His hands upon the counter, Warburton
stared at the door by which first Rosamund, then Bertha
Cross, had disappeared. His nerves were a-tremble;
his eyes were hot. Of a sudden he felt himself
shaken with irresistible mirth; from the diaphragm
it mounted to his throat, and only by a great effort
did he save himself from exploding in laughter.
The orgasm possessed him for several minutes.
It was followed by a sense of light-heartedness, which
set him walking about, rubbing his hands together,
and humming tunes.
At last the burden had fallen from
him; the foolish secret was blown abroad; once more
he could look the world in the face, bidding it think
of him what it would.
They were talking now the
two girls, discussing their strange discovery.
When he saw Rosamund this evening of course
he would see her, as she had promised her
surprise would already have lost its poignancy; he
had but to tell the story of his disaster, of his
struggles, and then to announce the coming moment of
rescue. No chance could have been happier than
this which betrayed him to these two at the same time;
for Bertha Cross’s good sense would be the best
possible corrective of any shock her more sensitive
companion might have received. Bertha Cross’s
good sense that was how he thought of her,
without touch of emotion; whilst on Rosamund his imagination
dwelt with exultant fervour. He saw himself as
he would appear in her eyes when she knew all noble,
heroic. What he had done was a fine thing, beyond
the reach of ordinary self-regarding mortals, and who
more capable than Rosamund of appreciating such courage?
After all, fate was kind. In the byways of London
it had wrought for him a structure of romance, and
amid mean pursuits it exalted him to an ideal of love.
And as he thus dreamt, and smiled
and gloried very much like an aproned Malvolio the
hours went quickly by. He found himself near
Albert Bridge, pacing this way and that, expecting
at every moment the appearance of the slim figure
clad in grey. The sun set; the blind of Rosamund’s
sitting-room showed that there was lamplight within;
and at ten o’clock Warburton still hung about
the square, hoping against his reason that
she might come forth. He went home, and wrote
to her.
In a score of ways he explained to
himself her holding aloof. It was vexation at
his not having confided in her; it was a desire to
reflect before seeing him again; it was and
so on, all through the night, which brought him never
a wink of sleep. Next morning, he did not go to
the shop; it would have been impossible to stand at
the counter for ten minutes, he sent a note to Allchin,
saying that he was detained by private affairs, then
set off for a day-long walk in the country, to kill
time until the coming of Rosamund’s reply.
On his return in the afternoon, he found it awaiting
him.
An hour later he was in Oakley Crescent.
He stood looking at the house for a moment, then approached,
and knocked at the door. He asked if Miss Elvan
was at home.
“She’s gone away,”
was the reply of the landlady, who spoke distantly,
her face a respectable blank.
“Left for good?”
“Yes, sir,” answered the woman, her eyes
falling.
“You don’t know where she has gone to?”
“It’s somewhere abroad,
sir in France, I think. She has a sister
there.”
This was at five o’clock or
so. Of what happened during the next four hours,
Will had never a very distinct recollection. Beyond
doubt, he called at the shop, and spoke with Allchin;
beyond doubt, also, he went to his lodgings and packed
a travelling bag. Which of his movements were
performed in cabs, which on foot, he could scarce have
decided, had he reflected on the matter during the
night that followed. That night was passed in
the train, on a steamboat, then again on the railway
And before sunrise he was in Paris.
At the railway refreshment-room, he
had breakfast, eating with some appetite; then he
drove to the terminus of another line. The streets
of Paris, dim vistas under a rosy dawn, had no reality
for his eyes; the figures flitting here and there,
the voices speaking a foreign tongue, made part of
a phantasm in which he himself moved no less fantastically.
He was in Paris; yet how could that be? He would
wake up, and find himself at his lodgings, and get
up to go to business in Fulham Road; but the dream
bore him on. Now he had taken another ticket.
His bag was being registered for St. Jean
de Luz. A long journey lay before him. He
yawned violently, half remembering that he had passed
two nights without sleep. Then he found himself
seated in a corner of the railway carriage, an unknown
landscape slipping away before his eyes.
Now for the first time did he seem
to be really aware of what he was doing. Rosamund
had taken flight to the Pyrénées, and he was in hot
pursuit. He grew exhilarated in the thought of
his virile energy. If the glimpse of him aproned
and behind a counter had been too great a shock for
Rosamund’s romantic nature, this vigorous action
would more than redeem his manhood in her sight.
“Yes, I am a grocer; I have lived for a couple
of years by selling tea and sugar not to
speak of treacle; but none the less I am the man you
drew on to love you. Grocer though I be, I come
to claim you!” Thus would he speak and how could
the reply be doubtful? In such a situation, all
depends on the man’s strength and passionate
resolve. Rosamund should be his; he swore it in
his heart. She should take him as he was, grocer’s
shop and all; not until her troth was pledged would
he make known to her the prospect of better things.
The emotions of the primitive lover had told upon him.
She thought to escape him, by flight across Europe?
But what if the flight were meant as a test of his
worthiness? He seized upon the idea, and rejoiced
in it. Rosamund might well have conceived this
method of justifying both him and herself. “If
he loves me as I would be loved, let him dare to follow!”
To-morrow morning he would stand before
her, grocerdom a thousand miles away. They would
walk together, as when they were among the Alps.
Why, even then, had his heart prompted, had honour
permitted, he could have won her. He believed
now, what at the time he had refused to admit, that
Franks’ moment of jealous anger was not without
its justification. Again they would meet among
the mountains, and the shop in Fulham Road would be
seen as at the wrong end of a telescope its
due proportions. They would return together to
England, and at once be married. As for the grocery
business
Reason lost itself amid ardours of the natural man.
He paid little heed to the country
through which he was passing. He flung himself
on to the dark platform, and tottered drunkenly in
search of the exit. Billet? Why, yes,
he had a billet somewhere. Hotel?
Yes, yes, the hotel, no matter which.
It took some minutes before his brain could grasp
the idea that his luggage cheque was wanted; he had
forgotten that he had any luggage at all. Ultimately,
he was thrust into some sort of a vehicle, which set
him down at the hotel door. Food? Good Heavens,
no; but something to drink, and a bed to tumble into quick.
He stood in a bedroom, holding in
his hand a glass of he knew not what beverage.
Before him was a waiter, to whom very much
to his own surprise he discoursed fluently
in French, or something meant for that tongue.
That it was more than sixty hours since he had slept;
that he had started from London at a moment’s
notice; that the Channel had been very rough for the
time of the year; that he had never been in this part
of France before, and hoped to see a good deal of the
Pyrénées, perhaps to have a run into Spain; that first
of all he wanted to find the abode of an English lady
named Mrs. Cap Cop he couldn’t
think of the name, but he had written it down in his
pocket-book.
The door closed; the waiter was gone;
but Warburton still talked French.
“Oui, oui en
effet très fatigue, horriblement
fatiguee! Trois nuits sans sommeil trois
nuits trois!”
His clothes fell in a heap on the
floor; his body fell in another direction. He
was dead asleep.