THREE YEARS LATER
“Extra speshul extra
speshul all about Kruger an’ his guns!”
The shrill, acrid cry rang down St.
James’s Street, and a newsboy with a bunch of
pink papers under his arm shot hither and thither on
the pavement, offering his sensational wares to all
he met.
“Extra speshul extra
speshul all about the war wot’s comin’ all
about Kruger’s guns!”
From an open window on the second
floor of a building in the street a man’s head
was thrust out, listening.
“The war wot’s comin’!”
he repeated, with a bitter sort of smile. “And
all about Kruger’s guns. So it is coming,
is it, Johnny Bull; and you do know all about his
guns, do you? If it is, and you do know, then
a shattering big thing is coming, and you know quite
a lot, Johnny Bull.”
He hummed to himself an impromptu
refrain to an impromptu tune:
“Then you know quite a lot, Johnny
Bull, Johnny Bull,
Then you know quite a lot, Johnny Bull!”
Stepping out of the French window
upon a balcony now, he looked down the street.
The newsboy was almost below. He whistled, and
the lad looked up. In response to a beckoning
finger the gutter-snipe took the doorway and the staircase
at a bound. Like all his kind, he was a good
judge of character, and one glance had assured him
that he was speeding upon a visit of profit.
Half a postman’s knock a sharp, insistent
stroke and he entered, his thin weasel-like
face thrust forward, his eyes glittering. The
fire in such eyes is always cold, for hunger is poor
fuel to the native flame of life.
“Extra speshul, m’lord all
about Kruger’s guns.”
He held out the paper to the figure
that darkened the window, and he pronounced the g
in Kruger soft, as in Scrooge.
The hand that took the paper deftly
slipped a shilling into the cold, skinny palm.
At its first touch the face of the paper-vender fell,
for it was the same size as a halfpenny; but even
before the swift fingers had had a chance to feel
the coin, or the glance went down, the face regained
its confidence, for the eyes looking at him were generous.
He had looked at so many faces in his brief day that
he was an expert observer.
“Thank y’ kindly,”
he said; then, as the fingers made assurance of the
fortune which had come to him, “Ow, thank ye
werry much, y’r gryce,” he added.
Something alert and determined in
the face of the boy struck the giver of the coin as
he opened the paper to glance at its contents, and
he paused to scan him more closely. He saw the
hunger in the lad’s eyes as they swept over
the breakfast-table, still heavy with uneaten breakfast bacon,
nearly the whole of an omelette, and rolls, toast,
marmalade and honey.
“Wait a second,” he said,
as the boy turned toward the door.
“Yes, y’r gryce.”
“Had your breakfast?”
“I has me brekfist w’en
I sells me pypers.” The lad hugged the
remaining papers closer under his arms, and kept his
face turned resolutely away from the inviting table.
His host correctly interpreted the action.
“Poor little devil grit,
pure grit!” he said under his breath. “How
many papers have you got left?” he asked.
The lad counted like lightning.
“Ten,” he answered. “I’ll
soon get ’em off now. Luck’s wiv
me dis mornin’.” The ghost of
a smile lighted his face.
“I’ll take them all,”
the other said, handing over a second shilling.
The lad fumbled for change and the
fumbling was due to honest agitation. He was
not used to this kind of treatment.
“No, that’s all right,” the other
interposed.
“But they’re only a h’ypenny,”
urged the lad, for his natural cupidity had given
way to a certain fine faculty not too common in any
grade of human society.
“Well, I’m buying them
at a penny this morning. I’ve got some friends
who’ll be glad to give a penny to know all about
Kruger’s guns.” He too softened the
g in Kruger in consideration of his visitor’s
idiosyncrasies.
“You won’t be mykin’
anythink on them, y’r gryce,” said the
lad with a humour which opened the doors of Ian Stafford’s
heart wide; for to him heaven itself would be insupportable
if it had no humorists.
“I’ll get at them in other
ways,” Stafford rejoined. “I’ll
get my profit, never fear. Now what about breakfast?
You’ve sold all your papers, you know.”
