The room was a long bare one, with
three deep windows. They were all open so that
the fog and the noises of the street came in freely.
It had for furniture a long office table, an American
desk, several cupboards the door of one
of these last stood open, revealing lettered pigeon-holes
inside. Everywhere there were files, letter-baskets,
all manner of receptacles for papers. There were
a number of hard, painted chairs. An American
clock ticked on the mantel-shelf, a fire burned in
the grate behind a high wire screen. The unshaded
gas-lights gave the room a dreary aspect it need not
have had otherwise.
The only occupant of the room was
Mary Gray, who sat at a small table working a typewriter.
She had pulled a gas-jet down low over her head, and
the light of it was on her hair, bringing out bronze
lights in it, on her neck, showing its whiteness and
roundness. The machine clicked away busily.
Sheet after sheet was pulled from it and dropped into
a basket. The basket was half-filled with the
pile of papers that had fallen into it.
Suddenly there came a little tap at
the door. Mary raised her head and looked towards
it expectantly as she said, “Come in.”
Someone came in, someone whom she
had expected to see, although she had said to herself
that she supposed the caretaker of the building had
grown tired of waiting, and was coming to remind her
that the church clock had just struck seven.
“Ah, Sir Robin,” she said,
turning about to shake hands with him. “Who
would have thought of seeing you? I am just going
home.”
“As I came past this way I looked
up and saw your light through the fog. I thought
you would be going home, and that you would let me
escort you to your own door. There is a bit of
a fog really.”
“I am glad you did not come
out of your way. Thank you. I shall be ready
in a few minutes. You don’t mind waiting?”
“Not at all. May I smoke?”
“Do. It will be pleasanter than the smell
of the fog.”
“Ah! I hadn’t noticed
the smell. I have a delusion, or do I really
smell violets?”
“There are some violets by your
elbow. I was wearing them, but they drooped,
so I put them into water to revive them.”
She turned back again to her work,
and the clicking of the machine began anew. He
leant to inhale the smell of the violets. Then,
with a glance at her bent head, he drew one from the
bunch, and, taking a pocket-book out of his coat-pocket,
he opened it, and laid the violet between two of its
pages.
While he waited he looked about him.
The ugliness of the room did not affect him.
The flaring gas, the business-like furniture, the unhomely
aspect of the place, did not depress him. On the
contrary, in his eyes it was pleasant. He always
came to it with a sensation of happiness, which was
not lessened because he felt half-guilty about it.
To him the room was the room which for certain hours
of every day contained Mary Gray. What did it
matter if the case was unlovely since it held her?
Presently the clicking of the machine
ceased, and she looked up at him with a smile.
“You are very good to wait for me,” she
said.
“Am I?” he answered, smiling
back at her. “There is not very much to
do to-day. The House is not sitting, and my constituency
has been less exacting than usual.”
She put the cover on her machine,
locked up her desk, and then retired into a corner,
where she changed her shoes, putting her slippers away
tidily in a cupboard. She put on her hat, setting
it straight before a little glass that hung in one
corner. She got into her little blue jacket,
with its neat collar and cuffs of astrachan. Then
she came to him, drawing on her gloves.
“I am quite ready now,” she said.
They lowered the gas, and went down
the stone steps side by side. At the foot of
the stairs Mary stopped to call into the depths of
the back premises that she was going home, and a woman’s
voice bade her good-night.
It was cold in the street, and there
was a light brown fog through which the street lamps
shone yellowly.
The omnibuses crept by quietly, in
a long string, making a muffled sound in the fog.
As they went towards the nearest station a wind suddenly
blew in their faces.
“It is the west wind,”
she said. “And it breathes of the spring.”
“There will be no fog to-night,”
he answered. “See, it is lifting. The
west wind will blow it away.”
“It comes from fields and woods
and mountains and the sea,” she said dreamily.
The fog was indeed disappearing.
The gas-jets shone more clearly; the ’buses
broke into a decorous trot. The long line of lights
came out suddenly, crossing each other like a string
of many-coloured gems.
Outside the Tube station they paused
as though the same thought had struck both of them.
“It is like the washing of the
week before last,” Mary said, as the indescribable
odour floated out to them.
“Why not take a ’bus?”
said he. “The air grows more delicious.”
“Why not, indeed?” she
answered. “Except that I shall be so late
getting home. And it will keep you late for your
dinner.”
