Alethia Debchance sat in a corner of an otherwise empty railway carriage, more
or less at ease as regarded body, but in some trepidation as to mind. She had
embarked on a social adventure of no little magnitude as compared with the
accustomed seclusion and stagnation of her past life. At the age of twenty-eight
she could look back on nothing more eventful than the daily round of her
existence in her aunt's house at Webblehinton, a hamlet four and a half miles
distant from a country town and about a quarter of a century removed from modern
times. Their neighbours had been elderly and few, not much given to social
intercourse, but helpful or politely sympathetic in times of illness. Newspapers
of the ordinary kind were a rarity; those that Alethia saw regularly were
devoted exclusively either to religion or to poultry, and the world of politics
was to her an unheeded unexplored region. Her ideas on life in general had been
acquired through the medium of popular respectable novel-writers, and modified
or emphasised by such knowledge as her aunt, the vicar, and her aunt's
housekeeper had put at her disposal. And now, in her twenty-ninth year, her
aunt's death had left her, well provided for as regards income, but somewhat
isolated in the matter of kith and kin and human companionship. She had some
cousins who were on terms of friendly, though infrequent, correspondence with
her, but as they lived permanently in Ceylon, a locality about which she knew
little, beyond the assurance contained in the missionary hymn that the human
element there was vile, they were not of much immediate use to her. Other
cousins she also possessed, more distant as regards relationship, but not quite
so geographically remote, seeing that they lived somewhere in the Midlands. She
could hardly remember ever having met them, but once or twice in the course of
the last three or four years they had expressed a polite wish that she should
pay them a visit; they had probably not been unduly depressed by the fact that
her aunt's failing health had prevented her from accepting their invitation. The
note of condolence that had arrived on the occasion of her aunt's death had
included a vague hope that Alethia would find time in the near future to spend a
few days with her cousins, and after much deliberation and many hesitations she
had written to propose herself as a guest for a definite date some week ahead.
The family, she reflected with relief, was not a large one; the two daughters
were married and away, there was only old Mrs. Bludward and her son Robert at
home. Mrs. Bludward was something of an invalid, and Robert was a young man who
had been at Oxford and was going into Parliament. Further than that Alethia's
information did not go; her imagination, founded on her extensive knowledge of
the people one met in novels, had to supply the gaps. The mother was not
difficult to place; she would either be an ultra-amiable old lady, bearing her
feeble health with uncomplaining fortitude, and having a kind word for the
gardener's boy and a sunny smile for the chance visitor, or else she would be
cold and peevish, with eyes that pierced you like a gimlet, and a unreasoning
idolatry of her son. Alethia's imagination rather inclined her to the latter
view. Robert was more of a problem. There were three dominant types of manhood
to be taken into consideration in working out his classification; there was
Hugo, who was strong, good, and beautiful, a rare type and not very often met
with; there was Sir Jasper, who was utterly vile and absolutely unscrupulous,
and there was Nevil, who was not really bad at heart, but had a weak mouth and
usually required the life-work of two good women to keep him from ultimate
disaster. It was probable, Alethia considered, that Robert came into the last
category, in which case she was certain to enjoy the companionship of one or two
excellent women, and might possibly catch glimpses of undesirable adventuresses
or come face to face with reckless admiration-seeking married women. It was
altogether an exciting prospect, this sudden venture into an unexplored world of
unknown human beings, and Alethia rather wished that she could have taken the
vicar with her; she was not, however, rich or important enough to travel with a
chaplain, as the Marquis of Moystoncleugh always did in the novel she had just
been reading, so she recognised that such a proceeding was out of the question.
The train which carried Alethia towards her destination was a local one, with
the wayside station habit strongly developed. At most of the stations no one
seemed to want to get into the train or to leave it, but at one there were
several market folk on the platform, and two men, of the farmer or small cattle-
dealer class, entered Alethia's carriage. Apparently they had just foregathered,
after a day's business, and their conversation consisted of a rapid exchange of
short friendly inquiries as to health, family, stock, and so forth, and some
grumbling remarks on the weather. Suddenly, however, their talk took a
dramatically interesting turn, and Alethia listened with wide-eyed attention.