“I’m fair ready for it,
y’r gryce,” was the reply, and now the
lad’s glance went eagerly towards the door,
for the tension of labour was relaxed, and hunger
was scraping hard at his vitals.
“Well, sit down this
breakfast isn’t cold yet.... But, no, you’d
better have a wash-up first, if you can wait,”
Stafford added, and rang a bell.
“Wot, ’ere brekfist wiv y’r
gryce ’ere?”
“Well, I’ve had mine” Stafford
made a slight grimace “and there’s
plenty left for you, if you don’t mind eating
after me.”
“I dusted me clothes dis
mornin’,” said the boy, with an attempt
to justify his decision to eat this noble breakfast.
“An’ I washed me ’ends but
pypers is muck,” he added.
A moment later he was in the fingers
of Gleg the valet in the bath-room, and Stafford set
to work to make the breakfast piping hot again.
It was an easy task, as heaters were inseparable from
his bachelor meals, and, though this was only the
second breakfast he had eaten since his return to
England after three years’ absence, everything
was in order.
For Gleg was still more the child
of habit and decorous habit than
himself. It was not the first time that Gleg had
had to deal with his master’s philanthropic
activities. Much as he disapproved of them, he
could discriminate; and there was that about the newsboy
which somehow disarmed him. He went so far as
to heap the plate of the lad, and would have poured
the coffee too, but that his master took the pot from
his hand and with a nod and a smile dismissed him;
and his master’s smile was worth a good deal
to Gleg. It was an exacting if well-paid service,
for Ian Stafford was the most particular man in Europe,
and he had grown excessively so during the past three
years, which, as Gleg observed, had brought great,
if quiet, changes in him. He had grown more studious,
more watchful, more exclusive in his daily life, and
ladies of all kinds he had banished from direct personal
share in his life. There were no more little
tea-parties and dejeuners chez lui,
duly chaperoned by some gracious cousin or aunt for
there was no embassy in Europe where he had not relatives.
“’Ipped a bit
’ipped. ’E ’as found ’em
out, the ’uzzies,” Gleg had observed;
for he had decided that the general cause of the change
in his master was Woman, though he did not know the
particular woman who had ’ipped him.
As the lad ate his wonderful breakfast,
in which nearly half a pot of marmalade and enough
butter for three ordinary people figured, Stafford
read the papers attentively, to give his guest a fair
chance at the food and to overcome his self-consciousness.
He got an occasional glance at the trencherman, however,
as he changed the sheets, stepped across the room
to get a cigarette, or poked the small fire for,
late September as it was, a sudden cold week of rain
had come and gone, leaving the air raw; and a fire
was welcome.
At last, when he realized that the
activities of the table were decreasing, he put down
his paper. “Is it all right?” he asked.
“Is the coffee hot?”
“I ain’t never ’ad
a meal like that, y’r gryce, not never any time,”
the boy answered, with a new sort of fire in his eyes.
“Was there enough?”
“I’ve left some,”
answered his guest, looking at the jar of marmalade
and half a slice of toast. “I likes the
coffee hot tykes y’r longer to drink
it,” he added.
Ian Stafford chuckled. He was
getting more than the worth of his money. He
had nibbled at his own breakfast, with the perturbations
of a crossing from Flushing still in his system, and
its equilibrium not fully restored; and yet, with
the waste of his own meal and the neglect of his own
appetite, he had given a great and happy half-hour
to a waif of humanity.
As he looked at the boy he wondered
how many thousands there were like him within rifle-shot
from where he sat, and he thought each of them would
thank whatever gods they knew for such a neglected
meal. The words from the scare-column of the
paper he held smote his sight:
“War Inevitable Transvaal
Bristling with Guns and Loaded to the Nozzle with
War Stores Milner and Kruger No Nearer a
Settlement Sullen and Contemptuous Treatment
of British Outlander.” ... And so on.
And if war came, if England must do
this ugly thing, fulfil her bitter and terrible task,
then what about such as this young outlander here,
this outcast from home and goodly toil and civilized
conditions, this sickly froth of the muddy and dolorous
stream of lower England? So much withdrawn from
the sources of the possible relief, so much less with
which to deal with their miseries perhaps
hundreds of millions, mopped up by the parched and
unproductive soil of battle and disease and loss.
