The next afternoon Claire started
on her journey to London. She had spent the
night with friends, and been seen off at the station
by quite a crowd of well-wishers. Little souvenirs
had been showered upon her all the morning, and everyone
had a kindly word, and a hopeful prophecy of the future.
There were invitations also, and promises to look
her up in her London home, and a perfect shower of
violets thrown into the carriage as the train steamed
out of the station, and Claire laughed and waved her
hand, and looked so complacent and beaming that no
one looking on could have guessed the real nature
of her journey. She was not pretending to be
cheerful, she was cheerful, for, the dreaded
parting once over, her optimistic nature had asserted
itself, and painted the life ahead in its old rosy
colours. Mother was happy and secured from want;
she herself was about to enjoy a longed-for taste for
independence; then why grumble? asked Claire sensibly
of herself, and anything less grumbling than her appearance
at that moment it would be hard to imagine.
She was beautifully dressed, in the
simplest but most becoming of travelling costumes,
she was agreeably conscious that the onlookers to
her send-off had been unanimously admiring in their
regard, and, as she stood arranging her bags on the
rack overhead, she saw her own face in the strip of
mirror and whole-heartedly agreed in their verdict.
“I’m glad I’m pretty!
It’s a comfort to be pretty. I should
grow so tired of being with myself if I were plain!”
she reflected complacently as she settled herself
in her corner, and flicked a few grains of dust from
the front of her skirt.
She had taken a through first-class
ticket from sheer force of habit, for Mrs Gifford
had always travelled first, and the ways of economy
take some time to acquire. In the opposite corner
of the carriage sat an elderly woman, obviously English,
obviously also of the grande dame species,
with aquiline features, white hair dressed pompadour
fashion, and an expression compounded of indifference
and quizzical good humour. The good humour was
in the ascendant as she watched the kindly Belgians
crowd round her fellow-passenger, envelop her in their
arms, murmur tearful farewells, and kiss her soundly
on either cheek. The finely marked eyebrows
lifted themselves as if in commiseration for the victim,
and as the door closed on the last farewell she heaved
an involuntary sigh of relief. It was evident
that the scene appealed to her entirely from the one
standpoint; she saw nothing touching about it, nothing
pathetic; she was simply amused, and carelessly scornful
of eccentricities in manner or appearance.
On the seat beside this imposing personage
sat a young woman in black, bearing the hall mark
of lady’s maid written all over her in capital
letters. She sat stiffly in her seat, one gloved
hand on her knee, the other clasped tightly round
the handle of a crocodile dressing-bag.
Claire felt a passing interest in
the pair; reflected that if it were her lot in life
to be a maid, she would choose to live on the Continent,
where an affectionate intimacy takes the place of this
frigid separation, and then, being young and self-engrossed,
promptly forgot all about them, and fell to building
castles in the air, in which she herself lived in
every circumstance of affluence and plenty, beloved
and admired of all. There was naturally a prince
in the story, a veritable Prince Charming, who was
all that the most exacting mind could desire, but
the image was vague. Claire’s heart had
not yet been touched. She was still in ignorance
as to what manner of man she desired.
Engaged in these pleasant day-dreams
Antwerp was reached before Claire realised that half
the distance was covered. On the quay the wind
blew chill; on the boat itself it blew chillier still.
Claire became aware that she was in for a stormy
crossing, but was little perturbed by the fact, since
she knew herself to be an unusually good sailor.
She tipped the stewardess to fill a hot bottle, put
on a cosy dressing-jacket, and lay down in her berth,
quite ready for sleep after the fatigue and excitement
of the past week.
In five minutes the ship and all that
was in it was lost in dreams, and, so far as Claire
was concerned, it might have been but another five
minutes before the stewardess aroused her to announce
the arrival at Parkeston Pier. The first glance
around proved, however, that the other passengers
had found the time all too long. The signs of
a bad crossing were written large on the faces of
her companions, and there was a trace of resentment
in the manner in which they surveyed her active movements.
