An hour later he was at Old Square,
waiting for the tram to Aston. Huge steam-driven
vehicles came and went, whirling about the open space
with monitory bell-clang. Amid a press of homeward-going
workfolk, Hilliard clambered to a place on the top
and lit his pipe. He did not look the same man
who had waited gloomily at Dudley Port; his eyes gleamed
with life; answering a remark addressed to him by
a neighbour on the car, he spoke jovially.
No rain was falling, but the streets
shone wet and muddy under lurid lamp-lights.
Just above the house-tops appeared the full moon, a
reddish disk, blurred athwart floating vapour.
The car drove northward, speedily passing from the
region of main streets and great edifices into a squalid
district of factories and workshops and crowded by-ways.
At Aston Church the young man alighted, and walked
rapidly for five minutes, till he reached a row of
small modern houses. Socially they represented
a step or two upwards in the gradation which, at Birmingham,
begins with the numbered court and culminates in the
mansions of Edgbaston.
He knocked at a door, and was answered
by a girl, who nodded recognition.
“Mrs. Hilliard in? Just tell her I’m
here.”
There was a natural abruptness in
his voice, but it had a kindly note, and a pleasant
smile accompanied it. After a brief delay he received
permission to go upstairs, where the door of a sitting-room
stood open. Within was a young woman, slight,
pale, and pretty, who showed something of embarrassment,
though her face made him welcome.
“I expected you sooner.”
“Business kept me back. Well, little girl?”
The table was spread for tea, and
at one end of it, on a high chair, sat a child of
four years old. Hilliard kissed her, and stroked
her curly hair, and talked with playful affection.
This little girl was his niece, the child of his elder
brother, who had died three years ago. The poorly
furnished room and her own attire proved that Mrs.
Hilliard had but narrow resources in her widowhood.
Nor did she appear a woman of much courage; tears
had thinned her cheeks, and her delicate hands had
suffered noticeably from unwonted household work.
Hilliard remarked something unusual
in her behaviour this evening. She was restless,
and kept regarding him askance, as if in apprehension.
A letter from her, in which she merely said she wished
to speak to him, had summoned him hither from Dudley.
As a rule, they saw each other but once a month.
“No bad news, I hope!”
he remarked aside to her, as he took his place at
the table.
“Oh, no. I’ll tell you afterwards.”
Very soon after the meal Mrs. Hilliard
took the child away and put her to bed. During
her absence the visitor sat brooding, a peculiar half-smile
on his face. She came back, drew a chair up to
the fire, but did not sit down.
“Well, what is it?” asked
her brother-in-law, much as he might have spoken to
the little girl.
“I have something very serious to talk about,
Maurice.”
“Have you? All right; go ahead.”
“I I am so very much afraid I shall
offend you.”
The young man laughed.
“Not very likely. I can take a good deal
from you.”
She stood with her hands on the back
of the chair, and as he looked at her, Hilliard saw
her pale cheeks grow warm.
“It’ll seem very strange to you, Maurice.”
“Nothing will seem strange after
an adventure I’ve had this afternoon. You
shall hear about it presently.”
“Tell me your story first.”
“That’s like a woman.
All right, I’ll tell you. I met that scoundrel
Dengate, and he’s paid me the money
he owed my father.”
“He has paid it? Oh! really?”
“See, here’s a cheque,
and I think it likely I can turn it into cash.
The blackguard has been doing well at Liverpool.
I’m not quite sure that I understand the reptile,
but he seems to have given me this because I abused
him. I hurt his vanity, and he couldn’t
resist the temptation to astonish me. He thinks
I shall go about proclaiming him a noble fellow.
Four hundred and thirty-six pounds; there it is.”
He tossed the piece of paper into
the air with boyish glee, and only just caught it
as it was fluttering into the fire.
“Oh, be careful!” cried Mrs. Hilliard.
“I told him he was a scoundrel,
and he began by threatening to thrash me. I’m
very glad he didn’t try. It was in the train,
and I know very well I should have strangled him.
It would have been awkward, you know.”
“Oh, Maurice, how can you ?”
“Well, here’s the money; and half of it
is yours.”
“Mine? Oh, no! After all you have
given me. Besides, I sha’n’t want
it.”
“How’s that?”
Their eyes mete Hilliard again saw
the flush in her cheeks, and began to guess its explanation.
He looked puzzled, interested.
