“I’VE just been drinking
a man’s health,” said the night watchman,
coming slowly on to the wharf and wiping his mouth
with the back of his hand; “he’s come
in for a matter of three ’undred and twenty pounds,
and he stood me arf a pint arf a pint!”
He dragged a small empty towards him,
and after planing the surface with his hand sat down
and gazed scornfully across the river.
“Four ale,” he said, with
a hard laugh; “and when I asked ’im just
for the look of the thing, and to give ’im a
hint whether he’d ’ave
another, he said ‘yes.’”
The night watchman rose and paced
restlessly up and down the jetty.
“Money,” he said, at last,
resuming his wonted calm and lowering himself carefully
to the box again “money always gets
left to the wrong people; some of the kindest-’arted
men I’ve ever known ’ave never had
a ha’penny left ’em, while teetotaler
arter teetotaler wot I’ve heard of ’ave
come in for fortins.”
It’s ’ard lines though,
sometimes, waiting for other people’s money.
I knew o’ one chap that waited over forty years
for ’is grandmother to die and leave ’im
her money; and she died of catching cold at ’is
funeral. Another chap I knew, arter waiting years
and years for ’is rich aunt to die, was hung
because she committed suicide.
It’s always risky work waiting
for other people to die and leave you money.
Sometimes they don’t die; sometimes they marry
agin; and sometimes they leave it to other people
instead.
Talking of marrying agin reminds me
o’ something that ’appened to a young
fellow I knew named Alf Simms. Being an orphan
’e was brought up by his uncle, George Hatchard,
a widowed man of about sixty. Alf used to go
to sea off and on, but more off than on, his uncle
’aving quite a tidy bit of ’ouse property,
and it being understood that Alf was to have it arter
he ’ad gone. His uncle used to like to ’ave
him at ’ome, and Alf didn’t like work,
so it suited both parties.
I used to give Alf a bit of advice
sometimes, sixty being a dangerous age for a man,
especially when he ’as been a widower for so
long he ’as had time to forget wot being married’s
like; but I must do Alf the credit to say it wasn’t
wanted. He ’ad got a very old ’ead
on his shoulders, and always picked the housekeeper
’imself to save the old man the trouble.
I saw two of ’em, and I dare say I could ’ave
seen more, only I didn’t want to.
Cleverness is a good thing in its
way, but there’s such a thing as being too clever,
and the last ’ouse-keeper young Alf picked died
of old age a week arter he ’ad gone to sea.
She passed away while she was drawing George Hatchard’s
supper beer, and he lost ten gallons o’ the best
bitter ale and his ’ousekeeper at the same time.
It was four months arter that afore
Alf came ’ome, and the fust sight of the new
’ousekeeper, wot opened the door to ’im,
upset ’im terrible. She was the right side
o’ sixty to begin with, and only ordinary plain.
Then she was as clean as a new pin, and dressed up
as though she was going out to tea.
“Oh, you’re Alfred, I s’pose?”
she ses, looking at ’im.
“Mr. Simms is my name,” ses young
Alf, starting and drawing hisself up.
“I know you by your portrait,”
ses the ’ousekeeper. “Come in.
’Ave you ’ad a pleasant v’y’ge?
Wipe your boots.”
Alfred wiped ’is boots afore
he thought of wot he was doing. Then he drew
hisself up stiff agin and marched into the parlor.
“Sit down,” ses the ’ousekeeper,
in a kind voice.
Alfred sat down afore he thought wot ’e was
doing agin.
“I always like to see people
comfortable,” ses the ’ousekeeper;
“it’s my way. It’s warm weather
for the time o’ year, ain’t it? George
is upstairs, but he’ll be down in a minute.”
“Who?” ses Alf, hardly able
to believe his ears.
“George,” ses the ’ousekeeper.
“George? George who?” ses Alfred,
very severe.
“Why your uncle, of course,”
ses the ’ousekeeper. “Do you
think I’ve got a houseful of Georges?”
Young Alf sat staring at her and couldn’t
say a word. He noticed that the room ’ad
been altered, and that there was a big photygraph of
her stuck up on the mantelpiece. He sat there
fidgeting with ’is feet until the
’ousekeeper looked at them and then
’e got up and walked upstairs.
His uncle, wot was sitting on his
bed when ’e went into the room and pretended
that he ’adn’t heard ’im come in,
shook hands with ’im as though he’d never
leave off.