An old lady in a bunk immediately opposite her own
seemed especially injured, and did not hesitate to
put her feelings into words, “You have
had a good enough night! I believe you slept
right through... Are you aware that the rest
of us have been more ill than we’ve ever been
in our lives?” she asked in accusing tones.
And Claire laughed her happy, gurgling little laugh,
and said-
“I’m so sorry,
but it’s all over, isn’t it? And
people always say that they feel better afterwards!”
The old lady grunted. She certainly
looked thoroughly ill and wretched at the moment,
her face drawn and yellow beneath her scanty locks,
and her whole appearance expressive of an extremity
of fatigue. It seemed to her that it was years
since she had left the quay at Antwerp, and here was
this young thing as blooming as though she had spent
the night in her own bed! She hitched a shawl
more closely over her shoulders, and called aloud
in a high imperious tone-
“Mason! Mason! You
must really rouse yourself and attend to me.
We shall have to land in a few minutes. Get
up at once and bring me my things!”
The covering of another bunk stirred
feebly, and two feet encased in black merino stockings
descended slowly to the floor. A moment later
a ghastly figure was tottering across the floor, lifting
from a box a beautifully waved white wig, and dropping
it carefully over the head of the aggrieved old lady
of the straggly locks.
It was all that Claire could do to
keep from exclaiming aloud, as it burst upon her astonished
senses that this poor, huddled creature was none other
than the grande dame of the railway carriage,
the haughtily indifferent, cynically amused personage
who had seemed so supremely superior to the agitations
of the common ruck! Strange what changes a few
hours’ conflict with the forces of Nature could
bring about!
Ill as the mistress was, the maid
was even worse, and it was pitiful to see the poor
creature’s efforts to obey the exigent demands
of her employer. In the end faintness overcame
her, and if Claire had not rushed to the rescue, she
would have fallen on the floor.
“It’s no use struggling
against it! You must keep still until the boat
stops. You’ll feel better at once when
we land, and you get into the air.” Claire
laid the poor soul in her bunk, and turned back to
the old lady who was momentarily growing younger and
more formidable, as she continued the stages of her
toilette.
“Can I help you?” she
asked smilingly, and the offer was accepted with gracious
composure.
“Please do. I should be
grateful. Thank you. That hook fastens
over here, and the band crosses to this side.
The brooch is in my bag-a gold band with
some diamonds-and the hat-pins, and a clean
handkerchief. Can you manage? ... The clasp
slides back.”
Claire opened the bag and gazed with
admiration at a brown moire antique lining,
and fittings of tortoiseshell, bearing raised monograms
in gold. “I shall have one exactly to match,
when I marry my duke!” was the mental reflection,
as she selected the articles mentioned and put the
final touches to the good lady’s costume.
Later on there was Mason to be dressed;
later on still, Claire found herself carrying the
precious dressing-bag in one hand, and supporting
one invalid with the other, while Mason tottered in
the wake, unable for the moment to support any other
burden than that of her own body.
Mrs Fanshawe-Claire had
discovered the name on a printed card let into the
lining of the bag-had no sympathy to spare
for poor Mason. She plainly considered it the
height of bad manners for a maid to dare to be sea-sick;
but being unused to do anything for herself, gratefully
allowed Claire to lead the way, reply to the queries
of custom-house officials, secure a corner of a first-class
compartment of the waiting train, and bid an attendant
bring a cup of tea before the ordinary breakfast began.
Mason refused any refreshment, but
Mrs Fanshawe momentarily regained her vigour, and
was all that was gracious in her acknowledgment of
Claire’s help. The quizzical eyes roved
over the girl’s face and figure, and evidently
approved what they saw, and Claire, smiling back,
was conscious of an answering attraction. Thoughtless
and domineering as was her behaviour to her inferior,
there was yet something in the old lady’s personality
which struck an answering chord in the girl’s
heart. She was enough of a physiognomist to divine
the presence of humour and generosity, combined with
a persistent cheerfulness of outlook. The signs
of physical age were unmistakable, but the spirit within
was young, young as her own!
