, her housewifery duly accomplished in the invisible regions,
came back and sat by the fireside. She had exchanged her work-a-day
costume for one rather more ornate. Noticeable was a delicate gold
chain which hung about her neck, and Waymark smiled when he
presently saw her take out her watch and seem to compare its time
with that of the clock on the mantelpiece. It was a wedding present
from Ida.
Sally caught the smile, and almost immediately came over to a seat
by Waymark; and, whilst the others were engaged in loud talk, spoke
with him privately.
"Yes, that's just what it is, you may depend upon it. I more'n half
believe you're telling fibs."
Tumblers of whisky were soon smoking on the table, and all except
Casti laughed and talked to their heart's content. Casti was no
kill-joy; he smiled at all that went on, now and then putting in a
friendly word; but the vitality of the others was lacking in him,
and the weight which crushed him night and day could not so easily
be thrown aside. O'Gree was abundant in reminiscences of academic
days, and it would not have been easy to resist altogether the
comical vigour of his stories, all without one touch of real
bitterness or malice.
"Bedad," he cried, "I sent old Pendy a business prospectus, with my
compliments written on the bottom of it. I thought he might perhaps
be disposed to give me a contract for victualling the Academy. I
wish he had, for the boys' sake."
Then, to bring back completely the old times, Mr. Egger was
prevailed upon to sing one of his Volkslieder, that which had been
Waymark's especial favourite, and which he had sung--on an
occasion memorable to Sally and her husband--in the little
dining-room at Richmond.
"Die Schwalb'n flieg'n fort, doch sie zieh'n wieder her;
Der Mensch wenn er fortgeht, er kommt nimmermehr!"
When it was nearly eleven o'clock, Casti looked once or twice
meaningly at Waymark, and the friends at length rose to take their
leave, in spite of much protest. O'Gree accompanied them as far as
the spot where they would meet the omnibus, then, with assurances
that to-night had been but the beginning of glorious times, sent
them on their way. Julian was silent during the journey home; he
looked very wearied. For lack of a timely conveyance the last mile
or so had to be walked. Julian's cough had been bad during the
evening, and now the cold night-air seemed to give him much trouble.
Presently, just as they turned a corner, a severe blast of wind met
them full in the face. Julian began coughing violently, and all at
once became so weak that he had to lean against a palisading.
Waymark, looking closer in alarm, saw that the handkerchief which
the poor fellow was holding to his mouth was covered with blood.
"We must have a cab," he exclaimed. "It is impossible for you to
walk in this state."
Julian resisted, with assurances that the worst was over for the
time. If Waymark would give the support of his arm, he would get on
quite well. There was no overcoming his resolution to proceed.
"There's no misunderstanding this, old fellow," he said, with a
laugh, when they had walked a few paces.
"You'll laugh at me," Julian went on, "but isn't there a certain
resemblance between my case and that of Keats? He too was a
drug-pounder; he liked it as little as I do; and he died young of
consumption. I suppose a dying man may speak the truth about
himself. I too might have been a poet, if life had dealt more kindly
with me. I think you would have liked the thing I was writing; I'd
finished some three hundred lines; but now you'll never see it.
Well, I don't know that it matters."
Waymark tried to speak in a tone of hopefulness, but it was hard to
give his words the semblance of sincerity.
"Do you remember," Casti continued, "when all my talk used to be
about Rome, and how I planned to see it one day--see it again. I
should say? Strange to think that I really was born in Rome. I used
to call myself a Roman, you know, and grow hot with pride when I
thought of it. Those were dreams. Oh, I was to do wonderful things!
Poetry was to make me rich, and then I would go and live in Italy,
and fill my lungs with the breath of the Forum, and write my great
Epic. How good that we can't foresee our lives!"
"I wish to heaven," Waymark exclaimed, when they were parting, "that
you would be a man and shake this monstrous yoke from off your neck!
It is that that is killing you. Give yourself a chance. Defy
everything and make yourself free."
"Too late! I haven't the courage. My mind weakens with my body."
He went to his lodgings, and, as he anticipated, found that Harriet
had not yet come home. She was almost always out very late, and he
had learnt too well what t expect on her return. In spite of her
illness, of which she made the most when it suited her purpose, she
was able t wander about at all hours with the acquaintances her
husband did not even know by name, and Julian had no longer the
strength even to implore her to have pity on him. He absence racked
him with nervous fears; her presence tortured him to agony. Weakness
in him had reached a criminal degree. Once or twice he had all but
made up his mind to flee secretly, and only let her know his
determination when he had gone; but his poverty interposed such
obstacles that he ended by accepting them as excuses for his
hesitation. The mere thought of fulfilling the duty which he owed to
himself, of speaking out with manly firmness, and telling her that
here at length all ended between them--that was a terror to his
soul. So he stayed on and allowed her to kill him by slow torment.
He was at least carrying out to the letter the promise he had made
to her father, and this thought supplied him with a flattering
unction which, such was his disposition, at times even brought him a
moment's solace.
There was no fire in the room; he sank upon a chair and waited.
Every sound in the street below sent the blood back upon his heart.
At length there came the fumbling of a latch-key--he could hear it
plainly--and then the heavy foot ascending the stairs. Her glazed
eyes and red cheeks told the familiar tale. She sat down opposite
him and was silent for a minute, half dozing; then she seemed
suddenly to become conscious of his presence, and the words began to
flow from her tongue, every one cutting him to the quick, poisoning
his soul with their venom of jealousy and vulgar spite. Contention
was the breath of her nostrils; the prime impulse of her heart was
suspicion. Little by little she came round to the wonted topic. Had
he been to see his friend the thief? Was she in prison again yet?
Whom had she been stealing from of late? Oh, she was innocence
itself, of course; too good for this evil-speaking world.
Tonight he could not bear it. He rose from his chair like a drunken
man, and staggered to the door. She sprang after him, but he was
just in time to escape her grasp and spring down the stairs; then,
out into the night. Once before, not quite a month ago, be had been
driven thus in terror from the sound of her voice, and had slept at
a coffeehouse. Now, as soon as he had got out of the street and saw
that he was not being pursued, he discovered that he had given away
his last copper for the omnibus fare. No matter; the air was
pleasant upon his throbbing temples. It was too late to think of
knocking at the house where Waymark lodged. Nothing remained but to
walk about the streets all night, resting on a stone when he became
too weary to go further, sheltering a little here or there when the
wind cut him too keenly. Rather this, oh, a thousand times rather,
than the hell behind him.