“I’ve got something to
tell you, Alf,” he ses, arter they ’ad
said “How d’ye do?” and he ’ad
talked about the weather until Alf was fair tired
of it.
“I’ve been and gone and
done a foolish thing, and ’ow you’ll take
it I don’t know.”
“Been and asked the new ’ousekeeper
to marry you, I s’pose?” ses Alf,
looking at ’im very hard.
His uncle shook his ’ead.
“I never asked ’er; I’d take my Davy
I didn’t,” he ses.
“Well, you ain’t going
to marry her, then?” ses Alf, brightening
up.
His uncle shook his ’ead agin.
“She didn’t want no asking,” he ses,
speaking very slow and mournful. “I just
’appened to put my arm round her waist by accident
one day and the thing was done.”
“Accident? How could you
do it by accident?” ses Alf, firing up.
“How can I tell you that?”
ses George Hat-chard. “’If I’d
known ’ow, it wouldn’t ’ave
been an accident, would it?”
“Don’t you want to marry
her?” ses Alf, at last. “You
needn’t marry ’er if you don’t want
to.”
George Hatchard looked at ’im
and sniffed. “When you know her as well
as I do you won’t talk so foolish,” he
ses. “We’d better go down now,
else she’ll think we’ve been talking about
’er.”
They went downstairs and ’ad
tea together, and young Alf soon see the truth of
his uncle’s remarks. Mrs. Pearce that
was the ’ousekeeper’s name called
his uncle “dear” every time she spoke to
’im, and arter tea she sat on the sofa side
by side with ’im and held his ’and.
Alf lay awake arf that night thinking
things over and ’ow to get Mrs. Pearce out of
the house, and he woke up next morning with it still
on ’is mind. Every time he got ’is
uncle alone he spoke to ’im about it, and told
’im to pack Mrs. Pearce off with a month’s
wages, but George Hatchard wouldn’t listen to
’im.
“She’d ’ave
me up for breach of promise and ruin me,” he
ses. “She reads the paper to me every
Sunday arternoon, mostly breach of promise cases,
and she’d ’ave me up for it as soon
as look at me. She’s got ’eaps and
‘eaps of love-letters o’ mine.”
“Love-letters!” ses
Alf, staring. “Love-letters when you live
in the same house!”
“She started it,” ses
his uncle; “she pushed one under my door one
morning, and I ’ad to answer it. She wouldn’t
come down and get my breakfast till I did. I
have to send her one every morning.”
“Do you sign ’em with
your own name?” ses Alf, arter thinking
a bit.
“No,” ses ’is uncle, turning
red.
“Wot do you sign ’em, then?” ses
Alf.
“Never you mind,” ses
his uncle, turning redder. “It’s my
handwriting, and that’s good enough for her.
I did try writing backwards, but I only did it once.
I wouldn’t do it agin for fifty pounds.
You ought to ha’ heard ’er.”
“If ’er fust husband was
alive she couldn’t marry you,” ses
Alf, very slow and thoughtful.
“No,” ses his uncle,
nasty-like; “and if I was an old woman she couldn’t
marry me. You know as well as I do that he went
down with the Evening Star fifteen years ago.”
“So far as she knows,”
ses Alf; “but there was four of them saved,
so why not five? Mightn’t ’e have
floated away on a spar or something and been picked
up? Can’t you dream it three nights running,
and tell ’er that you feel certain sure he’s
alive?”
“If I dreamt it fifty times
it wouldn’t make any difference,” ses
George Hatchard. “Here! wot are you up
to? ’Ave you gone mad, or wot? You
poke me in the ribs like that agin if you dare.”
“Her fust ’usband’s alive,”
ses Alf, smiling at un.
“Wot?” ses his uncle.
“He floated away on a bit o’
wreckage,” ses Alf, nodding at ’im,
“just like they do in books, and was picked
up more dead than alive and took to Melbourne.
He’s now living up-country working on a sheep
station.”
“Who’s dreaming now?” ses his
uncle.
“It’s a fact,” ses
Alf. “I know a chap wot’s met ’im
and talked to ’im. She can’t marry
you while he’s alive, can she?”
“Certainly not,”
ses George Hatchard, trembling all over; “but
are you sure you ’aven’t made a mistake?”
“Certain sure,” ses Alf.
