Mr. X came to me, preceded by a letter
of introduction from a good friend of mine in Paris,
specifically to see my collection of Chinese bronzes
and porcelain.
“My friend in Paris is a collector,
too. He collects neither porcelain, nor bronzes,
nor pictures, nor medals, nor stamps, nor anything
that could be profitably dispersed under an auctioneer’s
hammer. He would reject, with genuine surprise,
the name of a collector. Nevertheless, that’s
what he is by temperament. He collects acquaintances.
It is delicate work. He brings to it the patience,
the passion, the determination of a true collector
of curiosities. His collection does not contain
any royal personages. I don’t think he considers
them sufficiently rare and interesting; but, with
that exception, he has met with and talked to everyone
worth knowing on any conceivable ground. He observes
them, listens to them, penetrates them, measures them,
and puts the memory away in the galleries of his mind.
He has schemed, plotted, and travelled all over Europe
in order to add to his collection of distinguished
personal acquaintances.
“As he is wealthy, well connected,
and unprejudiced, his collection is pretty complete,
including objects (or should I say subjects?) whose
value is unappreciated by the vulgar, and often unknown
to popular fame. Of trevolte of modern times.
The world knows him as a revolutionary writer whose
savage irony has laid bare the rottenness of the most
respectable institutions. He has scalped every
venerated head, and has mangled at the stake of his
wit every received opinion and every recognized principle
of conduct and policy. Who does not remember his
flaming red revolutionary pamphlets? Their sudden
swarmings used to overwhelm the powers of every Continental
police like a plague of crimson gadflies. But
this extreme writer has been also the active inspirer
of secret societies, the mysterious unknown Number
One of desperate conspiracies suspected and unsuspected,
matured or baffled. And the world at large has
never had an inkling of that fact! This accounts
for him going about amongst us to this day, a veteran
of many subterranean campaigns, standing aside now,
safe within his reputation of merely the greatest
destructive publicist that ever lived.”
Thus wrote my friend, adding that
Mr. X was an enlightened connoisseur of bronzes and
china, and asking me to show him my collection.
X turned up in due course. My
treasures are disposed in three large rooms without
carpets and curtains. There is no other furniture
than the etagres and the glass cases whose contents
shall be worth a fortune to my heirs. I allow
no fires to be lighted, for fear of accidents, and
a fire-proof door separates them from the rest of
the house.
It was a bitter cold day. We
kept on our overcoats and hats. Middle-sized
and spare, his eyes alert in a long, Roman-nosed countenance,
X walked on his neat little feet, with short steps,
and looked at my collection intelligently. I hope
I looked at him intelligently, too. A snow-white
moustache and imperial made his nutbrown complexion
appear darker than it really was. In his fur coat
and shiny tall hat that terrible man looked fashionable.
I believe he belonged to a noble family, and could
have called himself Vicomte X de la Z if he chose.
We talked nothing but bronzes and porcelain. He
was remarkably appreciative. We parted on cordial
terms.
Where he was staying I don’t
know. I imagine he must have been a lonely man.
Anarchists, I suppose, have no families not,
at any rate, as we understand that social relation.
Organization into families may answer to a need of
human nature, but in the last instance it is based
on law, and therefore must be something odious and
impossible to an anarchist. But, indeed, I don’t
understand anarchists. Does a man of that of
that persuasion still remain an anarchist
when alone, quite alone and going to bed, for instance?
Does he lay his head on the pillow, pull his bedclothes
over him, and go to sleep with the necessity of the
chambardement general, as the French slang has
it, of the general blow-up, always present to his
mind? And if so how can he? I am sure that
if such a faith (or such a fanaticism) once mastered
my thoughts I would never be able to compose myself
sufficiently to sleep or eat or perform any of the
routine acts of daily life. I would want no wife,
no children; I could have no friends, it seems to
me; and as to collecting bronzes or china, that, I
should say, would be quite out of the question.
But I don’t know. All I know is that Mr.
X took his meals in a very good restaurant which I
frequented also.
With his head uncovered, the silver
top-knot of his brushed-up hair completed the character
of his physiognomy, all bony ridges and sunken hollows,
clothed in a perfect impassiveness of expression.
His meagre brown hands emerging from large white cuffs
came and went breaking bread, pouring wine, and so
on, with quiet mechanical precision. His head
and body above the tablecloth had a rigid immobility.
This firebrand, this great agitator, exhibited the
least possible amount of warmth and animation.
His voice was rasping, cold, and monotonous in a low
key. He could not be called a talkative personality;
but with his detached calm manner he appeared as ready
to keep the conversation going as to drop it at any
moment.
And his conversation was by no means
commonplace. To me, I own, there was some excitement
in talking quietly across a dinner-table with a man
whose venomous pen-stabs had sapped the vitality of
at least one monarchy. That much was a matter
of public knowledge. But I knew more. I
knew of him from my friend as
a certainty what the guardians of social order in
Europe had at most only suspected, or dimly guessed
at.
He had had what I may call his underground
life. And as I sat, evening after evening, facing
him at dinner, a curiosity in that direction would
naturally arise in my mind. I am a quiet and peaceable
product of civilization, and know no passion other
than the passion for collecting things which are rare,
and must remain exquisite even if approaching to the
monstrous. Some Chinese bronzes are monstrously
precious. And here (out of my friend’s
collection), here I had before me a kind of rare monster.