He glanced at the paper again.
“Britons Hold Your Own,” was the heading
of the chief article. “Yes, we must hold
our own,” he said, aloud, with a sigh.
“If it comes, we must see it through; but the
breakfasts will be fewer. It works down one way
or another it all works down to this poor
little devil and his kind.”
“Now, what’s your name?” he asked.
“Jigger,” was the reply.
“What else?”
“Nothin’, y’r gryce.”
“Jigger what?”
“It’s the only nyme I got,” was
the reply.
“What’s your father’s or your mother’s
name?”
“I ain’t got none. I only got a sister.”
“What’s her name?”
“Lou,” he answered.
“That’s her real name. But she got
a fancy name yistiddy. She was took on at the
opera yistiddy, to sing with a hunderd uvver girls
on the styge. She’s Lulu Luckingham now.”
“Oh Luckingham!”
said Stafford, with a smile, for this was a name of
his own family, and of much account in circles he frequented.
“And who gave her that name? Who were her
godfathers and godmothers?”
“I dunno, y’r gryce.
There wasn’t no religion in it. They said
she’d have to be called somefink, and so they
called her that. Lou was always plenty for ’er
till she went there yistiddy.”
“What did she do before yesterday?”
“Sold flowers w’en she
could get ’em to sell. ’Twas when
she couldn’t sell her flowers that she piped
up sort of dead wild for she ’adn’t
‘ad nothin’ to eat, an’ she was fair
crusty. It was then a gentleman, ’e ’eard
‘er singin’ hot, an’ he says, ’That’s
good enough for a start,’ ’e says, ‘an’
you come wiv me,’ he says. ‘Not much,’
Lou says, ‘not if I knows it. I seed your
kind frequent.’ But ‘e stuck to it,
an’ says, ‘It’s stryght, an’
a lydy will come for you to-morrer, if you’ll
be ‘ere on this spot, or tell me w’ere
you can be found.’ An’ Lou says,
says she, ‘You buy my flowers, so’s I kin
git me bread-baskit full, an’ then I’ll
think it over.’ An’ he bought ‘er
flowers, an’ give ’er five bob. An’
Lou paid rent for both of us wiv that, an’ ‘ad
brekfist; an’ sure enough the lydy come next
dy an’ took her off. She’s in the
opery now, an’ she’ll ’ave
’er brekfist reg’lar. I seed the lydy
meself. Her picture ’s on the ’oardings ”
Suddenly he stopped. “W’y,
that’s ’er that’s ’er!”
he said, pointing to the mantel-piece.
Stafford followed the finger and the
glance. It was Al’mah’s portrait
in the costume she had worn over three years ago, the
night when Rudyard Byng had rescued her from the flames.
He had bought it then. It had been unpacked again
by Gleg, and put in the place it had occupied for
a day or two before he had gone out of England to do
his country’s work and to face the
bitterest disillusion of his life; to meet the heaviest
blow his pride and his heart had ever known.
“So that’s the lady, is
it?” he said, musingly, to the boy, who nodded
assent.
“Go and have a good look at it,” urged
Stafford.
The boy did so. “It’s ’er done
up for the opery,” he declared.
“Well, Lulu Luckingham is all
right, then. That lady will be good to her.”
“Right. As soon as I seed
her, I whispers to Lou ’You keep close to that
there wall,’ I sez. ‘There’s
a chimbey in it, an’ you’ll never be cold,’
I says to Lou.”
Stafford laughed softly at the illustration.
Many a time the lad snuggled up to a wall which had
a warm chimney, and he had got his figure of speech
from real life.
“Well, what’s to become of you?”
Stafford asked.
“Me I’ll be
level wiv me rent to-day,” he answered, turning
over the two shillings and some coppers in his pocket;
“an’ Lou and me’s got a fair start.”
Stafford got up, came over, and laid
a hand on the boy’s shoulder. “I’m
going to give you a sovereign,” he said “twenty
shillings, for your fair start; and I want you to
come to me here next Sunday-week to breakfast, and
tell me what you’ve done with it.”