“It’s too good to be true,” ses
George Hatchard.
“O’ course it is,”
ses Alf, “but she won’t know that.
Look ’ere; you write down all the things that
she ’as told you about herself and give it to
me, and I’ll soon find the chap I spoke of wot’s
met ’im. He’d meet a dozen men if
it was made worth his while.”
George Hatchard couldn’t understand
’im at fust, and when he did he wouldn’t
’ave a hand in it because it wasn’t
the right thing to do, and because he felt sure that
Mrs. Pearce would find it out. But at last ’e
wrote out all about her for Alf; her maiden name, and
where she was born, and everything; and then he told
Alf that, if ’e dared to play such a trick on
an unsuspecting, loving woman, he’d never forgive
’im.
“I shall want a couple o’ quid,”
ses Alf.
“Certainly not,” ses
his uncle. “I won’t ’ave
nothing to do with it, I tell you.”
“Only to buy chocolates with,” ses
Alf.
“Oh, all right,” ses
George Hatchard; and he went upstairs to ’is
bedroom and came down with three pounds and gave ’im.
“If that ain’t enough,” he ses,
“let me know, and you can ’ave
more.”
Alf winked at ’im, but the old
man drew hisself up and stared at ’im, and then
’e turned and walked away with his ’ead
in the air.
He ’ardly got a chance of speaking
to Alf next day, Mrs. Pearce being ’ere, there,
and everywhere, as the saying is, and finding so many
little odd jobs for Alf to do that there was no time
for talking. But the day arter he sidled up to
’im when the ’ouse-keeper was out of the
room and asked ’im whether he ’ad bought
the chocolates.
“Yes,” ses Alfred,
taking one out of ’is pocket and eating it, “some
of ’em.”
George Hatchard coughed and fidgeted
about. “When are you going to buy the others?”
he ses.
“As I want ’em,”
ses Alf. “They’d spoil if I got
’em all at once.”
George Hatchard coughed agin.
“I ’ope you haven’t been going on
with that wicked plan you spoke to me about the other
night,” he ses.
“Certainly not,” ses
Alf, winking to ’imself; “not arter wot
you said. How could I?”
“That’s right,”
ses the old man. “I’m sorry for
this marriage for your sake, Alf. O’ course,
I was going to leave you my little bit of ’ouse
property, but I suppose now it’ll ’ave
to be left to her. Well, well, I s’pose
it’s best for a young man to make his own way
in the world.”
“I s’pose so,” ses Alf.
“Mrs. Pearce was asking only
yesterday when you was going back to sea agin,”
ses his uncle, looking at ’im.
“Oh!” ses Alf.
“She’s took a dislike
to you, I think,” ses the old man.
“It’s very ’ard, my fav’rite
nephew, and the only one I’ve got. I forgot
to tell you the other day that her fust ’usband,
Charlie Pearce, ’ad a kind of a wart on ’is
left ear. She’s often spoke to me about
it.”
“In deed!” ses Alf.
“Yes,” ses his uncle,
“left ear, and a scar on his forehead
where a friend of his kicked ’im one day.”
Alf nodded, and then he winked at
’im agin. George Hatchard didn’t wink
back, but he patted ’im on the shoulder and said
’ow well he was filling out, and ’ow he
got more like ’is pore mother every day he lived.
“I ’ad a dream last night,”
ses Alf. “I dreamt that a man I know
named Bill Flurry, but wot called ’imself another
name in my dream, and didn’t know me then, came
’ere one evening when we was all sitting down
at supper, Joe Morgan and ’is missis being here,
and said as ’ow Mrs. Pearce’s fust husband
was alive and well.”
“That’s a very odd dream,”
ses his uncle; “but wot was Joe Morgan and
his missis in it for?”
“Witnesses,” ses Alf.
George Hatchard fell over a footstool
with surprise. “Go on,” he ses,
rubbing his leg. “It’s a queer thing,
but I was going to ask the Morgans ’ere to spend
the evening next Wednesday.”
“Or was it Tuesday?” ses Alf, considering.
“I said Tuesday,” ses
his uncle, looking over Alf’s head so that he
needn’t see ’im wink agin. “Wot
was the end of your dream, Alf?”
“The end of it was,” ses
Alf, “that you and Mrs. Pearce was both very
much upset, as o’ course you couldn’t marry
while ’er fust was alive, and the last thing
I see afore I woke up was her boxes standing at the
front door waiting for a cab.”
