Mr. George Henshaw
let himself in at the front door, and stood for some
time wiping his boots on the mat The little house was
ominously still, and a faint feeling, only partially
due to the lapse of time since breakfast, manifested
itself behind his waistcoat. He coughed a
matter-of-fact cough and, with an attempt
to hum a tune, hung his hat on the peg and entered
the kitchen.
Mrs. Henshaw had just finished dinner.
The neatly cleaned bone of a chop was on a plate by
her side; a small dish which had contained a rice-pudding
was empty; and the only food left on the table was
a small rind of cheese and a piece of stale bread.
Mr. Henshaw’s face fell, but he drew his chair
up to the table and waited.
His wife regarded him with a fixed
and offensive stare. Her face was red and her
eyes were blazing. It was hard to ignore her gaze;
harder still to meet it. Mr. Henshaw, steering
a middle course, allowed his eyes to wander round
the room and to dwell, for the fraction of a second,
on her angry face.
“You’ve had dinner early?”
he said at last, in a trembling voice.
“Have I?” was the reply.
Mr. Henshaw sought for a comforting
explanation. “Clock’s fast,”
he said, rising and adjusting it.
His wife rose almost at the same moment,
and with slow deliberate movements began to clear
the table.
“What what about
dinner?” said Mr. Henshaw, still trying to control
his fears.
“Dinner!” repeated Mrs.
Henshaw, in a terrible voice. “You go and
tell that creature you were on the ’bus with
to get your dinner.”
Mr. Henshaw made a gesture of despair.
“I tell you,” he said emphatically, “it
wasn’t me. I told you so last night.
You get an idea in your head and ”
“That’ll do,” said
his wife, sharply. “I saw you, George Henshaw,
as plain as I see you now. You were tickling
her ear with a bit o’ straw, and that good-for-nothing
friend of yours, Ted Stokes, was sitting behind with
another beauty. Nice way o’ going on, and
me at ’ome all alone by myself, slaving and
slaving to keep things respectable!”
“It wasn’t me,” reiterated the unfortunate.
“When I called out to you,”
pursued the unheeding Mrs. Henshaw, “you started
and pulled your hat over your eyes and turned away.
I should have caught you if it hadn’t been for
all them carts in the way and falling down. I
can’t understand now how it was I wasn’t
killed; I was a mask of mud from head to foot.”
Despite his utmost efforts to prevent
it, a faint smile flitted across the pallid features
of Mr. Henshaw.
“Yes, you may laugh,”
stormed his wife, “and I’ve no doubt them
two beauties laughed too. I’ll take care
you don’t have much more to laugh at, my man.”
She flung out of the room and began
to wash up the crockery. Mr. Henshaw, after standing
irresolute for some time with his hands in his pockets,
put on his hat again and left the house.
He dined badly at a small eating-house,
and returned home at six o’clock that evening
to find his wife out and the cupboard empty. He
went back to the same restaurant for tea, and after
a gloomy meal went round to discuss the situation
with Ted Stokes. That gentleman’s suggestion
of a double alibi he thrust aside with disdain and
a stern appeal to talk sense.
“Mind, if my wife speaks to
you about it,” he said, warningly, “it
wasn’t me, but somebody like me. You might
say he ’ad been mistook for me before.”
Mr. Stokes grinned and, meeting a
freezing glance from his friend, at once became serious
again.
“Why not say it was you?”
he said stoutly. “There’s no harm
in going for a ‘bus-ride with a friend and a
couple o’ ladies.”
“O’ course there ain’t,”
said the other, hotly, “else I shouldn’t
ha’ done it. But you know what my wife
is.”
Mr. Stokes, who was by no means a
favorite of the lady in question, nodded. “You
were a bit larky, too,” he said thoughtfully.
“You ’ad quite a little slapping game
after you pretended to steal her brooch.”
“I s’pose when a gentleman’s
with a lady he ’as got to make ’imself
pleasant?” said Mr. Henshaw, with dignity.
“Now, if my missis speaks to you about it, you
say that it wasn’t me, but a friend of yours
up from the country who is as like me as two peas.
See?”
“Name o’ Dodd,”
said Mr. Stokes, with a knowing nod. “Tommy
Dodd.”
