In the twilight of the long spring
evening, Ruth sat waiting in the bare room which had
been Arnold’s habitation during these days of
his struggle against poverty. She was sitting
on the couch, drawn up as usual to the window, her
elbows upon her knees, her hands supporting her delicate,
thoughtful face. Already the color which the
sunshine had brought seemed to have been drained from
her cheeks. Her eyes were unnaturally bright,
her expression seemed to have borrowed something of
that wistful earnestness of one of the earlier Madonnas,
seeking with pathetic strenuousness to discover the
germs of a truth which was as yet unborn. The
clouds, which hung low over the other side of the
river, were tinged with an unusual coloring, smoke-stained
as they hovered over the chimneys. They grew
clearer and more full of amber color as they floated
slowly southwards. Through the open window came
the ceaseless roar of the city, the undernote of grinding,
commonplace life, seeking always to stifle and enchain
the thoughts which would escape. Before her was
spread out a telegram. She had read it many times,
until every word was familiar to her. It was
from Arnold, and she had received it several hours
ago.
Please be prepared
to go out with me directly I return
this evening.
All well. Love. Arnold.
It was past eight o’clock before
her vigil was at an end. She listened to his
step upon the stairs, and, as he entered, looked at
him with all the eagerness of a wistful child, tremulously
anxious to read his expression. A little wave
of tenderness swept in upon him. He forgot in
a moment the anxieties and worries of the day, and
greeted her gayly.
“You got my telegram?”
“You extravagant person!”
she answered. “Yes, I have been ready for
quite a long time.”
He laughed.
“To tell you the truth, I didn’t
even pay for the telegram. As I had to stay late,
I took the liberty of sending it through the firm’s
accounts. You see, I have become quite an important
person in Tooley Street all of a sudden. I’ll
tell you about it presently. Now hold on tightly
to your stick. I’m much too impatient to
go down the steps one by one. I’m going
to carry you all the way.”
“But where to?” she asked.
“Leave it to me,” he laughed.
“There are all sorts of surprises for you.
The lady with the wand has been busy.”
He carried her downstairs, where,
to her surprise, she found a taxicab waiting.
“But, Arnold,” she exclaimed,
“how could you think of such extravagance!
You know I can walk quite easily a little distance,
if I take your arm.”
“I’ll tell you all about
it at dinner-time,” he replied.
“Dinner-time?” she cried. “Dinner
at this hour?”
“Why not? It’s quite
the fashionable hour, I can assure you, and, to tell
you the truth, I am half starved.”
She resigned herself with a sigh of
content. After all, it was so delightful to drift
like this with some one infinitely stronger to take
the responsibility for everything. They drove
to a large and popular restaurant close at hand, where
Arnold ordered the dinner, with frequent corrections
from Ruth, who sat with a menu-card in her hand.
A band was playing the music of the moment. It
was all very commonplace, but to Ruth it was like
a living chapter out of her book of dreams. Even
there, though, the shadow pursued. She could
bear the silence no longer. She dropped her voice
a little. The place was crowded and there were
people at the next table.
“Before I touch anything, Arnold,
tell me this. Is there any news of Isaac?”
“None at all,” he replied.
“It all seemed very alarming to us, but it seems
to be fizzling out. There is only quite a small
paragraph in the evening paper. You can read
it, if you like.”
He drew the Evening News from
his pocket and passed it to her. The paragraph
to which he pointed was headed
ESCAPE OF AN ANARCHIST
FROM ADAM STREET.
Up to the time of going to press,
the man Isaac Lalonde, whom the police failed
to arrest last night on a charge not at present
precisely stated, has not been apprehended.
The police are reticent about the matter, but
it is believed that the missing man was connected
with a dangerous band of anarchists who have
lately come to this country.