“So it will,” he said.
“To say nothing of your dinner. I know you
had only sandwiches and tea for lunch. You have
told me that when you go home you make yourself a
chafing-dish supper. You must need a meal at
this moment. Supposing Miss Gray, will
you do me the honour of dining with me?”
“Will you let me pay for my
dinner? I am a working-woman, and expect to be
treated like a man.”
“If you insist. But I hope you will not
insist.”
She looked at him for a moment hesitatingly.
There was no prudery about Mary Gray. She had
become a woman of the world, and she had had no reason
to distrust the camaraderie of men or to think
it less than honest.
“Very well, then,” she
said, “if you will let me pay for your lunch
another time.”
“Why, so you shall,” he
answered. For a usually grave young man he laughed
with an uncommon joyousness. “You shall
give me one day a French lunch with a bottle of wine
thrown in at one-and-sixpence. Mind, I must have
the wine.”
“You shall have the wine.
But it isn’t good form to talk about the price
of a lunch you are invited to.”
Laughing light-heartedly, they plunged
into a labyrinth of dark streets. The west wind
had brought a gentle rain with it now. It was
benignant upon their faces, with a suggestion of grasses
and spring flowers pushing their heads above the earth.
They passed by the Soho restaurants, crowded to the
doors. They found one at last in a more pretentious
street.
Over the dinner they laughed and talked.
There was something intoxicating to Robin Drummond’s
somewhat phlegmatic nature in their being together
after this friendly fashion.
“You have a crease in your forehead,
just above your nose,” he said, while they waited
for their salmon, the waiter having removed the plates
from which they had eaten their bisque.
“Have the Working Women been more unsatisfactory
than usual to-day?”
“I was not thinking of the Working
Women,” she answered. “It is family
cares that are on my mind. Supposing you had seven
young brothers and sisters whom you wanted to help
to place out in the world
“Heaven forbid! It’s
no wonder you look worried. What do you want to
do for them, Miss Gray?”
“There’s Jim. He’s
seventeen years old. I think he’d make a
very good bank-clerk, but at present he wants to go
to sea. There isn’t the remotest chance
of his being able to go to sea. The question is
whether he can get a nomination to a bank. It
will be quite a step in the social scale if we can
manage it for Jim.”
She looked at Drummond with her frank,
direct gaze, and he blushed awkwardly.
“I don’t know anything
at all about your people, or anything of that sort,
Miss Gray, but if I could help
“I don’t think you could
help.” Mary’s big mysterious eyes
under their dark lashes, under their beautiful brows,
looked at him reflectively. “You see, you
don’t know anything about us. I am the eldest
of a large family. The others are my stepbrothers
and sisters. I love them dearly, and I love my
stepmother, too. But not like my father oh,
not at all like my father. I would never have
left him only he sent me away. Lady Agatha was
very good to me. She paid me a disproportionate
salary. And besides after I had been
away from them for a time they could really do very
well without me. Cis and Minnie grew up so
fast. To be sure, none of them make up to father
for me. But he was really anxious that I should
go. He thought I would be cramped at home, after ”
She paused, and then went on: “He would
never think of himself when it was a question of me.”
What she was saying did not greatly
enlighten him. But, without a doubt, something
would come out of the desultory talk by-and-by.
As he watched her in the light of
the electric candle-lamps on the table, which, sending
their shaded light upwards reflected from the white
cloth, made her face luminous in the shadow of her
cloudy hair, he was struck again by a baffling resemblance
to someone he had known. Now and again during
the months since they had known each other her face
had seemed familiar; then the likeness had disappeared;
he had forgotten to be curious about it. At this
moment the suggestion was very strong.
They had the top of the ’bus
to themselves as they went on westward. At this
hour the traffic was eastward, and the mist of rain
saved them from fellow-travellers. They were
as much alone as though they were in a desert, up
there in the darkness at the back of the bus, with
the long line of blurred jewels that were the street
lamps stretching away before them.
They passed close to the trees overhanging
a square, and the branches brushed them.
“The sap is stirring in the
trees to-night,” she said. “Can’t
you smell the sap and the earth?”
“I associate you with the country
and green things,” he answered irrelevantly.
“Can you tell me, Miss Gray, how it is that I
who have always seen you in London yet always think
of you in fields and woods?”
