The sun was shining into his bedroom
when Philip Romilly was awakened the next morning
by a discreet tapping at the door. He sat up in
bed and shouted “Come in.” He had
no occasion to hesitate for a moment. He knew
perfectly well where he was, he remembered exactly
everything that had happened. The knocking at
the door was disquieting but he faced it without a
tremor. The floor waiter appeared and bowed deferentially.
“There is a gentleman on the
telephone wishes to speak to you, sir,” he announced.
“I have connected him with the instrument by
your side.”
“To speak with me?” Philip
repeated. “Are you quite sure?”
“Yes, sir. Mr. Douglas
Romilly he asked for. He said that his name was
Mr. Gayes, I believe.”
The man left the room and Philip took
up the receiver. For a moment he sat and thought.
The situation was perplexing, in a sense ominous, yet
it had to be faced. He held the instrument to
his ear.
“Hullo? Who’s that?” he enquired.
“That Mr. Romilly?” was
the reply, in a man’s pleasant voice. “Mr.
Douglas Romilly?”
“Yes!”
“Good! I’m Gayes Mr.
Gayes of Gayes Brothers. My people wrote me last
night from Leicester that you would be here this morning.
You are crossing, aren’t you, on the Elletania?”
Philip remained monosyllabic.
“Yes,” he admitted cautiously.
“Can’t you come round
and see us this morning?” Mr. Gayes invited.
“And look here, Mr. Romilly, in any case I want
you to lunch with me at the club. My car shall
come round and fetch you at any time you say.”
“Sorry,” Philip replied.
“I am very busy this morning, and I am engaged
for lunch.”
“Oh, come, that’s too
bad,” the other protested, “I really want
to have a chat with you on business matters, Mr. Romilly.
Will you spare me half an hour if I come round?”
“Tell me exactly what it is you want?”
Philip insisted.
“Oh! just the usual thing,”
was the cheerful answer. “We hear you are
off to America on a buying tour. Our last advices
don’t indicate a very easy market over there.
I am not at all sure that we couldn’t do better
for you here, and give you better terms.”
Philip began to feel more sure of
himself. The situation, after all, he realized,
was not exactly alarming.
“Very kind of you,” he
said. “My arrangements are all made now,
though, and I can’t interfere with them.”
“Well, I’m going to bother
you with a few quotations, anyway. See here,
I’ll just run round to see you. My car is
waiting at the door now. I won’t keep you
more than a few minutes.”
“Don’t come before twelve,”
Philip begged. “I shall be busy until then.”
“At twelve o’clock precisely,
then,” was the reply. “I shall hope
to induce you to change your mind about luncheon.
It’s quite a long time since we had you at the
club. Good-by!”
Philip set down the telephone.
He was still in his pajamas and the morning was cold,
but he suddenly felt a great drop of perspiration on
his forehead. It was the sort of thing, this,
which he had expected had been prepared
for, in fact but it was none the less, in
its way, gruesome. There was a further knock
at the door, and the waiter reappeared.
“Can I bring you any breakfast, sir?”
he enquired.
“What time is it?”
“Half-past nine, sir.”
“Bring me some coffee and rolls and butter,”
Philip ordered.
He sprang out of bed, bathed, dressed,
and ate his breakfast. Then he lit a cigarette,
repacked his dressing-case, and descended into the
hall. He made his way to the hall porter’s
enquiry office.
“I am going to pay some calls
in the city,” he announced “Mr.
Romilly is my name and I may not be able
to get back here before my boat sails. I am going
on the Elletania. Can I have my luggage
sent there direct?”
“By all means, sir.”
“Every article is properly labelled,”
Philip continued. “Those in my bedroom number
sixty-seven are for the cabin, and those
you have in your charge are for the hold.”
“That will be quite all right,
sir,” the man assured him pocketing his liberal
tip. “I will see to the matter myself.”
Philip paid his bill at the office
and breathed a little more freely as he left the hotel.
Passing a large, plate-glass window he stopped suddenly
and stared at his own reflection. There was something
unfamiliar in the hang of his well-cut clothes and
fashionable Homburg hat. It was like the shadow
of some one else passing some one to whom
those clothes belonged. Then he remembered, remembered
with a cold shiver which blanched his cheeks and brought
a little agonised murmur to his lips. The moment
passed, however, crushed down, stifled as he had sworn
that he would stifle all such memories. He turned
in at a barber’s shop, had his hair cut, and
yielded to the solicitations of a fluffy-haired young
lady who was dying to go to America if only somebody
would take her, and who was sure that he ought to
have a manicure before his voyage. Afterwards
he entered a call office and rang up the hotel on the
telephone.
“Mr. Romilly speaking,”
he announced. “Will you kindly tell Mr.
Gayes, if he calls to see me, that I have been detained
in the city, and shall not be back.”
The man took down the message.
Philip strolled out once more into the streets, wandering
aimlessly about for an hour or more. By this time
it was nearly one o’clock, and, selecting a
restaurant, he entered and ordered luncheon.