“Poor Isaac!” she murmured,
with a little shiver. “Do you know, I remember
him years ago, when he was the kindest-hearted man
breathing. He went to Russia to visit some of
his mother’s relatives, and when he came back
everything was changed. He saw injustice everywhere,
and it seemed almost to unbalance his mind. The
very sight of the west-end, the crowds coming out of
the theatres, the shops in Bond Street, seemed to
send him half mad. And it all started, Arnold,
with real pity for the poor. It isn’t a
personal matter with him at any time.”
Arnold nodded thoughtfully.
“Poor chap!” he remarked.
“Just at first I really used to like talking
to him. He was so earnest, and so many of his
arguments were absolutely sound.”
“It is only lately,” Ruth
said, “that he has changed so much.”
“I think it is quite time that
you and he were separated,” Arnold declared.
“It is evident, nowadays, that he isn’t
responsible for his actions.”
“Separated!” she repeated
bitterly. “You talk as though I had a choice
of homes.”
“You have,” he assured
her. “However, we won’t say anything
about that just now. I want to talk about myself.”
“And I want to listen, dear!”
she exclaimed. “You must tell me what has
happened, Arnie. Has Mr. Weatherley taken you
into partnership, or has some one of your disagreeable
relatives found you out and been pouring money into
your pockets?”
“Neither,” he replied.
“As a matter of fact, there is no Mr. Weatherley
just at present.”
“No Mr. Weatherley?” she
repeated, wonderingly. “I don’t understand.”
The slightly worn look came back to
Arnold’s face. Young and strong though
he was, he was beginning to feel the strain of the
last few days.
“A most extraordinary thing
has happened, Ruth,” he declared. “Mr.
Weatherley has disappeared.”
She looked at him blankly.
“Disappeared? I don’t understand.”
“He simply didn’t turn
up at business this morning,” Arnold continued.
“He left Bourne End about seven, and no one has
set eyes on him since.”
She was bewildered.
“But how is it that that makes
such a difference to you?” she asked. “What
can have happened to him?”
“No one knows,” he explained;
“but in a little safe, of which he had given
me the keys, he left behind some letters with instructions
that during his absence from business Mr. Jarvis and
I should jointly take charge. I can’t really
imagine why I should have been put in such a position,
but there it is. The solicitors have been down
this afternoon, and I am drawing six pounds a week
and a bonus.”
She took his hand in hers and patted it gently.
“I am so very glad, Arnold,”
she said, “so very glad that the days of your
loneliness are over. Now you will be able to go
and take some comfortable rooms somewhere and make
the sort of friends you ought to have. Didn’t
I always foretell it?” she went on. “I
used to try and fancy sometimes that the ships we
saw were bringing treasure for me, too, but I never
really believed that. It wasn’t quite likely.”
He turned and looked at her.
The first flush of excitement had left her cheeks.
She was very pale, and her soft gray eyes shone like
stars. Her mouth was tremulous. It was the
passing of a single impulse of self-pity.
“Foolish little girl!”
he exclaimed, under his breath. “You don’t
really suppose that the treasure which came for me
wasn’t yours, too? But there, we’ll
talk about our plans later on. At present, what
you have to do is to eat and to drink that glass of
Burgundy and to listen to me. I want to talk
about myself.”
It was the subtlest way to distract
her thoughts. She listened to him with keen interest
while he talked of his day’s work. It was
not until she mentioned Fenella’s name that
his face clouded over.
“Curiously enough, Mrs. Weatherley
is displeased with me. I should have thought
it entirely through her influence and suggestions that
Mr. Weatherley had been so kind to me, but to-day I
asked her some questions which I felt that I had a
right to ask, and have been told to mind my own business.
She left me at the office without even saying ‘Good
afternoon.’”
“What sort of questions?”
“I don’t know that I can
tell you exactly what the questions were,” Arnold
continued, “because they concerned some matters
in which Mrs. Weatherley and her brother were chiefly
concerned. To tell you the truth, ever since
that night when I went to Hampstead to dine, the oddest
things seem to have happened to me. I have to
pinch myself sometimes to realize that this is London
and that I am a clerk in the office of a wholesale
provision merchant. When I let myself go, I seem
to have been living in an unreal world, full of strange
excitements a veritable Arabian Nights.”