It is true that this monster was polished and in a
sense even exquisite. His beautiful unruffled
manner was that. But then he was not of bronze.
He was not even Chinese, which would have enabled one
to contemplate him calmly across the gulf of racial
difference. He was alive and European; he had
the manner of good society, wore a coat and hat like
mine, and had pretty near the same taste in cooking.
It was too frightful to think of.
One evening he remarked, casually,
in the course of conversation, “There’s
no amendment to be got out of mankind except by terror
and violence.”
You can imagine the effect of such
a phrase out of such a man’s mouth upon a person
like myself, whose whole scheme of life had been based
upon a suave and delicate discrimination of social
and artistic values. Just imagine! Upon
me, to whom all sorts and forms of violence appeared
as unreal as the giants, ogres, and seven-headed
hydras whose activities affect, fantastically, the
course of legends and fairy-tales!
I seemed suddenly to hear above the
festive bustle and clatter of the brilliant restaurant
the mutter of a hungry and seditious multitude.
I suppose I am impressionable and
imaginative. I had a disturbing vision of darkness,
full of lean jaws and wild eyes, amongst the hundred
electric lights of the place. But somehow this
vision made me angry, too. The sight of that
man, so calm, breaking bits of white bread, exasperated
me. And I had the audacity to ask him how it was
that the starving proletariat of Europe to whom he
had been preaching revolt and violence had not been
made indignant by his openly luxurious life. “At
all this,” I said, pointedly, with a glance round
the room and at the bottle of champagne we generally
shared between us at dinner.
He remained unmoved.
“Do I feed on their toil and
their heart’s blood? Am I a speculator or
a capitalist? Did I steal my fortune from a starving
people? No! They know this very well.
And they envy me nothing. The miserable mass of
the people is generous to its leaders. What I
have acquired has come to me through my writings;
not from the millions of pamphlets distributed gratis
to the hungry and the oppressed, but from the hundreds
of thousands of copies sold to the well-fed bourgeoisie.
You know that my writings were at one time the rage,
the fashion the thing to read with wonder
and horror, to turn your eyes up at my pathos . . .
or else, to laugh in ecstasies at my wit.”
“Yes,” I admitted.
“I remember, of course; and I confess frankly
that I could never understand that infatuation.”
“Don’t you know yet,”
he said, “that an idle and selfish class loves
to see mischief being made, even if it is made at
its own expense? Its own life being all a matter
of pose and gesture, it is unable to realize the power
and the danger of a real movement and of words that
have no sham meaning. It is all fun and sentiment.
It is sufficient, for instance, to point out the attitude
of the old French aristocracy towards the philosophers
whose words were preparing the Great Revolution.
Even in England, where you have some common-sense,
a demagogue has only to shout loud enough and long
enough to find some backing in the very class he is
shouting at. You, too, like to see mischief being
made. The demagogue carries the amateurs of emotion
with him. Amateurism in this, that, and the other
thing is a delightfully easy way of killing time, and
feeding one’s own vanity the silly
vanity of being abreast with the ideas of the day
after to-morrow. Just as good and otherwise harmless
people will join you in ecstasies over your collection
without having the slightest notion in what its marvellousness
really consists.”
I hung my head. It was a crushing
illustration of the sad truth he advanced. The
world is full of such people. And that instance
of the French aristocracy before the Revolution was
extremely telling, too. I could not traverse
his statement, though its cynicism always
a distasteful trait took off much of its
value to my mind. However, I admit I was impressed.
I felt the need to say something which would not be
in the nature of assent and yet would not invite discussion.
“You don’t mean to say,”
I observed, airily, “that extreme revolutionists
have ever been actively assisted by the infatuation
of such people?”
“I did not mean exactly that
by what I said just now. I generalized.
But since you ask me, I may tell you that such help
has been given to revolutionary activities, more or
less consciously, in various countries. And even
in this country.”
“Impossible!” I protested
with firmness. “We don’t play with
fire to that extent.”
“And yet you can better afford
it than others, perhaps. But let me observe that
most women, if not always ready to play with fire,
are generally eager to play with a loose spark or
so.”
“Is this a joke?” I asked, smiling.
“If it is, I am not aware of
it,” he said, woodenly. “I was thinking
of an instance. Oh! mild enough in a way . .
.”
I became all expectation at this.
I had tried many times to approach him on his underground
side, so to speak. The very word had been pronounced
between us. But he had always met me with his
impenetrable calm.
“And at the same time,”
Mr. X continued, “it will give you a notion
of the difficulties that may arise in what you are
pleased to call underground work. It is sometimes
difficult to deal with them. Of course there
is no hierarchy amongst the affiliated. No rigid
system.”
My surprise was great, but short-lived.
Clearly, amongst extreme anarchists there could be
no hierarchy; nothing in the nature of a law of precedence.
The idea of anarchy ruling among anarchists was comforting,
too. It could not possibly make for efficiency.
Mr. X startled me by asking, abruptly,
“You know Hermione Street?”
I nodded doubtful assent. Hermione
Street has been, within the last three years, improved
out of any man’s knowledge. The name exists
still, but not one brick or stone of the old Hermione
Street is left now. It was the old street he
meant, for he said:
“There was a row of two-storied
brick houses on the left, with their backs against
the wing of a great public building you
remember. Would it surprise you very much to
hear that one of these houses was for a time the centre
of anarchist propaganda and of what you would call
underground action?”
“Not at all,” I declared.
Hermione Street had never been particularly respectable,
as I remembered it.