“I’m not playing the giddy
goat,” said the other, bitterly, “and I’d
thank you not to.”
“All right,” said Mr.
Stokes, somewhat taken aback. “Any name
you like; I don’t mind.”
Mr. Henshaw pondered. “Any
sensible name’ll do,” he said, stiffly.
“Bell?” suggested Mr.
Stokes. “Alfred Bell? I did know a
man o’ that name once. He tried to borrow
a bob off of me.”
“That’ll do,” said
his friend, after some consideration; “but mind
you stick to the same name. And you’d better
make up something about him where he lives,
and all that sort of thing so that you can
stand being questioned without looking more like a
silly fool than you can help.”
“I’ll do what I can for
you,” said Mr. Stokes, “but I don’t
s’pose your missis’ll come to me at all.
She saw you plain enough.”
They walked on in silence and, still
deep in thought over the matter, turned into a neighboring
tavern for refreshment. Mr. Henshaw drank his
with the air of a man performing a duty to his constitution;
but Mr. Stokes, smacking his lips, waxed eloquent
over the brew.
“I hardly know what I’m
drinking,” said his friend, forlornly. “I
suppose it’s four-half, because that’s
what I asked for.”
Mr. Stokes gazed at him in deep sympathy.
“It can’t be so bad as that,” he
said, with concern.
“You wait till you’re
married,” said Mr. Hen-shaw, brusquely.
“You’d no business to ask me to go with
you, and I was a good-natured fool to do it.”
“You stick to your tale and
it’ll be all right,” said the other.
“Tell her that you spoke to me about it, and
that his name is Alfred Bell B E double
L and that he lives in in Ireland.
Here! I say!”
“Well,” said Mr. Henshaw,
shaking off the hand which the other had laid on his
arm.
“You you be Alfred Bell,” said
Mr. Stokes, breathlessly.
Mr. Henshaw started and eyed him nervously.
His friend’s eyes were bright and, he fancied,
a bit wild.
“Be Alfred Bell,” repeated
Mr. Stokes. “Don’t you see? Pretend
to be Alfred Bell and go with me to your missis.
I’ll lend you a suit o’ clothes and a
fresh neck-tie, and there you are.”
“What?” roared the astounded Mr. Henshaw.
“It’s as easy as easy,”
declared the other. “Tomorrow evening, in
a new rig-out, I walks you up to your house and asks
for you to show you to yourself. Of course, I’m
sorry you ain’t in, and perhaps we walks in to
wait for you.”
“Show me to myself?” gasped Mr. Henshaw.
Mr. Stokes winked. “On
account o’ the surprising likeness,” he
said, smiling. “It is surprising, ain’t
it? Fancy the two of us sitting there and talking
to her and waiting for you to come in and wondering
what’s making you so late!”
Mr. Henshaw regarded him steadfastly
for some seconds, and then, taking a firm hold of
his mug, slowly drained the contents.
“And what about my voice?”
he demanded, with something approaching a sneer.
“That’s right,”
said Mr. Stokes, hotly; “it wouldn’t be
you if you didn’t try to make difficulties.”
“But what about it?” said Mr. Henshaw,
obstinately.
“You can alter it, can’t you?” said
the other.
They were alone in the bar, and Mr.
Henshaw, after some persuasion, was induced to try
a few experiments. He ranged from bass, which
hurt his throat, to a falsetto which put Mr. Stokes’s
teeth on edge, but in vain. The rehearsal was
stopped at last by the landlord, who, having twice
come into the bar under the impression that fresh customers
had entered, spoke his mind at some length. “Seem
to think you’re in a blessed monkey-house,”
he concluded, severely.
“We thought we was,” said
Mr. Stokes, with a long appraising sniff, as he opened
the door. “It’s a mistake anybody
might make.”
He pushed Mr. Henshaw into the street
as the landlord placed a hand on the flap of the bar,
and followed him out.
“You’ll have to ’ave
a bad cold and talk in ’usky whispers,”
he said slowly, as they walked along. “You
caught a cold travelling in the train from Ireland
day before yesterday, and you made it worse going for
a ride on the outside of a ‘bus with me and
a couple o’ ladies. See? Try ’usky
whispers now.”
