Then Mr. Hoopdriver returned to the
little room with the lead-framed windows where he
had dined, and where the bed was now comfortably made,
sat down on the box under the window, stared at the
moon rising on the shining vicarage roof, and tried
to collect his thoughts. How they whirled at
first! It was past ten, and most of Midhurst was
tucked away in bed, some one up the street was learning
the violin, at rare intervals a belated inhabitant
hurried home and woke the echoes, and a corncrake
kept up a busy churning in the vicarage garden.
The sky was deep blue, with a still luminous afterglow
along the black edge of the hill, and the white moon
overhead, save for a couple of yellow stars, had the
sky to herself.
At first his thoughts were kinetic,
of deeds and not relationships. There was this
malefactor, and his victim, and it had fallen on Mr.
Hoopdriver to take a hand in the game. He
was married. Did she know he was married?
Never for a moment did a thought of evil concerning
her cross Hoopdriver’s mind. Simple-minded
people see questions of morals so much better than
superior persons who have read and thought
themselves complex to impotence. He had heard
her voice, seen the frank light in her eyes, and she
had been weeping that sufficed. The
rights of the case he hadn’t properly grasped.
But he would. And that smirking well,
swine was the mildest for him. He recalled the
exceedingly unpleasant incident of the railway bridge.
“Thin we won’t detain yer, thenks,”
said Mr. Hoopdriver, aloud, in a strange, unnatural,
contemptible voice, supposed to represent that of
Bechamel. “Oh, the beggar! I’ll
be level with him yet. He’s afraid of us
detectives that I’ll swear.”
(If Mrs. Wardor should chance to be on the other side
of the door within earshot, well and good.)
For a space he meditated chastisements
and revenges, physical impossibilities for the most
part, Bechamel staggering headlong from
the impact of Mr. Hoopdriver’s large, but, to
tell the truth, ill supported fist, Bechamel’s
five feet nine of height lifted from the ground and
quivering under a vigorously applied horsewhip.
So pleasant was such dreaming, that Mr. Hoopdriver’s
peaked face under the moonlight was transfigured.
One might have paired him with that well-known and
universally admired triumph, ‘The Soul’s
Awakening,’ so sweet was his ecstasy. And
presently with his thirst for revenge glutted by six
or seven violent assaults, a duel and two vigorous
murders, his mind came round to the Young Lady in
Grey again.
She was a plucky one too. He
went over the incident the barmaid at the Angel had
described to him. His thoughts ceased to be a
torrent, smoothed down to a mirror in which she was
reflected with infinite clearness and detail.
He’d never met anything like her before.
Fancy that bolster of a barmaid being dressed in that
way! He whuffed a contemptuous laugh. He
compared her colour, her vigour, her voice, with the
Young Ladies in Business with whom his lot had been
cast. Even in tears she was beautiful, more beautiful
indeed to him, for it made her seem softer and weaker,
more accessible. And such weeping as he had seen
before had been so much a matter of damp white faces,
red noses, and hair coming out of curl. Your
draper’s assistant becomes something of a judge
of weeping, because weeping is the custom of all Young
Ladies in Business, when for any reason their services
are dispensed with. She could weep and
(by Gosh!) she could smile. He knew that,
and reverting to acting abruptly, he smiled confidentially
at the puckered pallor of the moon.
It is difficult to say how long Mr.
Hoopdriver’s pensiveness lasted. It seemed
a long time before his thoughts of action returned.
Then he remembered he was a ‘watcher’;
that to-morrow he must be busy. It would be in
character to make notes, and he pulled out his little
note-book. With that in hand he fell a-thinking
again. Would that chap tell her the ’tecks
were after them? If so, would she be as anxious
to get away as he was? He must be on the
alert. If possible he must speak to her.
Just a significant word, “Your friend trust
me!” It occurred to him that to-morrow
these fugitives might rise early to escape. At
that he thought of the time and found it was half-past
eleven. “Lord!” said he, “I
must see that I wake.” He yawned and rose.
The blind was up, and he pulled back the little chintz
curtains to let the sunlight strike across to the
bed, hung his watch within good view of his pillow,
on a nail that supported a kettle-holder, and sat
down on his bed to undress. He lay awake for
a little while thinking of the wonderful possibilities
of the morrow, and thence he passed gloriously into
the wonderland of dreams.