“The house was the property
of a distinguished government official,” he
added, sipping his champagne.
“Oh, indeed!” I said,
this time not believing a word of it.
“Of course he was not living
there,” Mr. X continued. “But from
ten till four he sat next door to it, the dear man,
in his well-appointed private room in the wing of
the public building I’ve mentioned. To be
strictly accurate, I must explain that the house in
Hermione Street did not really belong to him.
It belonged to his grown-up children a daughter
and a son. The girl, a fine figure, was by no
means vulgarly pretty. To more personal charm
than mere youth could account for, she added the seductive
appearance of enthusiasm, of independence, of courageous
thought. I suppose she put on these appearances
as she put on her picturesque dresses and for the
same reason: to assert her individuality at any
cost. You know, women would go to any length almost
for such a purpose. She went to a great length.
She had acquired all the appropriate gestures of revolutionary
convictions the gestures of pity, of anger,
of indignation against the anti-humanitarian vices
of the social class to which she belonged herself.
All this sat on her striking personality as well as
her slightly original costumes. Very slightly
original; just enough to mark a protest against the
philistinism of the overfed taskmasters of the poor.
Just enough, and no more. It would not have done
to go too far in that direction you understand.
But she was of age, and nothing stood in the way of
her offering her house to the revolutionary workers.”
“You don’t mean it!” I cried.
“I assure you,” he affirmed,
“that she made that very practical gesture.
How else could they have got hold of it? The cause
is not rich. And, moreover, there would have
been difficulties with any ordinary house-agent, who
would have wanted references and so on. The group
she came in contact with while exploring the poor
quarters of the town (you know the gesture of charity
and personal service which was so fashionable some
years ago) accepted with gratitude. The first
advantage was that Hermione Street is, as you know,
well away from the suspect part of the town, specially
watched by the police.
“The ground floor consisted
of a little Italian restaurant, of the flyblown sort.
There was no difficulty in buying the proprietor out.
A woman and a man belonging to the group took it on.
The man had been a cook. The comrades could get
their meals there, unnoticed amongst the other customers.
This was another advantage. The first floor was
occupied by a shabby Variety Artists’ Agency an
agency for performers in inferior music-halls, you
know. A fellow called Bomm, I remember. He
was not disturbed. It was rather favourable than
otherwise to have a lot of foreign-looking people,
jugglers, acrobats, singers of both sexes, and so
on, going in and out all day long. The police
paid no attention to new faces, you see. The
top floor happened, most conveniently, to stand empty
then.”
X interrupted himself to attack impassively,
with measured movements, a bombe glacee which the
waiter had just set down on the table. He swallowed
carefully a few spoonfuls of the iced sweet, and asked
me, “Did you ever hear of Stone’s Dried
Soup?”
“Hear of what?”
“It was,” X pursued, evenly,
“a comestible article once rather prominently
advertised in the dailies, but which never, somehow,
gained the favour of the public. The enterprise
fizzled out, as you say here. Parcels of their
stock could be picked up at auctions at considerably
less than a penny a pound. The group bought some
of it, and an agency for Stone’s Dried Soup
was started on the top floor. A perfectly respectable
business. The stuff, a yellow powder of extremely
unappetizing aspect, was put up in large square tins,
of which six went to a case. If anybody ever
came to give an order, it was, of course, executed.
But the advantage of the powder was this, that things
could be concealed in it very conveniently. Now
and then a special case got put on a van and sent
off to be exported abroad under the very nose of the
policeman on duty at the corner. You understand?”
“I think I do,” I said,
with an expressive nod at the remnants of the bombe
melting slowly in the dish.
“Exactly. But the cases
were useful in another way, too. In the basement,
or in the cellar at the back, rather, two printing-presses
were established. A lot of revolutionary literature
of the most inflammatory kind was got away from the
house in Stone’s Dried Soup cases. The
brother of our anarchist young lady found some occupation
there. He wrote articles, helped to set up type
and pull off the sheets, and generally assisted the
man in charge, a very able young fellow called Sevrin.
“The guiding spirit of that
group was a fanatic of social revolution. He
is dead now. He was an engraver and etcher of
genius. You must have seen his work. It
is much sought after by certain amateurs now.
He began by being revolutionary in his art, and ended
by becoming a revolutionist, after his wife and child
had died in want and misery. He used to say that
the bourgeoisie, the smug, overfed lot, had killed
them. That was his real belief. He still
worked at his art and led a double life. He was
tall, gaunt, and swarthy, with a long, brown beard
and deep-set eyes. You must have seen him.
His name was Horne.”
At this I was really startled.
Of course years ago I used to meet Horne about.
He looked like a powerful, rough gipsy, in an old top
hat, with a red muffler round his throat and buttoned
up in a long, shabby overcoat. He talked of his
art with exaltation, and gave one the impression of
being strung up to the verge of insanity. A small
group of connoisseurs appreciated his work. Who
would have thought that this man. . . . Amazing!
And yet it was not, after all, so difficult to believe.
“As you see,” X went on,
“this group was in a position to pursue its
work of propaganda, and the other kind of work, too,
under very advantageous conditions. They were
all resolute, experienced men of a superior stamp.
And yet we became struck at length by the fact that
plans prepared in Hermione Street almost invariably
failed.”
“Who were ’we’?” I asked,
pointedly.