The mutual scrutiny ended in a mutual
laugh, which was the last breaking of the ice.
“My dear,” cried Mrs Fanshawe,
“you must excuse my bad manners! You are
so refreshing to look at after all those horrors on
the boat that I can’t help staring. And
you’ve been so kind! Positively I don’t
know how I should have survived without you.
Will you tell me your name? I should like to
know to whom I am indebted for so much help.”
“My name is Claire Gifford.”
“Er-yes?”
Plainly Mrs Fanshawe felt the information insufficient.
“Gifford! I knew some Giffords. Do
you belong to the Worcestershire branch?”
Claire hitched her shoulders in the true French shrug.
“Sais pas! I have
no English relations nearer than second cousins, and
we have lived abroad so much that we are practically
strangers. My father died when I was a child.
I went to school in Paris, and for the last few years
my mother and I have made our headquarters in Brussels.
She married again, only yesterday, and is going to
live in Bombay.”
Mrs Fanshawe arched surprised brows.
“And you are staying behind?”
“Yes. They asked me to
go. Mr Judge is very kind. He is my-er-
stepfather!” Claire shrugged again at the strangeness
of that word. “He gave me the warmest of
invitations, but I refused. I preferred to be
left.”
Mrs Fanshawe hitched herself into
her corner, planted her feet more firmly on the provisionary
footstool, and folded her hands on her knee.
She had the air of a person settling down to the enjoyment
of a favourite amusement, and indeed her curiosity
was a quality well-known to all her acquaintances.
“Why?” she asked boldly,
and such was the force of her personality that Claire
never dreamt for a moment of refusing to reply.
“Because I want to be independent.”
Mrs Fanshawe rolled her eyes to the hat-rail.
“My dear, nonsense! You’re
far too pretty. Leave that to the poor creatures
who have no chance of finding other people to work
for them. You should change your mind, you know,
you really should. India’s quite an agreeable
place to put in a few years. The English girl
is a trifle overdone, but with your complexion you
would be bound to have a success. Think it over!
Don’t be in a hurry to let the chance slip!”
“It has slipped.
They sail from Marseilles a week from to-day, and
besides I don’t want to change. I like
the prospect of independence better even than being
admired.”
“Though you like that, too?”
“Of course. Who doesn’t?
I’m hoping-with good luck-to
be admired in England instead!”
“Then you mustn’t be independent!”
Mrs Fanshawe said, laughing. “It was
the rage a year or two ago; girls had a craze for joining
Settlements, and running about in the slums, but it’s
quite out of date. Hobble skirts killed it.
It’s impossible to be utilitarian in a hobble
skirt... And how do you propose to show your
independence, may I ask?”
“I am going to be French mistress
in a High School,” Claire said sturdily, and
hated herself because she winced before the eloquent
change of expression which passed over her companion’s
face.
Mrs Fanshawe said, “Oh, really!
How very interesting!” and looked about
as uninterested the while as a human creature could
be. In the pause which followed it was obvious
that she was readjusting the first impression of a
young gentlewoman belonging to her own leisured class,
and preparing herself to cross-question an entirely
different person-an ordinary teacher in
a High School! There was a touch of patronage
in her manner, but it was still quite agreeable Mrs
Fanshawe was always agreeable for choice: she
found it the best policy, and her indolent nature
shrank from disagreeables of every kind. This
pretty girl had made herself quite useful, and a chat
with her would enliven a dull hour in the train.
Curiosity shifted its point, but remained actively
in force.
“Tell me all about it!”
she said suavely. “I know nothing about
teachers. Shocking, isn’t it? They
alarm me too much. I have a horror of clever
women. You don’t look at all clever.
I mean that as a compliment-far too pretty
and smart, but I suppose you are dreadfully learned,
all the same. What are you going to teach?”