“Me y’r gryce!”
A look of fright almost came into the lad’s face.
“Twenty bob me!”
The sovereign was already in his hand,
and now his face suffused. He seemed anxious
to get away, and looked round for his cap. He
couldn’t do here what he wanted to do.
He felt that he must burst.
“Now, off you go. And you
be here at nine o’clock on Sunday-week with
the papers, and tell me what you’ve done.”
“Gawd my Gawd!”
said the lad, huskily. The next minute he was
out in the hall, and the door was shut behind him.
A moment later, hearing a whoop, Stafford went to
the window and, looking down, he saw his late visitor
turning a cart-wheel under the nose of a policeman,
and then, with another whoop, shooting down into the
Mall, making Lambeth way.
With a smile he turned from the window.
“Well, we shall see,” he said. “Perhaps
it will be my one lucky speculation. Who knows who
knows!”
His eye caught the portrait of Al’mah
on the mantelpiece. He went over and stood looking
at it musingly.
“You were a good girl,”
he said, aloud. “At any rate, you wouldn’t
pretend. You’d gamble with your immortal
soul, but you wouldn’t sell it not
for three millions, not for a hundred times three millions.
Or is it that you are all alike, you women? Isn’t
there one of you that can be absolutely true?
Isn’t there one that won’t smirch her soul
and kill the faith of those that love her for some
moment’s excitement, for gold to gratify a vanity,
or to have a wider sweep to her skirts? Vain,
vain, vain and dishonourable, essentially
dishonourable. There might be tragedies, but
there wouldn’t be many intrigues if women weren’t
so dishonourable the secret orchard rather
than the open highway and robbery under arms....
Whew, what a world!”
He walked up and down the room for
a moment, his eyes looking straight before him; then
he stopped short. “I suppose it’s
natural that, coming back to England, I should begin
to unpack a lot of old memories, empty out the box-room,
and come across some useless and discarded things.
I’ll settle down presently; but it’s a
thoroughly useless business turning over old stock.
The wise man pitches it all into the junk-shop, and
cuts his losses.”
He picked up the Morning Post and
glanced down the middle page the social
column first with the half-amused reflection
that he hadn’t done it for years, and that here
were the same old names reappearing, with the same
brief chronicles. Here, too, were new names, some
of them, if not most of them, of a foreign turn to
their syllables New York, Melbourne, Buenos
Ayres, Johannesburg. His lip curled a little
with almost playful scorn. At St. Petersburg,
Vienna, and elsewhere he had been vaguely conscious
of these social changes; but they did not come within
the ambit of his daily life, and so it had not mattered.
And there was no reason why it should matter now.
His England was a land the original elements of which
would not change, had not changed; for the old small
inner circle had not been invaded, was still impervious
to the wash of wealth and snobbery and push. That
refuge had its sequestered glades, if perchance it
was unilluminating and rather heavily decorous; so
that he could let the climbers, the toadies, the gold-spillers,
and the bribers have the middle of the road.
It did not matter so much that London
was changing fast. The old clock on the tower
of St. James’s would still give the time to his
step as he went to and from the Foreign Office, and
there were quiet places like Kensington Gardens where
the bounding person would never think to stray.
Indeed, they never strayed; they only rushed and pushed
where their spreading tails could be seen by the multitude.
They never got farther west than Rotten Row, which
was in possession of three classes of people those
who sat in Parliament, those who had seats on the
Stock Exchange, and those who could not sit their horses.
Three years had not done it all, but it had done a
good deal; and he was more keenly alive to the changes
and developments which had begun long before he left
and had increased vastly since. Wealth was more
and more the master of England new-made
wealth; and some of it was too ostentatious and too
pretentious to condone, much less indulge.
All at once his eye, roaming down
the columns, came upon the following announcement:
“Mr. and Mrs. Rudyard Byng have
returned to town from Scotland for a few days, before
proceeding to Wales, where they are presently to receive
at Glencader Castle the Duke and Duchess of Sheffield,
the Prince and Princess of Cleaves, M. Santon,
the French Foreign Minister, the Slavonian Ambassador,
the Earl and Countess of Tynemouth, and Mr. Tudor
Tempest.”