“Some of us in Brussels at
the centre,” he said, hastily. “Whatever
vigorous action originated in Hermione Street seemed
doomed to failure. Something always happened
to baffle the best planned manifestations in every
part of Europe. It was a time of general activity.
You must not imagine that all our failures are of
a loud sort, with arrests and trials. That is
not so. Often the police work quietly, almost
secretly, defeating our combinations by clever counter-plotting.
No arrests, no noise, no alarming of the public mind
and inflaming the passions. It is a wise procedure.
But at that time the police were too uniformly successful
from the Mediterranean to the Baltic. It was annoying
and began to look dangerous. At last we came
to the conclusion that there must be some untrustworthy
elements amongst the London groups. And I came
over to see what could be done quietly.
“My first step was to call upon
our young Lady Amateur of anarchism at her private
house. She received me in a flattering way.
I judged that she knew nothing of the chemical and
other operations going on at the top of the house
in Hermione Street. The printing of anarchist
literature was the only ‘activity’ she
seemed to be aware of there. She was displaying
very strikingly the usual signs of severe enthusiasm,
and had already written many sentimental articles with
ferocious conclusions. I could see she was enjoying
herself hugely, with all the gestures and grimaces
of deadly earnestness. They suited her big-eyed,
broad-browed face and the good carriage of her shapely
head, crowned by a magnificent lot of brown hair done
in an unusual and becoming style. Her brother
was in the room, too, a serious youth, with arched
eyebrows and wearing a red necktie, who struck me
as being absolutely in the dark about everything in
the world, including himself. By and by a tall
young man came in. He was clean-shaved with a
strong bluish jaw and something of the air of a taciturn
actor or of a fanatical priest: the type with
thick black eyebrows you know. But
he was very presentable indeed. He shook hands
at once vigorously with each of us. The young
lady came up to me and murmured sweetly, ‘Comrade
Sevrin.’
“I had never seen him before.
He had little to say to us, but sat down by the side
of the girl, and they fell at once into earnest conversation.
She leaned forward in her deep armchair, and took her
nicely rounded chin in her beautiful white hand.
He looked attentively into her eyes. It was the
attitude of love-making, serious, intense, as if on
the brink of the grave. I suppose she felt it
necessary to round and complete her assumption of
advanced ideas, of revolutionary lawlessness, by making
believe to be in love with an anarchist. And this
one, I repeat, was extremely presentable, notwithstanding
his fanatical black-browed aspect. After a few
stolen glances in their direction, I had no doubt
that he was in earnest. As to the lady, her gestures
were unapproachable, better than the very thing itself
in the blended suggestion of dignity, sweetness, condescension,
fascination, surrender, and reserve. She interpreted
her conception of what that precise sort of love-making
should be with consummate art. And so far, she,
too, no doubt, was in earnest. Gestures but
so perfect!
“After I had been left alone
with our Lady Amateur I informed her guardedly of
the object of my visit. I hinted at our suspicions.
I wanted to hear what she would have to say, and half
expected some perhaps unconscious revelation.
All she said was, ‘That’s serious,’
looking delightfully concerned and grave. But
there was a sparkle in her eyes which meant plainly,
‘How exciting!’ After all, she knew little
of anything except of words. Still, she undertook
to put me in communication with Horne, who was not
easy to find unless in Hermione Street, where I did
not wish to show myself just then.
“I met Horne. This was
another kind of a fanatic altogether. I exposed
to him the conclusion we in Brussels had arrived at,
and pointed out the significant series of failures.
To this he answered with irrelevant exaltation:
“’I have something in
hand that shall strike terror into the heart of these
gorged brutes.’
“And then I learned that, by
excavating in one of the cellars of the house, he
and some companions had made their way into the vaults
under the great public building I have mentioned before.
The blowing up of a whole wing was a certainty as
soon as the materials were ready.
“I was not so appalled at the
stupidity of that move as I might have been had not
the usefulness of our centre in Hermione Street become
already very problematical. In fact, in my opinion
it was much more of a police trap by this time than
anything else.
“What was necessary now was
to discover what, or rather who, was wrong, and I
managed at last to get that idea into Horne’s
head. He glared, perplexed, his nostrils working
as if he were sniffing treachery in the air.
“And here comes a piece of work
which will no doubt strike you as a sort of theatrical
expedient. And yet what else could have been done?
The problem was to find out the untrustworthy member
of the group. But no suspicion could be fastened
on one more than another. To set a watch upon
them all was not very practicable. Besides, that
proceeding often fails. In any case, it takes
time, and the danger was pressing. I felt certain
that the premises in Hermione Street would be ultimately
raided, though the police had evidently such confidence
in the informer that the house, for the time being,
was not even watched. Horne was positive on that
point. Under the circumstances it was an unfavourable
symptom. Something had to be done quickly.
“I decided to organize a raid
myself upon the group. Do you understand?
A raid of other trusty comrades personating the police.
A conspiracy within a conspiracy. You see the
object of it, of course. When apparently about
to be arrested I hoped the informer would betray himself
in some way or other; either by some unguarded act
or simply by his unconcerned demeanour, for instance.
Of coarse there was the risk of complete failure and
the no lesser risk of some fatal accident in the course
of resistance, perhaps, or in the efforts at escape.
For, as you will easily see, the Hermione Street group
had to be actually and completely taken unawares,
as I was sure they would be by the real police before
very long. The informer was amongst them, and
Horne alone could be let into the secret of my plan.