"What do you think of Mister Robert Bludward, eh?"
There was a certain scornful ring in his question.
"Robert Bludward? An out-an'-out rotter, that's what he is. Ought to be ashamed
to look any decent man in the face. Send him to Parliament to represent us --
not much! He'd rob a poor man of his last shilling, he would."
"Ah, that he would. Tells a pack of lies to get our votes, that's all that he's
after, damn him. Did you see the way the Argus showed him up this week? Properly
exposed him, hip and thigh, I tell you."
And so on they ran, in their withering indictment. There could be no doubt that
it was Alethia's cousin and prospective host to whom they were referring; the
allusion to a Parliamentary candidature settled that. What could Robert Bludward
have done, what manner of man could he be, that people should speak of him with
such obvious reprobation?
"He was hissed down at Shoalford yesterday," said one of the speakers.
Hissed! Had it come to that? There was something dramatically biblical in the
idea of Robert Bludward's neighbours and acquaintances hissing him for very
scorn. Lord Hereward Stranglath had been hissed, now Alethia came to think of
it, in the eighth chapter of Matterby Towers, while in the act of opening a
Wesleyan bazaar, because he was suspected (unjustly as it turned out afterwards)
of having beaten the German governess to death. And in Tainted Guineas Roper
Squenderby had been deservedly hissed, on the steps of the Jockey Club, for
having handed a rival owner a forged telegram, containing false news of his
mother's death, just before the start for an important race, thereby ensuring
the withdrawal of his rival's horse. In placid Saxon-blooded England people did
not demonstrate their feelings lightly and without some strong compelling cause.
What manner of evildoer was Robert Bludward?
The train stopped at another small station, and the two men got out. One of them
left behind him a copy of the Argus, the local paper to which he had made
reference. Alethia pounced on it, in the expectation of finding a cultured
literary endorsement of the censure which these rough farming men had expressed
in their homely, honest way. She had not far to look; "Mr. Robert Bludward,
Swanker," was the title of one of the principal articles in the paper. She did
not exactly know what a swanker was, probably it referred to some unspeakable
form of cruelty, but she read enough in the first few sentences of the article
to discover that her cousin Robert, the man at whose house she was about to
stay, was an unscrupulous, unprincipled character, of a low order of
intelligence, yet cunning withal, and that he and his associates were
responsible for most of the misery, disease, poverty, and ignorance with which
the country was afflicted; never, except in one or two of the denunciatory
Psalms, which she had always supposed to have be written in a spirit of
exaggerated Oriental imagery, had she read such an indictment of a human being.
And this monster was going to meet her at Derrelton Station in a few short
minutes. She would know him at once; he would have the dark beetling brows, the
quick, furtive glance, the sneering, unsavoury smile that always characterised
the Sir Jaspers of this world. It was too late to escape; she must force herself
to meet him with outward calm.
It was a considerable shock to her to find that Robert was fair, with a snub
nose, merry eye, and rather a schoolboy manner. "A serpent in duckling's
plumage," was her private comment; merciful chance had revealed him to her in
his true colours.
As they drove away from the station a dissipated-looking man of the labouring
class waved his hat in friendly salute. "Good luck to you, Mr. Bludward," he
shouted; "you'll come out on top! We'll break old Chobham's neck for him."
"Oh, one of my supporters," laughed Robert; "a bit of a poacher and a bit of a
pub-loafer, but he's on the right side."
So these were the sort of associates that Robert Bludward consorted with,
thought Alethia.
"Who is the person he referred to as old Chobham?" she asked.
"Sir John Chobham, the man who is opposing me," answered Robert; "that is his
house away there among the trees on the right."