“‘And Mr. Tudor Tempest,’”
Ian repeated to himself. “Well, she would.
She would pay that much tribute to her own genius.
Four-fifths to the claims of the body and the social
nervous system, and one-fifth to the desire of the
soul. Tempest is a literary genius by what he
has done, and she is a genius by nature, and with
so much left undone. The Slavonian Ambassador him,
and the French Foreign Minister! That looks like
a useful combination at this moment at this
moment. She has a gift for combinations, a wonderful
skill, a still more wonderful perception and
a remarkable unscrupulousness. She’s the
naturally ablest woman I have ever known; but she
wants to take short-cuts to a worldly Elysium, and
it can’t be done, not even with three times three
millions and three millions was her price.”
Suddenly he got up and went over to
a table where were several dispatch-boxes. Opening
one, he drew forth from the bottom, where he had placed
it nearly three years ago, a letter. He looked
at the long, sliding handwriting, so graceful and
fine, he caught the perfume which had intoxicated
Rudyard Byng, and, stooping down, he sniffed the dispatch-box.
He nodded.
“She’s pervasive in everything,”
he murmured. He turned over several other packets
of letters in the box. “I apologize,”
he said, ironically, to these letters. “I
ought to have banished her long ago, but, to tell
you the truth, I didn’t realize how much she’d
influence everything even in a box.”
He laughed cynically, and slowly opened the one letter
which had meant so much to him.
There was no show of agitation.
His eye was calm; only his mouth showed any feeling
or made any comment. It was a little supercilious
and scornful. Sitting down by the table, he spread
the letter out, and read it with great deliberation.
It was the first time he had looked at it since he
received it in Vienna and had placed it in the dispatch-box.
“Dear Ian,” it ran, “our
year of probation that is the word isn’t
it? is up; and I have decided that our ways
must lie apart. I am going to marry Rudyard Byng
next month. He is very kind and very strong, and
not too ragingly clever. You know I should chafe
at being reminded daily of my own stupidity by a very
clever man. You and I have had so many good hours
together, there has been such confidence between us,
that no other friendship can ever be the same; and
I shall always want to go to you, and ask your advice,
and learn to be wise. You will not turn a cold
shoulder on me, will you? I think you yourself
realized that my wish to wait a year before giving
a final answer was proof that I really had not that
in my heart which would justify me in saying what
you wished me to say. Oh yes, you knew; and the
last day when you bade me good-bye you almost said
as much! I was so young, so unschooled, when
you first asked me, and I did not know my own mind;
but I know it now, and so I go to Rudyard Byng for
better or for worse ”
He suddenly stopped reading, sat back
in his chair, and laughed sardonically.
“For richer, for poorer’ now
to have launched out on the first phrase, and to have
jibbed at the second was distinctly stupid. The
quotation could only have been carried off with audacity
of the ripest kind. ’For better, for worse,
for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health,
till death us do part, amen ’ That
was the way to have done it, if it was to be done
at all. Her cleverness forsook her when she wrote
that letter. ’Our year of probation’ she
called it that. Dear, dear, what a poor prevaricator
the best prevaricator is! She was sworn to me,
bound to me, wanted a year in which to have her fling
before she settled down, and she threw me over like
that.”
He did not read the rest of the letter,
but got up, went over to the fire, threw it in, and
watched it burn.
“I ought to have done so when
I received it,” he said, almost kindly now.
“A thing like that ought never to be kept a minute.
It’s a terrible confession, damning evidence,
a self-made exposure, and to keep it is too brutal,
too hard on the woman. If anything had happened
to me and it had been read, ’Not all the King’s
horses nor all the King’s men could put Humpty
Dumpty together again.’”
Then he recalled the brief letter
he had written her in reply. Unlike him, she
had not kept his answer, when it came into her hands,
but, tearing it up into fifty fragments, had thrown
it into the waste-basket, and paced her room in shame,
anger and humiliation. Finally, she had taken
the waste-basket and emptied it into the flames.