“I will not enter into the detail
of my preparations. It was not very easy to arrange,
but it was done very well, with a really convincing
effect. The sham police invaded the restaurant,
whose shutters were immediately put up. The surprise
was perfect. Most of the Hermione Street party
were found in the second cellar, enlarging the hole
communicating with the vaults of the great public building.
At the first alarm, several comrades bolted through
impulsively into the aforesaid vault, where, of course,
had this been a genuine raid, they would have been
hopelessly trapped. We did not bother about them
for the moment. They were harmless enough.
The top floor caused considerable anxiety to Horne
and myself. There, surrounded by tins of Stone’s
Dried Soup, a comrade, nick-named the Professor (he
was an ex-science student) was engaged in perfecting
some new detonators. He was an abstracted, self-confident,
sallow little man, armed with large round spectacles,
and we were afraid that under a mistaken impression
he would blow himself up and wreck the house about
our ears. I rushed upstairs and found him already
at the door, on the alert, listening, as he said, to
‘suspicious noises down below.’ Before
I had quite finished explaining to him what was going
on he shrugged his shoulders disdainfully and turned
away to his balances and test-tubes. His was the
true spirit of an extreme revolutionist. Explosives
were his faith, his hope, his weapon, and his shield.
He perished a couple of years afterwards in a secret
laboratory through the premature explosion of one of
his improved detonators.
“Hurrying down again, I found
an impressive scene in the gloom of the big cellar.
The man who personated the inspector (he was no stranger
to the part) was speaking harshly, and giving bogus
orders to his bogus subordinates for the removal of
his prisoners. Evidently nothing enlightening
had happened so far. Horne, saturnine and swarthy,
waited with folded arms, and his patient, moody expectation
had an air of stoicism well in keeping with the situation.
I detected in the shadows one of the Hermione Street
group surreptitiously chewing up and swallowing a
small piece of paper. Some compromising scrap,
I suppose; perhaps just a note of a few names and
addresses. He was a true and faithful ‘companion.’
But the fund of secret malice which lurks at the bottom
of our sympathies caused me to feel amused at that
perfectly uncalled-for performance.
“In every other respect the
risky experiment, the theatrical coup, if you like
to call it so, seemed to have failed. The deception
could not be kept up much longer; the explanation
would bring about a very embarrassing and even grave
situation. The man who had eaten the paper would
be furious. The fellows who had bolted away would
be angry, too.
“To add to my vexation, the
door communicating with the other cellar, where the
printing-presses were, flew open, and our young lady
revolutionist appeared, a black silhouette in a close-fitting
dress and a large hat, with the blaze of gas flaring
in there at her back. Over her shoulder I perceived
the arched eyebrows and the red necktie of her brother.
“The last people in the world
I wanted to see then! They had gone that evening
to some amateur concert for the delectation of the
poor people, you know; but she had insisted on leaving
early, on purpose to call in Hermione Street on the
way home, under the pretext of having some work to
do. Her usual task was to correct the proofs of
the Italian and French editions of the Alarm Bell
and the Firebrand.” . . .
“Heavens!” I murmured.
I had been shown once a few copies of these publications.
Nothing, in my opinion, could have been less fit for
the eyes of a young lady. They were the most
advanced things of the sort; advanced, I mean, beyond
all bounds of reason and decency. One of them
preached the dissolution of all social and domestic
ties; the other advocated systematic murder.
To think of a young girl calmly tracking printers’
errors all along the sort of abominable sentences I
remembered was intolerable to my sentiment of womanhood.
Mr. X, after giving me a glance, pursued steadily.
“I think, however, that she
came mostly to exercise her fascinations upon Sevrin,
and to receive his homage in her queenly and condescending
way. She was aware of both her power
and his homage and enjoyed them with, I
dare say, complete innocence. We have no ground
in expediency or morals to quarrel with her on that
account. Charm in woman and exceptional intelligence
in man are a law unto themselves. Is it not so?”
I refrained from expressing my abhorrence
of that licentious doctrine because of my curiosity.
“But what happened then?” I hastened to
ask.
X went on crumbling slowly a small
piece of bread with a careless left hand.
“What happened, in effect,”
he confessed, “is that she saved the situation.”
“She gave you an opportunity
to end your rather sinister farce,” I suggested.
“Yes,” he said, preserving
his impassive bearing. “The farce was bound
to end soon. And it ended in a very few minutes.
And it ended well. Had she not come in, it might
have ended badly. Her brother, of course, did
not count. They had slipped into the house quietly
some time before. The printing-cellar had an
entrance of its own. Not finding any one there,
she sat down to her proofs, expecting Sevrin to return
to his work at any moment. He did not do so.
She grew impatient, heard through the door the sounds
of a disturbance in the other cellar and naturally
came in to see what was the matter.
“Sevrin had been with us.
At first he had seemed to me the most amazed of the
whole raided lot. He appeared for an instant as
if paralyzed with astonishment. He stood rooted
to the spot. He never moved a limb. A solitary
gas-jet flared near his head; all the other lights
had been put out at the first alarm. And presently,
from my dark corner, I observed on his shaven actor’s
face an expression of puzzled, vexed watchfulness.
He knitted his heavy eyebrows. The corners of
his mouth dropped scornfully. He was angry.
Most likely he had seen through the game, and I regretted
I had not taken him from the first into my complete
confidence.