So there was an upright man, possibly a very Hugo in character, who was
thwarting and defying the evildoer in his nefarious career, and there was a
dastardly plot afoot to break his neck! Possibly the attempt would be made
within the next few hours. He must certainly be warned. Alethia remembered how
Lady Sylvia Broomgate, in Nightshade Court, had pretended to be bolted with by
her horse up to the front door of a threatened county magnate, and had whispered
a warning in his ear which saved him from being the victim of foul murder. She
wondered if there was a quiet pony in the stables on which she would be allowed
to ride out alone. The chances were that she would be watched. Robert would come
spurring after her and seize her bridle just as she was turning in at Sir John's
gates.
A group of men that they passed in a village street gave them no very friendly
looks, and Alethia thought she heard a furtive hiss; a moment later they came
upon an errand boy riding a bicycle. He had the frank open countenance, neatly
brushed hair and tidy clothes that betoken a clear conscience and a good mother.
He stared straight at the occupants of the car, and, after he had passed them,
sang in his clear, boyish voice:
"We'll hang Bobby Bludward on the sour apple tree."
Robert merely laughed. That was how he took the scorn and condemnation of his
fellow-men. He had goaded them to desperation with his shameless depravity till
they spoke openly of putting him to a violent death, and he laughed.
Mrs. Bludward proved to be of the type that Alethia had suspected, thin-lipped,
cold-eyed, and obviously devoted to her worthless son. From her no help was to
be expected. Alethia locked her door that night, and placed such ramparts of
furniture against it that the maid had great difficulty in breaking in with the
early tea in the morning.
After breakfast Alethia, on the pretext of going to look at an outlying rose-
garden, slipped away to the village through which they had passed on the
previous evening. She remembered that Robert had pointed out to her a public
reading-room, and here she considered it possible that she might meet Sir John
Chobham, or some one who knew him well and would carry a message to him. The
room was empty when she entered it; a Graphic twelve days old, a yet older copy
of Punch, and one or two local papers lay upon the central table; the other
tables were stacked for the most part with chess and draughtsboards, and wooden
boxes of chessmen and dominoes. Listlessly she picked up one of the papers, the
Sentinel, and glanced at its contents. Suddenly she started, and began to read
with breathless attention a prominently printed article, headed "A Little
Limelight on Sir John Chobham." The colour ebbed away from her face, a look of
frightened despair crept into her eyes. Never, in any novel that she had read,
had a defenceless young woman been confronted with a situation like this. Sir
John, the Hugo of her imagination, was, if anything, rather more depraved and
despicable than Robert Bludward. He was mean, evasive, callously indifferent to
his country's interests, a cheat, a man who habitually broke his word, and who
was responsible, with his associates, for most of the poverty, misery, crime,
and national degradation with which the country was afflicted. He was also a
candidate for Parliament, it seemed, and as there was only one seat in this
particular locality, it was obvious that the success of either Robert or Sir
John would mean a check to the ambitions of the other, hence, no doubt, the
rivalry and enmity between these otherwise kindred souls. One was seeking to
have his enemy done to death, the other was apparently trying to stir up his
supporters to an act of "Lynch law". All this in order that there might be an
unopposed election, that one or other of the candidates might go into Parliament
with honeyed eloquence on his lips and blood on his heart. Were men really so
vile?
"I must go back to Webblehinton at once," Alethia informed her astonished
hostess at lunch time; "I have had a telegram. A friend is very seriously ill
and I have been sent for."
It was dreadful to have to concoct lies, but it would be more dreadful to have
to spend another night under that roof.
Alethia reads novels now with even greater appreciation than before. She has
been herself in the world outside Webblehinton, the world where the great dramas
of sin and villainy are played unceasingly. She had come unscathed through it,
but what might have happened if she had gone unsuspectingly to visit Sir John
Chobham and warn him of his danger? What indeed! She had been saved by the
fearless outspokenness of the local Press.