George Hatchard was going to ask ’im
more about it, but just then Mrs. Pearce came in with
a pair of Alf’s socks that he ’ad been
untidy enough to leave in the middle of the floor
instead of chucking ’em under the bed.
She was so unpleasant about it that, if it hadn’t
ha’ been for the thought of wot was going to
‘appen on Tuesday, Alf couldn’t ha’
stood it.
For the next day or two George Hatchard
was in such a state of nervousness and excitement
that Alf was afraid that the ’ousekeeper would
notice it. On Tuesday morning he was trembling
so much that she said he’d got a chill, and
she told ’im to go to bed and she’d make
’im a nice hot mustard poultice. George
was afraid to say “no,” but while she
was in the kitchen making the poultice he slipped out
for a walk and cured ’is trembling with three
whiskies. Alf nearly got the poultice instead,
she was so angry.
She was unpleasant all dinner-time,
but she got better in the arternoon, and when the
Morgans came in the evening, and she found that Mrs.
Morgan ‘ad got a nasty sort o’ red swelling
on her nose, she got quite good-tempered. She
talked about it nearly all supper-time, telling ’er
what she ought to do to it, and about a friend of hers
that ’ad one and ’ad to turn teetotaler
on account of it.
“My nose is good enough for
me,” ses Mrs. Morgan, at last.
“It don’t affect ’er
appetite,” ses George Hat-chard, trying
to make things pleasant, “and that’s the
main thing.”
Mrs. Morgan got up to go, but arter
George Hat-chard ’ad explained wot he didn’t
mean she sat down agin and began to talk to Mrs. Pearce
about ’er dress and ’ow beautifully it
was made. And she asked Mrs. Pearce to give ’er
the pattern of it, because she should ’ave
one like it herself when she was old enough.
“I do like to see people dressed suitable,”
she ses, with a smile.
“I think you ought to ’ave
a much deeper color than this,” ses Mrs.
Pearce, considering.
“Not when I’m faded,” ses Mrs.
Morgan.
Mrs. Pearce, wot was filling ’er
glass at the time, spilt a lot of beer all over the
tablecloth, and she was so cross about it that she
sat like a stone statue for pretty near ten minutes.
By the time supper was finished people was passing
things to each other in whispers, and when a bit o’
cheese went the wrong way with Joe Morgan he nearly
suffocated ’imself for fear of making a noise.
They ‘ad a game o’ cards
arter supper, counting twenty nuts as a penny, and
everybody got more cheerful. They was all laughing
and talking, and Joe Morgan was pretending to steal
Mrs. Pearce’s nuts, when George Hatchard held
up his ’and.
“Somebody at the street door, I think,”
he ses.
Young Alf got up to open it, and they
’eard a man’s voice in the passage asking
whether Mrs. Pearce lived there, and the next moment
Alf came into the room, followed by Bill Flurry.
“Here’s a gentleman o’
the name o’ Smith asking arter you,” he
ses, looking at Mrs. Pearce.
“Wot d’you want?” ses Mrs.
Pearce rather sharp.
“It is ’er,” ses
Bill, stroking his long white beard and casting ’is
eyes up ’at the ceiling. “You don’t
remember me, Mrs. Pearce, but I used to see you years
ago, when you and poor Charlie Pearce was living down
Poplar way.”
“Well, wot about it?” ses Mrs. Pearce.
“I’m coming to it,”
ses Bill Flurry. “I’ve been two
months trying to find you, so there’s no need
to be in a hurry for a minute or two. Besides,
what I’ve got to say ought to be broke gently,
in case you faint away with joy.”
“Rubbish!” ses Mrs. Pearce.
“I ain’t the fainting sort.”
“I ’ope it’s nothing
unpleasant,” ses George Hat-chard, pouring
’im out a glass of whisky.
“Quite the opposite,”
ses Bill. “It’s the best news
she’s ’eard for fifteen years.”
“Are you going to tell me wot
you want, or ain’t you?” ses Mrs.
Pearce.
“I’m coming to it,”
ses Bill. “Six months ago I was in
Melbourne, and one day I was strolling about looking
in at the shop-winders, when all at once I thought
I see a face I knew. It was a good bit older than
when I see it last, and the whiskers was gray, but
I says to myself ”
“I can see wot’s coming,”
ses Mrs. Morgan, turning red with excitement
and pinching Joe’s arm.