“But with the appearance of
the girl he became obviously alarmed. It was
plain. I could see it grow. The change of
his expression was swift and startling. And I
did not know why. The reason never occurred to
me. I was merely astonished at the extreme alteration
of the man’s face. Of course he had not
been aware of her presence in the other cellar; but
that did not explain the shock her advent had given
him. For a moment he seemed to have been reduced
to imbecility. He opened his mouth as if to shout,
or perhaps only to gasp. At any rate, it was somebody
else who shouted. This somebody else was the
heroic comrade whom I had detected swallowing a piece
of paper. With laudable presence of mind he let
out a warning yell.
“‘It’s the police!
Back! Back! Run back, and bolt the door behind
you.’
“It was an excellent hint; but
instead of retreating the girl continued to advance,
followed by her long-faced brother in his knickerbocker
suit, in which he had been singing comic songs for
the entertainment of a joyless proletariat. She
advanced not as if she had failed to understand the
word ‘police’ has an unmistakable sound but
rather as if she could not help herself. She
did not advance with the free gait and expanding presence
of a distinguished amateur anarchist amongst poor,
struggling professionals, but with slightly raised
shoulders, and her elbows pressed close to her body,
as if trying to shrink within herself. Her eyes
were fixed immovably upon Sevrin. Sevrin the man,
I fancy; not Sevrin the anarchist. But she advanced.
And that was natural. For all their assumption
of independence, girls of that class are used to the
feeling of being specially protected, as, in fact,
they are. This feeling accounts for nine tenths
of their audacious gestures. Her face had gone
completely colourless. Ghastly. Fancy having
it brought home to her so brutally that she was the
sort of person who must run away from the police!
I believe she was pale with indignation, mostly, though
there was, of course, also the concern for her intact
personality, a vague dread of some sort of rudeness.
And, naturally, she turned to a man, to the man on
whom she had a claim of fascination and homage the
man who could not conceivably fail her at any juncture.”
“But,” I cried, amazed
at this analysis, “if it had been serious, real,
I mean as she thought it was what
could she expect him to do for her?”
X never moved a muscle of his face.
“Goodness knows. I imagine
that this charming, generous, and independent creature
had never known in her life a single genuine thought;
I mean a single thought detached from small human
vanities, or whose source was not in some conventional
perception. All I know is that after advancing
a few steps she extended her hand towards the motionless
Sevrin. And that at least was no gesture.
It was a natural movement. As to what she expected
him to do, who can tell? The impossible.
But whatever she expected, it could not have come
up, I am safe to say, to what he had made up his mind
to do, even before that entreating hand had appealed
to him so directly. It had not been necessary.
From the moment he had seen her enter that cellar,
he had made up his mind to sacrifice his future usefulness,
to throw off the impenetrable, solidly fastened mask
it had been his pride to wear ”
“What do you mean?” I
interrupted, puzzled. “Was it Sevrin, then,
who was ”
“He was. The most persistent,
the most dangerous, the craftiest, the most systematic
of informers. A genius amongst betrayers.
Fortunately for us, he was unique. The man was
a fanatic, I have told you. Fortunately, again,
for us, he had fallen in love with the accomplished
and innocent gestures of that girl. An actor in
desperate earnest himself, he must have believed in
the absolute value of conventional signs. As
to the grossness of the trap into which he fell, the
explanation must be that two sentiments of such absorbing
magnitude cannot exist simultaneously in one heart.
The danger of that other and unconscious comedian
robbed him of his vision, of his perspicacity, of
his judgment. Indeed, it did at first rob him
of his self-possession. But he regained that
through the necessity as it appeared to
him imperiously to do something at once.
To do what? Why, to get her out of the house
as quickly as possible. He was desperately anxious
to do that. I have told you he was terrified.
It could not be about himself. He had been surprised
and annoyed at a move quite unforeseen and premature.
I may even say he had been furious. He was accustomed
to arrange the last scene of his betrayals with a
deep, subtle art which left his revolutionist reputation
untouched. But it seems clear to me that at the
same time he had resolved to make the best of it, to
keep his mask resolutely on. It was only with
the discovery of her being in the house that everything the
forced calm, the restraint of his fanaticism, the
mask all came off together in a kind of
panic. Why panic, do you ask? The answer
is very simple. He remembered or, I
dare say, he had never forgotten the Professor
alone at the top of the house, pursuing his researches,
surrounded by tins upon tins of Stone’s Dried
Soup. There was enough in some few of them to
bury us all where we stood under a heap of bricks.
Sevrin, of course, was aware of that. And we must
believe, also, that he knew the exact character of
the man. He had gauged so many such characters!
Or perhaps he only gave the Professor credit for what
he himself was capable of. But, in any case, the
effect was produced. And suddenly he raised his
voice in authority.
“‘Get the lady away at once.’
“It turned out that he was as
hoarse as a crow; result, no doubt, of the intense
emotion. It passed off in a moment. But these
fateful words issued forth from his contracted throat
in a discordant, ridiculous croak. They required
no answer. The thing was done. However, the
man personating the inspector judged it expedient
to say roughly:
“‘She shall go soon enough,
together with the rest of you.’
“These were the last words belonging
to the comedy part of this affair.
“Oblivious of everything and
everybody, Sevrin strode towards him and seized the
lapels of his coat. Under his thin bluish cheeks
one could see his jaws working with passion.
“’You have men posted
outside. Get the lady taken home at once.
Do you hear? Now. Before you try to get
hold of the man upstairs.’
“‘Oh! There is a
man upstairs,’ scoffed the other, openly.