“French. I am almost as
good as a Frenchwoman, for I’ve talked little
else for sixteen years. Mother and I spoke English
together, or I should have forgotten my own language.
It seems, from a scholastic point of view, that it’s
a useful blend to possess-perfect French
and an English temperament. `Mademoiselle’
is not always a model of patience!”
“And you think you will be?
I prophesy differently. You’ll throw the
whole thing up in six months, and fly off to mamma
in India. You haven’t the least idea what
you are in for, but you’ll find out, you’ll
find out! Where is this precious school?
In town, did you say? Shall you live in the
house or with friends?”
“I have no friends in London
except Miss Farnborough, the head mistress, but there
are fifteen other mistresses besides myself.
That will be fifteen friends ready-made. I am
going to share lodgings with one of them, and be a
bachelor girl on my own account. I’m so
excited about it. After living in countries
where a girl can’t go to the pillar-box alone,
it will be thrilling to be free to do just as I like.
Please don’t pity me! I’m going
to have great fun.”
Mrs Fanshawe hitched herself still
further into her corner and smiled a lazy, quizzical
smile.
“Oh, I don’t pity you-not
one bit! All young people nowadays think they
are so much wiser than their parents; it’s a
wholesome lesson to learn their mistake. You’re
a silly, blind, ridiculous little girl, and if I’d
been your mother, I should have insisted upon taking
you with me, whether you liked it or not. I
always wanted a daughter like you-sons
are so dull; but perhaps it’s just as well that
she never appeared. She might have wanted to
be independent, too, in which case we should have
quarrelled.-So those fifteen school-mistresses
make up your whole social circle, do they? I
wouldn’t mind prophesying that you’ll never
want to speak a word to them out of school hours!
I have a friend living in town, quite a nice woman,
with a daughter about your age. Shall I ask her
to send you a card? It would be somewhere for
you to go on free afternoons, and she entertains a
good deal, and has a craze for the feminist movement,
and for girls who work for themselves. You might
come in for some fun.”
Claire’s flush of gratification
made her look prettier than ever, and Mrs Fanshawe
felt an agreeable glow of self-satisfaction.
Nothing she liked better than to play the part of
Lady Bountiful, especially when any effort involved
was shifted onto the shoulders of another, and in
her careless fashion she was really anxious to do this
nice girl a good turn. She made a note of Claire’s
address in a dainty gold-edged pocket-book, expressed
pleasure in the belief that through her friend she
would hear reports of the girl’s progress, and
presently shut her eyes, and dozed peacefully for
the rest of the ride.
Round London a fine rain was falling,
and the terminus looked bleak and cheerless as the
train slowed down the long platform. Mason, still
haggard, roused herself to step to the platform and
look around as if expecting to see a familiar face,
and in the midst of collecting her own impedimenta
Claire was conscious that Mrs Fanshawe was distinctly
ruffled, when the familiar figure failed to appear.
Once more she found herself coming to the rescue,
marshalling the combined baggage to the screened portion
of the platform where the custom-house officials went
through the formalities incidental to the occasion,
while the tired passengers stood shiveringly on guard,
looking bleached and grey after their night’s
journey. The bright-haired, bright-faced girl
stood out in pleasant contrast to the rest, trim and
smart and dainty as though such a thing as fatigue
did not exist. Mrs Fanshawe, looking at her,
stopped short in the middle of a mental grumble, and
turned it round, so that it ended in being a thanksgiving
instead.
“Most neglectful of Erskine
to fail me after promising he would come... Perhaps,
after all, it’s just as well he did not.”
And at that moment, with the usual
contrariety of fate, Erskine appeared! He came
striding along the platform, a big, loosely-built
man, with a clean-shaven face, glancing to right and
left over the upstanding collar of a tweed coat.