“Do I know him?” was his next inquiry.
“Should you think it very wrong
of me?” She moved aside from the line of his
gaze. “I couldn’t imagine how you
would take it.”
“It all depends. Who is the man?”
Still shrinking towards a position
where Hilliard could not easily observe her, the young
widow told her story. She had consented to marry
a man of whom her brother-in-law knew little but the
name, one Ezra Marr; he was turned forty, a widower
without children, and belonged to a class of small
employers of labour known in Birmingham as “little
masters.” The contrast between such a man
and Maurice Hilliard’s brother was sufficiently
pronounced; but the widow nervously did her best to
show Ezra Marr in a favourable light.
“And then,” she added
after a pause, while Hilliard was reflecting, “I
couldn’t go on being a burden on you. How
very few men would have done what you have ”
“Stop a minute. Is that the real
reason? If so ”
Hurriedly she interposed.
“That was only one of the reasons only
one.”
Hilliard knew very well that her marriage
had not been entirely successful; it seemed to him
very probable that with a husband of the artisan class,
a vigorous and go-ahead fellow, she would be better
mated than in the former instance. He felt sorry
for his little niece, but there again sentiment doubtless
conflicted with common-sense. A few more questions,
and it became clear to him that he had no ground of
resistance.
“Very well. Most likely
you are doing a wise thing. And half this money
is yours; you’ll find it useful.”
The discussion of this point was interrupted
by a tap at the door. Mrs. Hilliard, after leaving
the room for a moment, returned with rosy countenance.
“He is here,” she murmured.
“I thought I should like you to meet him this
evening. Do you mind?”
Mr. Marr entered; a favourable specimen
of his kind; strong, comely, frank of look and speech.
Hilliard marvelled somewhat at his choice of the frail
and timid little widow, and hoped upon marriage would
follow no repentance. A friendly conversation
between the two men confirmed them in mutual good
opinion. At length Mrs. Hilliard spoke of the
offer of money made by her brother-in-law.
“I don’t feel I’ve
any right to it,” she said, after explaining
the circumstances. “You know what Maurice
has done for me. I’ve always felt I was
robbing him ”
“I wanted to say something about
that,” put in the bass-voiced Ezra. “I
want to tell you, Mr. Hilliard, that you’re a
man I’m proud to know, and proud to shake hands
with. And if my view goes for anything, Emily
won’t take a penny of what you’re offering
her. I should think it wrong and mean. It
is about time that’s my way of thinking that
you looked after your own interests. Emily has
no claim to a share in this money, and what’s
more, I don’t wish her to take it.”
“Very well,” said Hilliard.
“I tell you what we’ll do. A couple
of hundred pounds shall be put aside for the little
girl. You can’t make any objection to that.”
The mother glanced doubtfully at her
future husband, but Marr again spoke with emphasis.
“Yes, I do object. If you
don’t mind me saying it, I’m quite able
to look after the little girl; and the fact is, I
want her to grow up looking to me as her father, and
getting all she has from me only. Of course,
I mean nothing but what’s friendly: but
there it is; I’d rather Winnie didn’t
have the money.”
This man was in the habit of speaking
his mind; Hilliard understood that any insistence
would only disturb the harmony of the occasion.
He waved a hand, smiled good-naturedly, and said no
more.
About nine o’clock he left the
house and walked to Aston Church. While he stood
there, waiting for the tram, a voice fell upon his
ear that caused him to look round. Crouched by
the entrance to the churchyard was a beggar in filthy
rags, his face hideously bandaged, before him on the
pavement a little heap of matchboxes; this creature
kept uttering a meaningless sing-song, either idiot
jabber, or calculated to excite attention and pity;
it sounded something like “A-pah-pahky; pah-pahky;
pah”; repeated a score of times, and resumed
after a pause. Hilliard gazed and listened, then
placed a copper in the wretch’s extended palm,
and turned away muttering, “What a cursed world!”
He was again on the tram-car before
he observed that the full moon, risen into a sky now
clear of grosser vapours, gleamed brilliant silver
above the mean lights of earth. And round about
it, in so vast a circumference that it was only detected
by the wandering eye, spread a softly radiant halo.
This vision did not long occupy his thoughts, but
at intervals he again looked upward, to dream for a
moment on the silvery splendour and on that wide halo
dim-glimmering athwart the track of stars.