’Well, he shall be brought down in time to see
the end of this.’
“But Sevrin, beside himself, took no heed of
the tone.
“’Who’s the imbecile
meddler who sent you blundering here? Didn’t
you understand your instructions? Don’t
you know anything? It’s incredible.
Here ’
“He dropped the lapels of the
coat and, plunging his hand into his breast, jerked
feverishly at something under his shirt. At last
he produced a small square pocket of soft leather,
which must have been hanging like a scapulary from
his neck by the tape whose broken ends dangled from
his fist.
“‘Look inside,’
he spluttered, flinging it in the other’s face.
And instantly he turned round towards the girl.
She stood just behind him, perfectly still and silent.
Her set, white face gave an illusion of placidity.
Only her staring eyes seemed bigger and darker.
“He spoke rapidly, with nervous
assurance. I heard him distinctly promise her
to make everything as clear as daylight presently.
But that was all I caught. He stood close to
her, never attempting to touch her even with the tip
of his little finger and she stared at him
stupidly. For a moment, however, her eyelids
descended slowly, pathetically, and then, with the
long black eyelashes lying on her white cheeks, she
looked ready to fall down in a swoon. But she
never even swayed where she stood. He urged her
loudly to follow him at once, and walked towards the
door at the bottom of the cellar stairs without looking
behind him. And, as a matter of fact, she did
move after him a pace or two. But, of course,
he was not allowed to reach the door. There were
angry exclamations, a short, fierce scuffle.
Flung away violently, he came flying backwards upon
her, and fell. She threw out her arms in a gesture
of dismay and stepped aside, just clear of his head,
which struck the ground heavily near her shoe.
“He grunted with the shock.
By the time he had picked himself up, slowly, dazedly,
he was awake to the reality of things. The man
into whose hands he had thrust the leather case had
extracted therefrom a narrow strip of bluish paper.
He held it up above his head, and, as after the scuffle
an expectant uneasy stillness reigned once more, he
threw it down disdainfully with the words, ’I
think, comrades, that this proof was hardly necessary.’
“Quick as thought, the girl
stooped after the fluttering slip. Holding it
spread out in both hands, she looked at it; then, without
raising her eyes, opened her fingers slowly and let
it fall.
“I examined that curious document
afterwards. It was signed by a very high personage,
and stamped and countersigned by other high officials
in various countries of Europe. In his trade or
shall I say, in his mission? that sort
of talisman might have been necessary, no doubt.
Even to the police itself all but the heads he
had been known only as Sevrin the noted anarchist.
“He hung his head, biting his
lower lip. A change had come over him, a sort
of thoughtful, absorbed calmness. Nevertheless,
he panted. His sides worked visibly, and his
nostrils expanded and collapsed in weird contrast
with his sombre aspect of a fanatical monk in a meditative
attitude, but with something, too, in his face of an
actor intent upon the terrible exigencies of his part.
Before him Horne declaimed, haggard and bearded, like
an inspired denunciatory prophet from a wilderness.
Two fanatics. They were made to understand each
other. Does this surprise you? I suppose
you think that such people would be foaming at the
mouth and snarling at each other?”
I protested hastily that I was not
surprised in the least; that I thought nothing of
the kind; that anarchists in general were simply inconceivable
to me mentally, morally, logically, sentimentally,
and even physically. X received this declaration
with his usual woodenness and went on.
“Horne had burst out into eloquence.
While pouring out scornful invective, he let tears
escape from his eyes and roll down his black beard
unheeded. Sevrin panted quicker and quicker.
When he opened his mouth to speak, everyone hung on
his words.
“‘Don’t be a fool,
Horne,’ he began. ’You know very well
that I have done this for none of the reasons you
are throwing at me.’ And in a moment he
became outwardly as steady as a rock under the other’s
lurid stare. ’I have been thwarting, deceiving,
and betraying you from conviction.’
“He turned his back on Horne,
and addressing the girl, repeated the words:
‘From conviction.’
“It’s extraordinary how
cold she looked. I suppose she could not think
of any appropriate gesture. There can have been
few precedents indeed for such a situation.
“‘Clear as daylight,’
he added. ’Do you understand what that means?
From conviction.’
“And still she did not stir.
She did not know what to do. But the luckless
wretch was about to give her the opportunity for a
beautiful and correct gesture.
“‘I have felt in me the
power to make you share this conviction,’ he
protested, ardently. He had forgotten himself;
he made a step towards her perhaps he stumbled.
To me he seemed to be stooping low as if to touch
the hem of her garment. And then the appropriate
gesture came. She snatched her skirt away from
his polluting contact and averted her head with an
upward tilt. It was magnificently done, this gesture
of conventionally unstained honour, of an unblemished
high-minded amateur.
“Nothing could have been better.
And he seemed to think so, too, for once more he turned
away. But this time he faced no one. He was
again panting frightfully, while he fumbled hurriedly
in his waistcoat pocket, and then raised his hand
to his lips. There was something furtive in this
movement, but directly afterwards his bearing changed.
His laboured breathing gave him a resemblance to a
man who had just run a desperate race; but a curious
air of detachment, of sudden and profound indifference,
replaced the strain of the striving effort. The
race was over. I did not want to see what would
happen next. I was only too well aware.
I tucked the young lady’s arm under mine without
a word, and made my way with her to the stairs.
“Her brother walked behind us.