“I ses to myself,”
ses Bill Flurry, “either that’s a
ghost, I ses or else it’s Charlie ”
“Go on,” ses George
Hatchard, as was sitting with ’is fists clinched
on the table and ’is eyes wide open, staring
at ’im.
“Pearce,” ses Bill Flurry.
You might ’ave heard a
pin drop. They all sat staring at ’im, and
then George Hatchard took out ’is handkerchief
and ’eld it up to ’is face.
“But he was drownded in the
Evening Star” ses Joe Morgan.
Bill Flurry didn’t answer ’im.
He poured out pretty near a tumbler of whisky and
offered it to Mrs. Pearce, but she pushed it away,
and, arter looking round in a ’elpless sort
of way and shaking his ’ead once or twice, he
finished it up ’imself.
“It couldn’t ’ave
been ’im,” ses George Hatchard, speaking
through ’is handkerchief. “I can’t
believe it. It’s too cruel.”
“I tell you it was ’im,”
ses Bill. “He floated off on a spar
when the ship went down, and was picked up two days
arterwards by a bark and taken to New Zealand.
He told me all about it, and he told me if ever I
saw ’is wife to give her ’is kind regards.”
“Kind regards!”
ses Joe Morgan, starting up. “Why didn’t
he let ’is wife know ’e was alive?”
“That’s wot I said to
’im,” ses Bill Flurry; “but
he said he ’ad ’is reasons.”
“Ah, to be sure,” ses
Mrs. Morgan, nodding. “Why, you and her
can’t be married now,” she ses, turning
to George Hatchard.
“Married?” ses Bill
Flurry with a start, as George Hatchard gave a groan
that surprised ’im-self. “Good gracious!
what a good job I found ’er!”
“I s’pose you don’t
know where he is to be found now?” ses Mrs.
Pearce, in a low voice, turning to Bill.
“I do not, ma’am,”
ses Bill, “but I think you’d find
’im somewhere in Australia. He keeps changing
’is name and shifting about, but I dare say
you’d ’ave as good a chance of finding
’im as anybody.”
“It’s a terrible blow
to me,” ses George Hatchard, dabbing his
eyes.
“I know it is,” ses
Mrs. Pearce; “but there, you men are all alike.
I dare say if this hadn’t turned up you’d
ha’ found something else.”
“Oh, ’ow can you talk
like that?” ses George Hatchard, very reproachful.
“It’s the only thing in the world that
could ’ave prevented our getting married.
I’m surprised at you.”
“Well, that’s all right,
then,” ses Mrs. Pearce, “and we’ll
get married after all.”
“But you can’t,” ses Alf.
“It’s bigamy,” ses Joe Morgan.
“You’d get six months,” ses
his wife.
“Don’t you worry, dear,”
ses Mrs. Pearce, nodding at George Hatchard;
“that man’s made a mistake.”
“Mistake!” ses Bill
Flurry. “Why, I tell you I talked to ’im.
It was Charlie Pearce right enough; scar on ’is
forehead and a wart on ’is left ear and all.”
“It’s wonderful,”
ses Mrs. Pearce. “I can’t think
where you got it all from.”
“Got it all from?” ses
Bill, staring at her. “Why, from ’im.”
“Oh, of course,” ses
Mrs. Pearce. “I didn’t think of that;
but that only makes it the more wonderful, doesn’t
it? because, you see, he didn’t go
on the Evening Star.”
“Wot?” ses
George Hatchard. “Why you told me yourself ”
“I know I did,” ses
Mrs. Pearce, “but that was only just to spare
your feelings. Charlie was going to sea
in her, but he was prevented.”
“Prevented?” ses two or three of
’em.
“Yes,” ses Mrs. Pearce;
“the night afore he was to ’ave sailed
there was some silly mistake over a diamond ring,
and he got five years. He gave a different name
at the police-station, and naturally everybody thought
’e went down with the ship. And when he
died in prison I didn’t undeceive ’em.”
She took out her ’andkerchief,
and while she was busy with it Bill Flurry got up
and went out on tiptoe. Young Alf got up a second
or two arterwards to see where he’d gone; and
the last Joe Morgan and his missis see of the happy
couple they was sitting on one chair, and George Hatchard
was making desprit and ’artrending attempts to
smile.