He looked at once plain and distinguished, and in
the quizzical eyes and beetling eyebrows there was
an unmistakable likeness to the grande dame
standing by Claire’s side. Just for a moment
he paused, as he came in sight of the group of passengers,
and Claire, meeting his glance, knew who he was, even
before he came forward and made his greeting.
“Holla, Mater! Sorry to
be late. Not my fault this time. I was
ready all right, but the car did not come round.
Had a good crossing?”
“My dear, appalling! Don’t
talk of it. I was prostrate all night, and Mason
too ill to do anything but moan. She’s
been no use.”
“Poor beggar! She looks
pretty green. But- er-”
The plain face lighted with an expectant smile as
he turned towards the girl who stood by his mother’s
side, still holding the precious bag. “You
seem to have met a friend...”
“Oh-er-yes!”
With a gesture of regal graciousness Mrs Fanshawe
turned towards the girl, and held out her gloved hand.
“Thank you so much, Miss Gifford!
You’ve been quite too kind. I’m
really horribly in your debt. I hope you will
find everything as you like, and have a very good
time. Thank you again. Good-bye.
I’m really dropping with fatigue. What
a relief it will be to get to bed!” She turned
aside, and laid her hand on her son’s arm.
“Erskine, where is the car?”
Mother and son turned away, and made
their way down the platform, leaving Claire with crimson
cheeks and fast-beating heart. The little scene
which had just happened had been all too easy to understand.
The nice son had wished for an introduction to the
nice girl who a moment before had seemed on such intimate
terms with his mother: the mother had been quite
determined that such an introduction should not take
place. Claire knew enough of the world to realise
how different would have been the proceedings if she
had announced herself as a member of the “idle
rich,” bound for a course of visits to well-known
houses in the country. “May I introduce
my son, Miss Gifford? Miss Gifford has been an
angel of goodness to me, Erskine. Positively
I don’t know what I should have done without
her! Do look after her now, and see her into
a taxi. Such a mercy to have a man to help!”
That was what would have happened to the Claire Gifford
of a week before, but now for the first time Claire
experienced a taste of the disagreeables attendant
on her changed circumstances, and it was bitter to
her mouth. All very well to remind herself that
work was honourable, that anyone who looked down on
her for choosing to be independent was not worth a
moment’s thought, the fact remained that for
the first, the very first time in her life she had
been made to feel that there was a barrier between
herself and a member of her own class, and that, however
willing Mrs Fanshawe might be to introduce her to
a casual friend, she was unwilling to make her known
to her own son!
Claire stood stiff and poker-like
at her post, determined to make no movement until
Mrs Fanshawe and her attendants had taken their departure.
The storm of indignation and wounded pride which was
surging through her veins distracted her mind from
her surroundings; she was dimly conscious that one
after another, her fellow-passengers had taken their
departure, preceded by a porter trundling a truck of
luggage; conscious that where there had been a crowd,
there was now a space, until eventually with a shock
of surprise she discovered that she was standing alone,
by her own little pile of boxes. At that she
shook herself impatiently, beckoned to a porter and
was about to walk ahead, when an uneasy suspicion
made itself felt. The luggage! Something
was wrong. The pile looked smaller than it had
done ten minutes before. She made a rapid circuit,
and made a horrible discovery. A box was missing!
The dress-box containing the skirts of all her best
frocks, spread at full length and carefully padded
with tissue paper. It had been there ten minutes
ago; the custom-house officer had given it a special
rap. She distinctly remembered noticing a new
scratch on the leather. Where in the name of
everything that was inexplicable could it have disappeared?
Appealed to for information the porter was not illuminating.
“If it had been there before, why wasn’t
it there now? Was the lady sure she had
seen it? Might have been left behind at Antwerp
or Parkeston. Better telegraph and see!
If it had been there before, why wasn’t it
there now? Mistakes did happen. Boxes were
much alike. P’raps it was left in the
van. If it was there ten minutes before, why
wasn’t it-”
Claire stopped him with an imperious hand.
“That’s enough!