Half-way up the short flight she seemed unable to
lift her feet high enough for the steps, and we had
to pull and push to get her to the top. In the
passage she dragged herself along, hanging on my arm,
helplessly bent like an old woman. We issued
into an empty street through a half-open door, staggering
like besotted revellers. At the corner we stopped
a four-wheeler, and the ancient driver looked round
from his box with morose scorn at our efforts to get
her in. Twice during the drive I felt her collapse
on my shoulder in a half faint. Facing us, the
youth in knickerbockers remained as mute as a fish,
and, till he jumped out with the latch-key, sat more
still than I would have believed it possible.
“At the door of their drawing-room
she left my arm and walked in first, catching at the
chairs and tables. She unpinned her hat, then,
exhausted with the effort, her cloak still hanging
from her shoulders, flung herself into a deep armchair,
sideways, her face half buried in a cushion.
The good brother appeared silently before her with
a glass of water. She motioned it away.
He drank it himself and walked off to a distant corner behind
the grand piano, somewhere. All was still in this
room where I had seen, for the first time, Sevrin,
the anti-anarchist, captivated and spellbound by the
consummate and hereditary grimaces that in a certain
sphere of life take the place of feelings with an excellent
effect. I suppose her thoughts were busy with
the same memory. Her shoulders shook violently.
A pure attack of nerves. When it quieted down
she affected firmness, ’What is done to a man
of that sort? What will they do to him?’
“‘Nothing. They can
do nothing to him,’ I assured her, with perfect
truth. I was pretty certain he had died in less
than twenty minutes from the moment his hand had gone
to his lips. For if his fanatical anti-anarchism
went even as far as carrying poison in his pocket,
only to rob his adversaries of legitimate vengeance,
I knew he would take care to provide something that
would not fail him when required.
“She drew an angry breath.
There were red spots on her cheeks and a feverish
brilliance in her eyes.
“’Has ever any one been
exposed to such a terrible experience? To think
that he had held my hand! That man!’ Her
face twitched, she gulped down a pathetic sob.
’If I ever felt sure of anything, it was of Sevrin’s
high-minded motives.’
“Then she began to weep quietly,
which was good for her. Then through her flood
of tears, half resentful, ’What was it he said
to me? “From conviction!” It
seemed a vile mockery. What could he mean by it?’
“‘That, my dear young
lady,’ I said, gently, ’is more than I
or anybody else can ever explain to you.’”
Mr. X flicked a crumb off the front of his coat.
“And that was strictly true
as to her. Though Horne, for instance, understood
very well; and so did I, especially after we had been
to Sevrin’s lodging in a dismal back street
of an intensely respectable quarter. Horne was
known there as a friend, and we had no difficulty in
being admitted, the slatternly maid merely remarking,
as she let us in, that ‘Mr Sevrin had not been
home that night.’ We forced open a couple
of drawers in the way of duty, and found a little useful
information. The most interesting part was his
diary; for this man, engaged in such deadly work,
had the weakness to keep a record of the most damnatory
kind. There were his acts and also his thoughts
laid bare to us. But the dead don’t mind
that. They don’t mind anything.
“‘From conviction.’
Yes. A vague but ardent humanitarianism had urged
him in his first youth into the bitterest extremity
of negation and revolt. Afterwards his optimism
flinched. He doubted and became lost. You
have heard of converted atheists. These turn often
into dangerous fanatics, but the soul remains the
same. After he had got acquainted with the girl,
there are to be met in that diary of his very queer
politico-amorous rhapsodies. He took her
sovereign grimaces with deadly seriousness. He
longed to convert her. But all this cannot interest
you. For the rest, I don’t know if you
remember it is a good many years ago now the
journalistic sensation of the ‘Hermione Street
Mystery’; the finding of a man’s body
in the cellar of an empty house; the inquest; some
arrests; many surmises then silence the
usual end for many obscure martyrs and confessors.
The fact is, he was not enough of an optimist.
You must be a savage, tyrannical, pitiless, thick-and-thin
optimist, like Horne, for instance, to make a good
social rebel of the extreme type.
“He rose from the table.
A waiter hurried up with his overcoat; another held
his hat in readiness.
“But what became of the young lady?” I
asked.
“Do you really want to know?”
he said, buttoning himself in his fur coat carefully.
“I confess to the small malice of sending her
Sevrin’s diary. She went into retirement;
then she went to Florence; then she went into retreat
in a convent. I can’t tell where she will
go next. What does it matter? Gestures!
Gestures! Mere gestures of her class.”
“He fitted on his glossy high
hat with extreme precision, and casting a rapid glance
round the room, full of well-dressed people, innocently
dining, muttered between his teeth:
“And nothing else! That
is why their kind is fated to perish.”
“I never met Mr. X again after
that evening. I took to dining at my club.
On my next visit to Paris I found my friend all impatience
to hear of the effect produced on me by this rare
item of his collection. I told him all the story,
and he beamed on me with the pride of his distinguished
specimen.
“‘Isn’t X well worth
knowing?’ he bubbled over in great delight.
’He’s unique, amazing, absolutely terrific.’
“His enthusiasm grated upon
my finer feelings. I told him curtly that the
man’s cynicism was simply abominable.
“‘Oh, abominable! abominable!’
assented my friend, effusively. ’And then,
you know, he likes to have his little joke sometimes,’
he added in a confidential tone.
“I fail to understand the connection
of this last remark. I have been utterly unable
to discover where in all this the joke comes in.”