She laughed with a fresh sound of mirth.
“We met long ago, Sir Robin,”
she said. “I have always been wondering
how long it would be before you found out.”
“Where?”
“Think!”
A sudden light broke over him.
“You were the little girl who
came with old Lady Anne Hamilton to the Court.
It is nine years ago. I never knew your name.
Lady Anne died one Long Vacation when I was abroad.
I did not hear of it for a long time afterwards.
I asked my mother once if she knew what had become
of you, but she did not. Why, to be sure, you
are that little girl.”
“Lady Anne was very good to
me. She gave me an education. Only for her
the thing I am would not be possible. And I mean
to be more than that. Do you know that I am writing
a book?”
“A novel? Poems?”
“That is what my father’s
daughter ought to be doing. No it is
a book on the Economic Conditions of Women’s
Work.”
“It is sure to be good, citoyenne.”
“I am a revolutionary,”
she said seriously. “I have learnt so much
since I have been at this work. I have things
to tell. Oh, you will see.”
“I remember Lady Anne as the
staunchest of Conservatives.”
“Yes, yet she was tolerant of
other opinions in her friends. She was very good
to me, dear old Lady Anne.”
“To think I should not have remembered!”
“I knew you all the time.
To be sure, there was your name. I don’t
think you ever knew my name. You called me Mary
all the afternoon. Do you remember the puppy
you sent me the Clumber spaniel? He
died in distemper. He had a happy little life.
I wept bitter tears over him.”
“Why didn’t you tell me before?”
“I thought I’d leave you to find out.”
“I am a stupid fellow.”
He leant towards her, and inhaled the scent of her
violets.
“I don’t think I should
have guessed it now,” he said, “only for
the spring. To think you are Mary!” He
lingered over the name.
“I am sorry about the Clumber.
You shall have another when you ask for it.”
It was a long drive westward.
They got down at Kensington Church, and went up the
hill. Close by the Carmélites they turned
into a little alley. The lit doorway of a high
building of flats faced them.
“Now, you must come no farther,”
she said, turning to him and holding out her hand.
“Let me see you to your door,” he pleaded.
“If you will, but it is a climb for nothing.”
“What a barrack you live in!” he said,
as they went up the stone steps.
“It was built for working men
originally, but perhaps there is none hereabouts.
It is now chiefly occupied by working women. They
are extremely pleasant and friendly. To be sure,
they are West-End working women. Now, Sir Robin,
I must bid you good-bye.”
They were at the very top of the house.
The staircase window was wide open, and the sweet
smell of wet earth came in. She had put the latch-key
in the door and opened it she had turned
on the electric light. Now, as she held out her
hand to him in farewell, he caught sight of the pleasant
little room beyond. He had the strongest wish
to cross the threshold on which she was standing;
but, of course, it was impossible.
“When my cousin comes back from
abroad,” he said, “I want you to know
each other, Miss Gray. Perhaps you will ask us
to tea here.”
“I shall be delighted,” she said frankly.
“You like your quarters?”
He was oddly reluctant to go.
“Very much indeed.”
“You are near Heaven.”
“I hear the singing at the Carmélites.
I can see the tops of the trees in Kensington Gardens.
To be sure, I ought to live nearer my work. But
these things counterbalance the distance. By the
way, do you know that Mrs. Morres is in town?”
“I had not heard.”
“She has come up for a week’s shopping.”
“Ah! I must call on her.
I like her douches of cold water on all our schemes.”
“So do I.”
He looked at her with a dawning intention
in his eyes. Before he could speak the words
that were on his lips the opposite door opened, and
a young woman, wearing an artist’s blouse, with
close-cropped dark hair and a frank boyish face, came
out.
“I beg your pardon, Miss Gray,
do you happen to have any methylated spirit?”
“Good-night, Miss Gray.”
He lifted his hat and went down the
stairs. On the next landing he paused and listened
with a smile to the conversation overhead. It
appeared that Mary had only enough methylated spirit
for a single occasion.
“Then you must come to breakfast
with me in the morning,” said the other girl.
“Can you oblige me with a few slices of bacon?”
It was the true communistic life.
He was smiling to himself still as
he walked up the hill homewards. “Winter
is over and past, and the spring is come,” he
murmured to himself. And to think that a few
hours ago the fog was creeping over the City!