“There was that terrible murder,”
she murmured. “You saw that, didn’t
you?”
He nodded.
“Not only saw it,” he
agreed, “but I seem, somehow, to have been mixed
up with people who know a great deal about it.
However, I have been told to mind my own business
and I am going to. I have plenty to occupy my
thoughts in Tooley Street. I am going to close
in my little world and live there. The rest I
am going to forget.”
“You are coming back!”
she whispered, with a joy in her tone which amazed
him.
“I suppose I am,” he admitted.
“I like and admire Mrs. Weatherley’s brother,
Count Sabatini, and I have a genuine affection for
Mrs. Weatherley, but I don’t understand them.
I don’t understand these mysterious matters
in which they seem mixed up.”
“I do not believe,” she
declared, “that Count Sabatini would be mixed
up in anything dishonorable. Women so seldom make
a mistake, you know,” she continued, “and
I never met any one in my life who seemed so kind
and gentle.”
Arnold sighed.
“I wish I could tell you everything,”
he said, “then I think you would really be as
bewildered as I am. Mr. Weatherley’s disappearance
coming on the top of it all simply makes my brain
reel. I can’t do anything to help straighten
things out. Therefore, I am going to do what
I am told I am going to mind my own business.”
“To think only of Tooley Street,” she
murmured.
“I shall find it quite enough,”
he answered. “I want to understand all
the details of the business, and it isn’t easy
at first. Mr. Jarvis is very sound and good,
but he’s a very small man moving in a very small
way. Even Mr. Weatherley used to laugh at his
methods.”
She was silent for several moments.
He studied her expression curiously.
“You don’t believe that
I shall be able to immerse myself in business?”
he asked.
“It isn’t exactly that,”
she replied. “I believe that you mean to
try, and I believe that to some extent you will succeed,
but I think, Arnold, that before very long you will
hear the voices calling again from the world where
these strange things happened. You are not made
of the clay, dear, which resists for ever.”
He moved uneasily in his seat.
Her words sounded ominous. He was suddenly conscious
that his present state of determination was the result
of a battle, and that the war was not yet ended.
“She is so beautiful, that Mrs.
Weatherley,” Ruth continued, clasping her hands
together and looking for a moment away from her surroundings.
“No one could be blamed for climbing a little
way out of the dull world if she held out her hands.
I have seen so little of either of them, Arnold, but
I do know that they both of them have that curious
gift would you call it charm? the
gift of creating affection. No one has ever spoken
to me more kindly and more graciously than Count Sabatini
did when he sat by my side on the lawn. What
is that gift, Arnold? Do you know that with every
word he spoke I felt that he was not in the least
a stranger? There was something familiar about
his voice, his manner everything.”
“I think that they are both
quite wonderful people,” Arnold admitted.
“Mrs. Weatherley, too, was kind,”
Ruth went on; “but I felt that she did not like
me very much. She has an interest in you, and
like all women she was a little jealous not
in the ordinary way, I don’t mean,” she
corrected herself hastily, “but no woman likes
any one in whom she takes an interest to be very kind
to any one else.”
They had reached the stage of their
coffee. The band was playing the latest waltz.
It was all very commonplace, but they were both young
and uncritical. The waltz was one which Fenella
had played after dinner at Bourne End, while they
had sat out in the garden, lingering over their dessert.
A flood of memories stirred him. The soft sensuousness
of that warm spring night, with its perfumed silence,
its subtly luxurious setting, stole through his senses
like a narcotic. Ruth was right. It was
not to be so easy! He called for his bill and
paid it. Ruth laid her fingers upon his arm.
“Arnold,” she began timidly,
“there is something more. I scarcely know
how to say it to you and yet it ought not to be difficult.