It was there: I saw it. I counted
the pieces before the custom-house officer came along.
I noticed it especially. Someone must have
taken it by mistake.”
The porter shook his head darkly.
“On purpose, more like!
Funny people crosses by this route. Funny thing
that you didn’t notice-”
Claire found nothing funny in the
reflection. She was furious with herself for
her carelessness, and still more furious with Mrs Fanshawe
as the cause thereof. Down the platform she stalked,
a picture of vivid impetuous youth, head thrown back,
cheeks aflame, grey eyes sending out flashes of indignation.
Every porter who came in her way was stopped and
imperiously questioned as to his late load, every porter
was in his turn waved impatiently away. Claire
was growing seriously alarmed. Suppose the box
was lost! It would be as bad as losing two
boxes, for of what use were bodices minus skirts to
match? Never again would she be guilty of the
folly of packing bits of the same costumes in different
boxes. How awful-how awful beyond
words to arrive in London without a decent dress to
wear!
Whirling suddenly round to pursue
yet another porter, Claire became aware of a figure
in a long tweed coat standing on the space beside the
taxi-stand, intently watching her movements.
She recognised him in a moment as none other than
“Erskine” himself, who, having seen his
mother into her car, was presumably bound for another
destination. But why was he standing there?
Why had he been so long in moving away? Claire
hastily averted her eyes, but as she cross-questioned
porter number four, she was aware that the tall figure
was drawing nearer, and presently he was standing
by her side, taking off his hat, and saying in the
most courteous and deferential of tones-
“Excuse me-I’m
afraid something is wrong! Can I be of any assistance?”
Claire’s glance was frigid in
its coldness; but it was difficult to remain frigid
in face of the man’s obvious sincerity and kindliness.
“Thank you,” she said
quietly. “Please don’t trouble.
I can manage quite well. It’s only a
trunk...”
“Is it lost? I say-what
a fag! Do let me help. I know this station
by heart! If it is to be found, I am sure I can
get it for you.”
This time there was a distinct air
of appeal in his deep voice. Claire divined
that the nice man was anxious to atone for his mother’s
cavalier behaviour, and her heart softened towards
him. After all, why should she punish herself
by refusing? Five minutes more or less on the
station platform could make no difference one way or
another, for at the end they would wish each other
a polite adieu, and part never to meet again.
And she did want that box!
She smiled, and sighed, and looked
delightfully pretty and appealing, as she said frankly-
“Thank you, I should
be grateful for suggestions. It’s the most
extraordinary and provoking thing-”
They walked slowly down the platform
while she explained the situation, and reiterated
the fact that she had seen the box ten minutes before.
Erskine Fanshawe did not dispute the statement as each
porter had done before him; he contented himself with
asking if there was any distinctive feature in the
appearance of the box itself.
Claire shook her head.
“The ordinary brown leather,
with strappings and C.G. on one side. Just like
a thousand other boxes, but it had a label, beside
the initials. I don’t see how anyone can
have taken it by mistake.” She set her
teeth, and her head took a defiant tilt. “There’s
one comfort; if it is stolen, whoever has taken
it will not get much for her pains! There’s
nothing in it but skirts. Skirts won’t
be much good without the bodices to match!”
The man looked down at her, his expression
comically compounded of sympathy and humour.
At that moment, despite the irregularity of his features,
he looked wonderfully like his handsome mother.
“Er-just so!
Unfortunately, however, from the opposite point of
view, you find yourself in the same position!
Bodices, I presume, without skirts-”
Claire groaned, and held up a protesting hand.
“Don’t! I can’t
bear it. It’s really devastating.
My whole outfit-at one fell sweep!”
“Isn’t it-excuse
my suggesting it-rather a mistake to-er-divide
pieces of the same garment, so that if one trunk
should be lost, the loss practically extends to two?”
“No, it isn’t. It’s
the only sensible thing to do,” Claire said
obstinately. “Skirts must be packed at
full length, and a dress-box is made for that very
purpose. All the same, I shall never do it again.