She had watched the tiny fragments burn in a fire not
hotter than that in her own eyes, which presently
were washed by a flood of bitter tears and passionate
and unavailing protest. For hours she had sobbed,
and when she went out into the world the next day,
it was with his every word ringing in her ears, as
they had rung ever since: the sceptic comment
at every feast, the ironical laughter behind every
door, the whispered detraction in every loud accent
of praise.
“Dear Jasmine,” his letter
had run, “it is kind of you to tell me of your
intended marriage before it occurs, for in these distant
lands news either travels slowly or does not reach
one at all. I am fortunate in having my information
from the very fountain of first knowledge. You
have seen and done much in the past year; and the end
of it all is more fitting than the most meticulous
artist could desire or conceive. You will adorn
the new sphere into which you enter. You are of
those who do not need training or experience:
you are a genius, whose chief characteristic is adaptability.
Some people, to whom nature and Providence have not
been generous live up to things; to you it is given
to live down to them; and no one can do it so well.
We have had good times together happy conversations
and some cheerful and entertaining dreams and purposes.
We have made the most of opportunity, each in his
and her own way. But, my dear Jasmine, don’t
ever think that you will need to come to me for advice
and to learn to be wise. I know of no one from
whom I could learn, from whom I have learned, so I
much. I am deeply your debtor for revelations
which never could have come to me without your help.
There is a wonderful future before you, whose variety
let Time, not me, attempt to reveal. I shall watch
your going on” (he did not say goings
on) “your Alpine course, with clear
memories of things and hours dearer to me than all
the world, and with which I would not have parted
for the mines of the Rand. I lose them now for
nothing and less than nothing. I shall
be abroad for some years, and, meanwhile, a new planet
will swim into the universe of matrimony. I shall
see the light shining, but its heavenly orbit will
not be within my calculations. Other astronomers
will watch, and some no doubt will pray, and I shall
read in the annals the bright story of the flower
that was turned into a star!
“Always yours sincerely, Ian Stafford.”
From the filmy ashes of her letter
to him Stafford now turned away to his writing-table.
There he sat for a while and answered several notes,
among them one to Alice Mayhew, now the Countess of
Tynemouth, whose red parasol still hung above the
mantel-piece, a relic of the Zambesi and
of other things.
Periodically Lady Tynemouth’s
letters had come to him while he was abroad, and from
her, in much detail, he had been informed of the rise
of Mrs. Byng, of her great future, her “delicious”
toilettes, her great entertainments for charity,
her successful attempts to gather round her the great
figures in the political and diplomatic world; and
her partial rejection of Byng’s old mining and
financial confreres and their belongings. It
had all culminated in a visit of royalty to their
place in Suffolk, from which she had emerged radiantly
and delicately aggressive, and sweeping a wider circle
with her social scythe.
Ian had read it all unperturbed.
It was just what he knew she could and would do; and
he foresaw for Byng, if he wanted it, a peerage in
the not distant future. Alice Tynemouth was no
gossip, and she was not malicious. She had a
good, if wayward, heart, was full of sentiment, and
was a constant and helpful friend. He, therefore,
accepted her invitation now to spend the next week-end
with her and her husband; and then, with letters to
two young nephews in his pocket, he prepared to sally
forth to buy them presents, and to get some sweets
for the children of a poor invalid cousin to whom
for years he had been a generous friend. For
children he had a profound love, and if he had married,
he would not have been content with a childless home with
a childless home like that of Rudyard Byng. That
news also had come to him from Alice Tynemouth, who
honestly lamented that Jasmine Byng had no “balance-wheel,”
which was the safety and the anchor of women “like
her and me,” Lady Tynemouth’s letter had
said.
Three millions then and
how much more now? and big houses, and no
children. It was an empty business, or so it seemed
to him, who had come of a large and agreeably quarrelsome
and clever family, with whom life had been checkered
but never dull.
He took up his hat and stick, and
went towards the door. His eyes caught Al’mah’s
photograph as he passed.
“It was all done that night
at the opera,” he said. “Jasmine made
up her mind then to marry him, ... I wonder what
the end will be.... Sad little, bad little girl....
The mess of pottage at the last? Quién sabe!”