Mr. Henshaw tried, and his friend,
observing that he was taking but a languid interest
in the scheme, was loud in his praises. “I
should never ’ave known you,” he
declared. “Why, it’s wonderful!
Why didn’t you tell me you could act like that?”
Mr. Henshaw remarked modestly that
he had not been aware of it himself, and, taking a
more hopeful view of the situation, whispered himself
into such a state of hoarseness that another visit
for refreshment became absolutely necessary.
“Keep your ’art up and
practise,” said Mr. Stokes, as he shook hands
with him some time later. “And If you can
manage it, get off at four o’clock to-morrow
and we’ll go round to see her while she thinks
you’re still at work.”
Mr. Henshaw complimented him upon
his artfulness, and, with some confidence in a man
of such resource, walked home in a more cheerful frame
of mind. His heart sank as he reached the house,
but to his relief the lights were out and his wife
was in bed.
He was up early next morning, but
his wife showed no signs of rising. The cupboard
was still empty, and for some time he moved about hungry
and undecided. Finally he mounted the stairs again,
and with a view to arranging matters for the evening
remonstrated with her upon her behavior and loudly
announced his intention of not coming home until she
was in a better frame of mind. From a disciplinary
point of view the effect of the remonstrance was somewhat
lost by being shouted through the closed door, and
he also broke off too abruptly when Mrs. Henshaw opened
it suddenly and confronted him. Fragments of the
peroration reached her through the front door.
Despite the fact that he left two
hours earlier, the day passed but slowly, and he was
in a very despondent state of mind by the time he
reached Mr. Stokes’s lodging. The latter,
however, had cheerfulness enough for both, and, after
helping his visitor to change into fresh clothes and
part his hair in the middle instead of at the side,
surveyed him with grinning satisfaction. Under
his directions Mr. Henshaw also darkened his eyebrows
and beard with a little burnt cork until Mr. Stokes
declared that his own mother wouldn’t know him.
“Now, be careful,” said
Mr. Stokes, as they set off. “Be bright
and cheerful; be a sort o’ ladies’ man
to her, same as she saw you with the one on the ’bus.
Be as unlike yourself as you can, and don’t forget
yourself and call her by ’er pet name.”
“Pet name!” said Mr. Henshaw,
indignantly. “Pet name! You’ll
alter your ideas of married life when you’re
caught, my lad, I can tell you!”
He walked on in scornful silence,
lagging farther and farther behind as they neared
his house. When Mr. Stokes knocked at the door
he stood modestly aside with his back against the
wall of the next house.
“Is George in?” inquired
Mr. Stokes, carelessly, as Mrs. Henshaw opened the
door.
“No,” was the reply.
Mr. Stokes affected to ponder; Mr. Henshaw instinctively
edged away.
“He ain’t in,” said Mrs. Henshaw,
preparing to close the door.
“I wanted to see him partikler,”
said Mr. Stokes, slowly. “I brought a friend
o’ mine, name o’ Alfred Bell, up here on
purpose to see ’im.”
Mrs. Henshaw, following the direction
of his eyes, put her head round the door.
“George!” she exclaimed, sharply.
Mr. Stokes smiled. “That
ain’t George,” he said, gleefully; “That’s
my friend, Mr. Alfred Bell. Ain’t it a
extraordinary likeness? Ain’t it wonderful?
That’s why I brought ’im up; I wanted George
to see ’im.”
Mrs. Henshaw looked from one to the other in wrathful
bewilderment.
“His living image, ain’t
he?” said Mr. Stokes. “This is my
pal George’s missis,” he added, turning
to Mr. Bell.
“Good afternoon to you,” said that gentleman,
huskily.
“He got a bad cold coming from
Ireland,” explained Mr. Stokes, “and,
foolish-like, he went outside a ’bus with me
the other night and made it worse.”
“Oh-h!” said Mrs. Henshaw, slowly.
“Indeed! Really!”
“He’s quite curious to
see George,” said Mr. Stokes. “In
fact, he was going back to Ireland tonight if it ’adn’t
been for that. He’s waiting till to-morrow
just to see George.”