Once more it came over him, as he looked around the
place, that he had, after all, only a very imperfect
hold upon his own identity. It seemed impossible
that he, Philip Romilly, should be there, ordering
precisely what appealed to him most, without thought
or care of the cost. He ate and drank slowly
and with discrimination, and when he left the place
he felt stronger. He sought out a first-class
tobacconist’s, bought some cigarettes, and enquired
his way to the dock. At a few minutes after two,
he passed up the gangway and boarded the great steamer.
One of the little army of linen-coated stewards enquired
the number of his room and conducted him below.
“Anything I can do for you,
sir, before your luggage comes on?” the man
asked civilly.
Philip shook his head and wandered
up on deck again, where there were already a fair
number of passengers in evidence. He leaned over
the side, watching the constant stream of porters
bearing supplies, and the steerage passengers passing
into the forepart of the ship. With every moment
his impatience grew. He looked at his watch sometimes
half a dozen times in ten minutes, changed his position
continually, started violently whenever he heard an
unexpected footstep behind him. Finally he broke
a promise he had made to himself. He bought newspapers,
took them into a sheltered corner, and tore them open.
Column by column he searched them through feverishly,
running his finger down one side and up the next.
It seemed impossible to find nowhere the heading he
dreaded to see, to realize that they were entirely
empty of any exciting incident. He satisfied
himself at last, however. The disappearance of
a half-starved art teacher had not yet blazoned out
to a sympathetic world. It was so much to the
good.... There was a touch upon his shoulder,
and he felt a chill of horror. When he turned
around, it was the steward who had conducted him below,
holding out a telegram.
“I beg your pardon, sir,”
he said. “Telegram just arrived for you.”
He passed on almost at once, in search
of some one else. Philip stood for several moments
perfectly still. He looked at the inscription Douglas
Romilly set his teeth and tore open
the envelope:
Understood you were returning to factory
before leaving. Am posting a few final particulars
to Waldorf Hotel, New York. Staff joins me in
wishing you bon voyage.
Philip felt his heart cease its pounding,
felt an immense sense of relief. It was a wonderful
thing, this message. It cleared up one point
on which he had been anxious and unsettled. It
was taken for granted at the Works, then, that he
had come straight to Liverpool. He walked up and
down the deck on the side remote from the dock, driving
this into his mind.
Everything was wonderfully simplified.
If only he could get across, once reach New York!
Meanwhile, he looked at his watch again and discovered
that it wanted but ten minutes to three. He made
his way back down to his stateroom, which was already
filled with his luggage. He shook out an ulster
from a bundle of wraps, and selected a tweed cap.
Already there was a faint touch of the sea in the
river breeze, and he was impatient for the immeasurable
open spaces, the salt wind, the rise and fall of the
great ship. Then, as he stood on the threshold
of his cabin, he heard voices.
“Down in number 110, eh?”
“Yes, sir,” he heard his
steward’s voice reply. “Mr. Romilly
has just gone down. You’ve only a minute,
sir, before the last call for passengers.”
“That’s all right,”
the voice which had spoken to him over the telephone
that morning replied. “I’d just like
to shake hands with him and wish him bon voyage.”
Philip’s teeth came together
in a little fury of anger. It was maddening,
this, to be trapped when only a few minutes remained
between him and safety! His brain worked swiftly.
He took his chance of finding the next stateroom empty,
as it happened to be, and stepped quickly inside.
He kept his back to the door until the footsteps had
passed. He heard the knock at his stateroom,
stepped back into the corridor, and passed along a
little gangway to the other side of the ship.
He hurried up the stairs and into the smoking-room.
The bugle was sounding now, and hoarse voices were
shouting:
“Every one for the shore! Last call for
the shore!”
“Give me a brandy and soda,”
he begged the steward, who was just opening the bar.
The man glanced at the clock and obeyed.
Philip swallowed half of it at a gulp, then sat down
with the tumbler in his hand. All of a sudden
something disappeared from in front of one of the portholes.
His heart gave a little jump. They were moving!
He sprang up and hurried to the doorway. Slowly
but unmistakably they were gliding away from the dock.
Already a lengthening line of people were waving their
handkerchiefs and shouting farewells. Around
them in the river little tugs were screaming, and
the ropes from the dock had been thrown loose.
Philip stepped to the rail, his heart growing lighter
at every moment. His ubiquitous steward, laden
with hand luggage, paused for a moment.
“I sent a gentleman down to
your stateroom just before the steamer started, sir,”
he announced, “gentleman of the name of Gayes,
who wanted to say good-by to you.”
“Bad luck!” Philip answered.
“I must have just missed him.”
The steward turned around and pointed to the quay.
“There he is, sir elderly
gentleman in a grey suit, and a bunch of violets in
his buttonhole. He’s looking straight at
you.”
Philip raised his cap and waved it
with enthusiasm. After a moment’s hesitation,
the other man did the same. The steward collected
his belongings and shuffled off.
“He picked you out, sir, all
right,” he remarked as he disappeared in the
companionway.
Philip turned away with a little final wave of the
hand.
“Glad I didn’t miss him
altogether,” he observed cheerfully. “Good-afternoon,
Mr. Gayes! Good-by, England!”