It’s no use being sensible if you have to contend
with-thieves!”
“I don’t think we need
leap to that conclusion just yet. You have only
spoken to two or three porters. We’d better
wait about a few minutes longer until the other men
come back. Very likely the box was put on a
truck by accident, and if the mistake was discovered
before it was put on the taxi, it would be sent back
to see if its owner were waiting here. If it
doesn’t turn up at once, you mustn’t be
discouraged. The odds are ten to one that it’s
only a mistake, and in that case when the taxi is
unloaded, the box will be sent back to the lost luggage
office, or forwarded to your address. Was the
full address on the box, by the way?”
Claire nodded assent.
“Oh, yes; I have that poor satisfaction
at least. I was most methodical and prudent,
but I don’t know that that’s going to be
much consolation if I lose my nice frocks, and am
too poor to buy any more.”
The last phrase was prompted by a
proud determination to sail under no false colours
in the eyes of Mrs Fanshawe’s son; but the picture
evoked thereby was sufficiently tragic to bring a
cloud over her face. The memory of each separate
gown rose before her, looking distractingly dainty
and becoming; she saw a vision of herself as she might
have been, and faced a future bounded by eternal blue
serge. All the tragedy of the thought was in
her air, and her companion cried quickly-
“You won’t need to buy
them! They’ll turn up all right, I am quite
sure of that. The worst that can happen is a
day or two’s delay. After all, you know,
there are thousands of honest folk to a single thief,
and even a thief would probably prefer a small money
reward to useless halves of dresses! If you
hear nothing by to-morrow, you might offer a reward.”
“Oh, I will!” Claire
said gratefully. “Thank you for thinking
of it.”
No more porters having for the moment
appeared in sight, they now turned, and slowly retraced
their steps. Claire, covertly regarding her
companion, wondered why she felt convinced that he
was a soldier; Erskine Fanshawe in his turn covertly
regarded Claire, and wondered why it was that she
seemed different from any girl he had seen before.
Then tentatively he put a personal question.
“Do you know London well, Miss
Gifford? My mother told me you were-
er-coming to settle-”
“Not at all well, as a whole.
I know the little bit around Regent Street, and the
Park, and the places one sees in a week’s visit,
but that’s all. We never stayed long in
town when we came to England. I shall enjoy
exploring on half holidays when I am free from work.
I am a school-mistress!” said Claire with an
air, and gathered from her companion’s face
that he knew as much already, and considered it a
subject for commiseration. He looked at her with
sympathetic eyes, and asked deeply-
“Hate it very much?”
“Not at all. Quite the
contrary. I adore it. At least, that’s
to say, I haven’t begun yet, but I feel sure
I shall!” Claire cried ardently; and
at that they both laughed with a delightful sense of
understanding and camaraderie. At that
moment Claire felt a distinct pang at the thought
that never again would she have the opportunity of
speaking and laughing with this attractive, eminently
companionable man; then her attention was distracted
by the appearance of two more porters, who had each
to be interviewed in his turn.
They had no good news to give, however,
so the searchers left the platform in disgust, and
repaired to the office for lost luggage, where the
story of the missing box was recounted to an unsympathetic
clerk. When a man spends his whole life listening
to complaints of missing property, he can hardly be
expected to show a vehement distress at the loss of
yet another passenger, but to Claire at this moment
there was something quite brutal in his callous indifference.
The one suggestion which he had to make was that
she could leave her name, and the manner in which
it was given was a death-blow to hope.
At this very moment, however, just
as Claire was bending forward to dictate the desired
information she felt a touch on her arm, and looking
in the direction of Mr Fanshawe’s outstretched
hand, beheld a porter approaching the office, trundling
before him a truck on which reposed in solitary splendour,
a long brown dress-box, and oh, joy of joys! even at
the present distance the white letters C.G. could be
plainly distinguished on the nearer side! Claire’s
dignity went to the winds at that sight, and she dashed
forward to meet her property with the joyous impetuosity
of a child.