Mr. Bell, in a voice huskier than
ever, said that he had altered his mind again.
“Nonsense!” said Mr. Stokes,
sternly. “Besides, George would like to
see you. I s’pose he won’t be long?”
he added, turning to Mrs. Hen-shaw, who was regarding
Mr. Bell much as a hungry cat regards a plump sparrow.
“I don’t suppose so,” she said,
slowly.
“I dare say if we wait a little
while ” began Mr. Stokes, ignoring
a frantic glance from Mr. Henshaw.
“Come in,” said Mrs. Henshaw, suddenly.
Mr. Stokes entered and, finding that
his friend hung back, went out again and half led,
half pushed him indoors. Mr. Bell’s shyness
he attributed to his having lived so long in Ireland.
“He is quite the ladies’
man, though,” he said, artfully, as they followed
their hostess into the front room. “You
should ha’ seen ’im the other night on
the ‘bus. We had a couple o’ lady
friends o’ mine with us, and even the conductor
was surprised at his goings on.”
Mr. Bell, by no means easy as to the
results of the experiment, scowled at him despairingly.
“Carrying on, was he?”
said Mrs. Henshaw, regarding the culprit steadily.
“Carrying on like one o’clock,”
said the imaginative Mr. Stokes. “Called
one of ’em ’is little wife, and asked her
where ’er wedding-ring was.”
“I didn’t,” said
Mr. Bell, in a suffocating voice. “I didn’t.”
“There’s nothing to be
ashamed of,” said Mr. Stokes, virtuously.
“Only, as I said to you at the time, ‘Alfred,’
I says, ’it’s all right for you as a single
man, but you might be the twin-brother of a pal o’
mine George Henshaw by name and
if some people was to see you they might think it
was ’im Didn’t I say that?”
“You did,” said Mr. Bell, helplessly.
“And he wouldn’t believe
me,” said Mr. Stokes, turning to Mrs. Henshaw.
“That’s why I brought him round to see
George.”
“I should like to see the two
of ’em together myself,” said Mrs. Henshaw,
quietly. “I should have taken him for my
husband anywhere.”
“You wouldn’t if you’d
seen ’im last night,” said Mr. Stokes,
shaking his head and smiling.
“Carrying on again, was he?”
inquired Mrs. Henshaw, quickly.
“No!” said Mr. Bell, in a stentorian whisper.
His glance was so fierce that Mr.
Stokes almost quailed. “I won’t tell
tales out of school,” he said, nodding.
“Not if I ask you to?”
said Mrs. Henshaw, with a winning smile.
“Ask ’im,” said Mr. Stokes.
“Last night,” said the
whisperer, hastily, “I went for a quiet walk
round Victoria Park all by myself. Then I met
Mr. Stokes, and we had one half-pint together at a
public-house. That’s all.”
Mrs. Henshaw looked at Mr. Stokes.
Mr. Stokes winked at her.
“It’s as true as my name
is Alfred Bell,” said that gentleman,
with slight but natural hesitation.
“Have it your own way,”
said Mr. Stokes, somewhat perturbed at Mr. Bell’s
refusal to live up to the character he had arranged
for him.
“I wish my husband spent his
evenings in the same quiet way,” said Mrs. Henshaw,
shaking her head.
“Don’t he?” said
Mr. Stokes. “Why, he always seems quiet
enough to me. Too quiet, I should say. Why,
I never knew a quieter man. I chaff ’im
about it sometimes.”
“That’s his artfulness,” said Mrs.
Henshaw.
“Always in a hurry to get ’ome,”
pursued the benevolent Mr. Stokes.
“He may say so to you to get
away from you,” said Mrs. Henshaw, thoughtfully.
“He does say you’re hard to shake off sometimes.”
Mr. Stokes sat stiffly upright and
threw a fierce glance in the direction of Mr. Henshaw.
“Pity he didn’t tell me,”
he said bitterly. “I ain’t one to
force my company where it ain’t wanted.”
“I’ve said to him sometimes,”
continued Mrs. Henshaw, “’Why don’t
you tell Ted Stokes plain that you don’t like
his company?’ but he won’t. That
ain’t his way. He’d sooner talk of
you behind your back.”