You talk all the time as though you were my brother,
or as though it were your duty to help me. It
isn’t so, dear, really, is it? If you could
manage to lend me your room for one week, I think that
I might be able to help myself a little. There
is a place the clergyman told us of who came to see
me once ”
Arnold interrupted her almost roughly.
A keen pang of remorse assailed him. He knew
very well that if she had not been intuitively conscious
of some change in him, the thought which prompted her
words would never have entered her brain.
“Don’t let me hear you
mention it!” he exclaimed. “I have
made all the arrangements. It wouldn’t
do for me to live in an attic now that I am holding
a responsible position in the city. Come along.
Lean on my arm and mind the corner.”
They had purposely chosen a table
close to the door, so that they had only a few steps
to take. Arnold called a taxi and handed Ruth
in before he told the man the address.
“Now close your eyes,”
he insisted, when they were together in the cab.
Ruth did as she was told.
“I feel that it is all wrong,”
she murmured, leaning back, “but it is like
little bits out of a fairy book, and to-night I feel
so weak and you are so strong. It isn’t
any use my saying anything, Arnold, is it?”
“Not a bit,” he answered.
“All that you have to do is to hold my hand
and wait.”
In less than ten minutes the cab stopped.
He hurried her into the entrance hall of a tall, somewhat
somber building. A man in uniform rang a bell
and the lift came down. They went up, it seemed
to her, seven or eight flights. When they stepped
out, her knees were trembling. He caught her
up and carried her down a corridor. Then he fitted
a Yale key from his pocket into a lock and threw open
the door. There was a little hall inside, with
three doors. He pushed open the first; it was
a small bedroom, plainly but not unattractively furnished.
He carried her a little way further down the corridor
and threw open another door a tiny sitting-room
with a fire burning.
“Our new quarters!” he
exclaimed cheerfully. “The room at the other
end of the passage is mine. A pound a week and
a woman to come in and light the fires! Mr. Jarvis
let me have some money and I paid three months’
rent in advance. What do you think of them?”
“I can’t think,” she whispered.
“I can’t!”
He carried her to the window.
“This is my real surprise, dear,”
he announced, in a tone of triumph. “Look!”
The blind flew up at his touch.
On the other side of the street was a row of houses
over which they looked. Beyond, the river, whose
dark waters were gleaming in the moonlight. On
their left were the Houses of Parliament, all illuminated.
On their right, the long, double line of lights shining
upon the water at which they had gazed so often.
“The lighted way, dear,”
he murmured, holding her a little more closely to
him. “While I am down in the city you can
sit here and watch, and you can see the ships a long
way further off than you could ever see them from
Adam Street. You can see the bend, too.
It’s always easier, isn’t it, to fancy
that something is coming into sight around the corner?”
She was not looking. Her head
was buried upon his shoulder. Arnold was puzzled.
“Look up, Ruth dear,”
he begged. “I want you to look now look
along the lighted way and hold my hand very tightly.
Don’t you think that, after all, one of your
ships has come home?”
She lifted her face, wet with tears,
and looked in the direction where he pointed.
Arnold, who felt nothing himself but a thrill of pleasure
at his new quarters, was puzzled at a certain trouble
which he seemed to see in her features, a faint hopelessness
of expression. She looked where he pointed but
there was none of the eager expectancy of a few weeks
ago.
“It is beautiful, Arnold,”
she murmured, “but I can’t talk just now.”
“I am going to leave you to
get over it,” he declared. “I’m
off now to fetch the luggage. You won’t
be afraid to be left here?”
She shook her head. A certain
look of relief flashed across her face.
“No, I shall not be afraid,” she answered.
He wheeled the easy-chair up to the
window which he had flung wide open. He placed
a cushion at the back of her head and left her with
a cheerful word. She heard his steps go down the
corridor, the rattle of the lift as it descended.
Then her lips began to tremble and the sobs to shake
her shoulders. She held out her hands toward
that line of lights at which he had pointed, and her
fingers were clenched.
“It is because I
am like this!” she cried, half hysterically.
“I don’t count!”