The explanation was simple to a degree,
and precisely agreed with Mr Fanshawe’s surmise
as to what had really happened. During Claire’s
trance of forgetfulness, the box had been wheeled away,
with a large consignment of luggage, and the mistake
discovered only when the various items were in process
of being packed into a company’s omnibus, when,
there being no one at hand to claim it, it had been
conveyed-by very leisurely stages-to
the lost luggage office.
All’s well that ends well!
Claire gleefully collected her possessions, feeling
a glow of delight in the safety which an hour before
she would have taken as a matter of course, and stood
at attention while each separate item was placed on
the roof of the taxi. The little addresses of
which she had boasted were duly inserted in leather
framings on each box, the delicate writing too small
to be deciphered, except near at hand. Claire
saw her companion’s eyes contract in an evident
effort to distinguish the words, and immediately moved
her position so as to frustrate his purpose.
She did not intend Mr Fanshawe to know her address!
When she was seated in the taxi, however, there came
an awkward moment, for her companion waved the chauffeur
to his seat, and stood by the window looking in at
her, with a face which seemed unduly serious and earnest,
considering the extremely slight nature of their acquaintance.
“Well! I am thankful the
box turned up. I shall think of you enjoying
your re-united frocks... Sure you’ve got
everything all right? Where shall I tell the
man to drive?”
For the fraction of a second Claire’s
eyes flickered, then she spoke in decided tones.
“`The Grand Hotel.’”
Mr Fanshawe’s eyes flickered
too, and turned involuntarily towards the boxes on
the roof. What exactly were the words on the
labels he could not see, but at least it was certain
that they were not “The Grand Hotel!”
He turned from the inspection to confront a flushed,
obstinate face.
“Do you wish me to give the man that address?”
“I do.”
Very deliberately and quietly Mr Fanshawe
stepped back a pace, opened his long coat, and fumbled
in an inner pocket for a leather pocket-book; very
quietly and deliberately he drew from one bulging division
a visiting card, and held it towards her. Claire
caught the word “Captain” and saw that
an address was printed in the corner, but she covered
it hastily with her hand, refusing a second glance.
Captain Fanshawe leant his arm on the window sash
and said hesitatingly-
“Will you allow me to give you
my card! As you are a stranger in town and your
people away, there may possibly be-er-occasions,
when it would be convenient to know some man whom
you could make of use. Please remember me if
they do come along! It would be a privilege to
repay your kindness to my mother... Send me
a wire at any time, and I am at your service.
I hope you will send. Good morning!”
“Good-bye!” said Claire.
Red as a rose was she at that moment, but very dignified
and stately, bending towards him in a sweeping bow,
as the taxi rolled away. The last glimpse of
Captain Fanshawe showed him standing with uplifted
hat, the keen eyes staring after her, with not a glint
of humour in their grey depths. Quite evidently
he meant what he said. Quite evidently he was
as keen to pursue her acquaintance as his mother had
been to drop it.
Claire Gifford sat bolt upright on
her seat, the slip of cardboard clasped within her
palms, and as she sat she thought many thoughts.
A physiognomist would have been interested to trace
the progress of those thoughts on the eloquent young
face. There was surprise written there, and
obvious gratification, and a demure, very feminine
content; later on came pride, and a general stiffening
of determination. The spoiled child of liberty
and the High School-Mistress of the future had fought
a heated battle, and the High School-Mistress had
won.
Deliberately turning aside her eyes,
so that no word of that printed address should obtrude
itself on her notice, Claire tore the card sharply
across and across, and threw the fragments out of the
window.
A moment later she whistled through
the tube, and instructed the chauffeur as to her change
of address.
Adieu to the Fanshawes, and all such
luxuries of the past. Heigh-ho for hard work,
and lodgings at fifteen shillings a week!