“What does he say?” inquired
Mr. Stokes, coldly ignoring a frantic headshake on
the part of his friend.
“Promise me you won’t
tell him if I tell you,” said Mrs. Henshaw.
Mr. Stokes promised.
“I don’t know that I ought
to tell you,” said Mrs. Henshaw, reluctantly,
“but I get so sick and tired of him coming home
and grumbling about you.”
“Go on,” said the waiting Stokes.
Mrs. Henshaw stole a glance at him.
“He says you act as if you thought yourself
everybody,” she said, softly, “and your
everlasting clack, clack, clack, worries him to death.”
“Go on,” said the listener, grimly.
“And he says it’s so much
trouble to get you to pay for your share of the drinks
that he’d sooner pay himself and have done with
it.”
Mr. Stokes sprang from his chair and,
with clenched fists, stood angrily regarding the horrified
Mr. Bell. He composed himself by an effort and
resumed his seat.
“Anything else?” he inquired.
“Heaps and heaps of things,”
said Mrs. Henshaw; “but I don’t want to
make bad blood between you.”
“Don’t mind me,”
said Mr. Stokes, glancing bale-fully over at his agitated
friend. “P’raps I’ll tell you
some things about him some day.”
“It would be only fair,”
said Mrs. Henshaw, quickly. “Tell me now;
I don’t mind Mr. Bell hearing; not a bit.”
Mr. Bell spoke up for himself.
“I don’t want to hear family secrets,”
he whispered, with an imploring glance at the vindictive
Mr. Stokes. “It wouldn’t be right.”
“Well, I don’t want to
say things behind a man’s back,” said the
latter, recovering himself. “Let’s
wait till George comes in, and I’ll say ’em
before his face.”
Mrs. Henshaw, biting her lip with
annoyance, argued with him, but in vain. Mr.
Stokes was firm, and, with a glance at the clock, said
that George would be in soon and he would wait till
he came.
Conversation flagged despite the efforts
of Mrs. Henshaw to draw Mr. Bell out on the subject
of Ireland. At an early stage of the catechism
he lost his voice entirely, and thereafter sat silent
while Mrs. Henshaw discussed the most intimate affairs
of her husband’s family with Mr. Stokes.
She was in the middle of an anecdote about her mother-in-law
when Mr. Bell rose and, with some difficulty, intimated
his desire to depart.
“What, without seeing George?”
said Mrs. Henshaw. “He can’t be long
now, and I should like to see you together.”
“P’r’aps we shall
meet him,” said Mr. Stokes, who was getting rather
tired of the affair. “Good night.”
He led the way to the door and, followed
by the eager Mr. Bell, passed out into the street.
The knowledge that Mrs. Henshaw was watching him from
the door kept him silent until they had turned the
corner, and then, turning fiercely on Mr. Henshaw,
he demanded to know what he meant by it.
“I’ve done with you,”
he said, waving aside the other’s denials.
“I’ve got you out of this mess, and now
I’ve done with you. It’s no good
talking, because I don’t want to hear it.”
“Good-by, then,” said
Mr. Henshaw, with unexpected hauteur, as he came to
a standstill.
“I’ll ’ave
my trousers first, though,” said Mr. Stokes,
coldly, “and then you can go, and welcome.”
“It’s my opinion she recognized
me, and said all that just to try us,” said
the other, gloomily.
Mr. Stokes scorned to reply, and reaching
his lodging stood by in silence while the other changed
his clothes. He refused Mr. Henshaw’s hand
with a gesture he had once seen on the stage, and,
showing him downstairs, closed the door behind him
with a bang.
Left to himself, the small remnants
of Mr. Hen-shaw’s courage disappeared.
He wandered forlornly up and down the streets until
past ten o’clock, and then, cold and dispirited,
set off in the direction of home. At the corner
of the street he pulled himself together by a great
effort, and walking rapidly to his house put the key
in the lock and turned it.
The door was fast and the lights were
out. He knocked, at first lightly, but gradually
increasing in loudness. At the fourth knock a
light appeared in the room above, the window was raised,
and Mrs. Henshaw leaned out.
“Mr. Bell!” she said, in tones
of severe surprise.
“Bell?” said her
husband, in a more surprised voice still. “It’s
me, Polly.”
“Go away at once, sir!”
said Mrs. Henshaw, indignantly. “How dare
you call me by my Christian name? I’m surprised
at you!”
“It’s me, I tell you George!”
said her husband, desperately. “What do
you mean by calling me Bell?”
“If you’re Mr. Bell, as
I suppose, you know well enough,” said Mrs.
Henshaw, leaning out and regarding him fixedly; “and
if you’re George you don’t.”
“I’m George,” said Mr. Henshaw,
hastily.
“I’m sure I don’t
know what to make of it,” said Mrs. Henshaw,
with a bewildered air. “Ted Stokes brought
round a man named Bell this afternoon so like you
that I can’t tell the difference. I don’t
know what to do, but I do know this I don’t
let you in until I have seen you both together, so
that I can tell which is which.”
“Both together!” exclaimed
the startled Mr. Henshaw. “Here look
here!”
He struck a match and, holding it
before his face, looked up at the window. Mrs.
Henshaw scrutinized him gravely.
“It’s no good,”
she said, despairingly. “I can’t tell.
I must see you both together.”
Mr. Henshaw ground his teeth.
“But where is he?” he inquired.
“He went off with Ted Stokes,”
said his wife. “If you’re George you’d
better go and ask him.”
She prepared to close the window,
but Mr. Hen-shaw’s voice arrested her.
“And suppose he is not there?” he said.
Mrs. Henshaw reflected. “If
he is not there bring Ted Stokes back with you,”
she said at last, “and if he says you’re
George, I’ll let you in.”
The window closed and the light disappeared.
Mr. Henshaw waited for some time, but in vain, and,
with a very clear idea of the reception he would meet
with at the hands of Mr. Stokes, set off to his lodging.
If anything, he had underestimated
his friend’s powers. Mr. Stokes, rudely
disturbed just as he had got into bed, was the incarnation
of wrath. He was violent, bitter, and insulting
in a breath, but Mr. Henshaw was desperate, and Mr.
Stokes, after vowing over and over again that nothing
should induce him to accompany him back to his house,
was at last so moved by his entreaties that he went
upstairs and equipped himself for the journey.
“And, mind, after this I never
want to see your face again,” he said, as they
walked swiftly back.
Mr. Henshaw made no reply. The
events of the day had almost exhausted him, and silence
was maintained until they reached the house. Much
to his relief he heard somebody moving about upstairs
after the first knock and in a very short time the
window was gently raised and Mrs. Henshaw looked out.
“What, you’ve come back?”
she said, in a low, intense voice. “Well,
of all the impudence! How dare you carry on like
this?”
“It’s me,” said her husband.
“Yes, I see it is,” was the reply.
“It’s him right enough;
it’s your husband,” said Mr. Stokes.
“Alfred Bell has gone.”
“How dare you stand there and
tell me them falsehoods!” exclaimed Mrs. Henshaw.
“I wonder the ground don’t open and swallow
you up. It’s Mr. Bell, and if he don’t
go away I’ll call the police.”
Messrs. Henshaw and Stokes, amazed
at their reception, stood blinking up at her.
Then they conferred in whispers.
“If you can’t tell ’em
apart, how do you know this is Mr. Bell?” inquired
Mr. Stokes, turning to the window again.
“How do I know?” repeated
Mrs. Henshaw. “How do I know? Why,
because my husband came home almost directly Mr. Bell
had gone. I wonder he didn’t meet him.”
“Came home?” cried Mr. Henshaw, shrilly.
“Came home?”
“Yes; and don’t make so
much noise,” said Mrs. Henshaw, tartly; “he’s
asleep.”
The two gentlemen turned and gazed
at each other in stupefaction. Mr. Stokes was
the first to recover, and, taking his dazed friend
by the arm, led him gently away. At the end of
the street he took a deep breath, and, after a slight
pause to collect his scattered energies, summed up
the situation.
“She’s twigged it all
along,” he said, with conviction. “You’ll
have to come home with me tonight, and to-morrow the
best thing you can do is to make a clean breast
of it. It was a silly game, and, if you remember,
I was against it from the first.”