MR. WILLIAM JOBLING leaned against
his door-post, smoking. The evening air, pleasant
in its coolness after the heat of the day, caressed
his shirt-sleeved arms. Children played noisily
in the long, dreary street, and an organ sounded faintly
in the distance. To Mr. Jobling, who had just
consumed three herrings and a pint and a half of strong
tea, the scene was delightful. He blew a little
cloud of smoke in the air, and with half-closed eyes
corrected his first impression as to the tune being
played round the corner.
“Bill!” cried the voice
of Mrs. Jobling, who was washing-up in the tiny scullery.
“’Ullo!” responded Mr. Jobling,
gruffly.
“You’ve been putting your
wet teaspoon in the sugar-basin, and well,
I declare, if you haven’t done it again.”
“Done what?” inquired
her husband, hunching his shoulders.
“Putting your herringy knife
in the butter. Well, you can eat it now; I won’t.
A lot of good me slaving from morning to night and
buying good food when you go and spoil it like that.”
Mr. Jobling removed the pipe from
his mouth. “Not so much of it,” he
commanded. “I like butter with a little
flavor to it. As for your slaving all day, you
ought to come to the works for a week; you’d
know what slavery was then.”
Mrs. Jobling permitted herself a thin,
derisive cackle, drowned hurriedly in a clatter of
tea-cups as her husband turned and looked angrily
up the little passage.
“Nag! nag! nag!” said Mr. Jobling.
He paused expectantly.
“Nag! nag! nag! from morning
till night,” he resumed. “It begins
in the morning and it goes on till bedtime.”
“It’s a pity ” began
Mrs. Jobling.
“Hold your tongue,” said
her husband, sternly; “I don’t want any
of your back answers. It goes on all day long
up to bedtime, and last night I laid awake for two
hours listening to you nagging in your sleep.”
He paused again.
“Nagging in your sleep,” he repeated.
There was no reply.
“Two hours!” he said, invitingly; “two
whole hours, without a stop.”
“I ’ope it done you good,”
retorted his wife. “I noticed you did wipe
one foot when you come in to-night.”
Mr. Jobling denied the charge hotly,
and, by way of emphasizing his denial, raised his
foot and sent the mat flying along the passage.
Honor satisfied, he returned to the door-post and,
looking idly out on the street again, exchanged a
few desultory remarks with Mr. Joe Brown, who, with
his hands in his pockets, was balancing himself with
great skill on the edge of the curb opposite.
His gaze wandered from Mr. Brown to
a young and rather stylishly-dressed woman who was
approaching a tall, good-looking girl with
a slight limp, whose hat encountered unspoken feminine
criticism at every step. Their eyes met as she
came up, and recognition flashed suddenly into both
faces.
“Fancy seeing you here!”
said the girl. “Well, this is a pleasant
surprise.”
She held out her hand, and Mr. Jobling,
with a fierce glance at Mr. Brown, who was not behaving,
shook it respectfully.
“I’m so glad to see you
again,” said the girl; “I know I didn’t
thank you half enough the other night, but I was too
upset.”
“Don’t mention it,”
said Mr. Jobling, in a voice the humility of which
was in strong contrast to the expression with which
he was regarding the antics of Mr. Brown, as that
gentleman wafted kisses to the four winds of heaven.
There was a pause, broken by a short,
dry cough from the parlor window. The girl, who
was almost touching the sill, started nervously.
“It’s only my missis,” said Mr.
Jobling.
The girl turned and gazed in at the
window. Mr. Jobling, with the stem of his pipe,
performed a brief ceremony of introduction.
“Good-evening,” said Mrs.
Jobling, in a thin voice. “I don’t
know who you are, but I s’pose my ’usband
does.”
“I met him the other night,”
said the girl, with a bright smile; “I slipped
on a piece of peel or something and fell, and he was
passing and helped me up.”
Mrs. Jobling coughed again. “First
I’ve heard of it,” she remarked.
“I forgot to tell you,”
said Mr. Jobling, carelessly. “I hope you
wasn’t hurt much, miss?”
“I twisted my ankle a bit, that’s
all,” said the girl; “it’s painful
when I walk.”
“Painful now?” inquired Mr. Jobling, in
concern.
The girl nodded. “A little; not very.”
Mr. Jobling hesitated; the contortions
of Mr. Brown’s face as he strove to make a wink
carry across the road would have given pause to a bolder
man; and twice his wife’s husky little cough
had sounded from the window.
“I s’pose you wouldn’t
like to step inside and rest for five minutes?”
he said, slowly.
“Oh, thank you,” said
the girl, gratefully; “I should like to.
It it really is very painful. I ought
not to have walked so far.”
She limped in behind Mr. Jobling,
and after bowing to Mrs. Jobling sank into the easy-chair
with a sigh of relief and looked keenly round the
room. Mr. Jobling disappeared, and his wife flushed
darkly as he came back with his coat on and his hair
wet from combing. An awkward silence ensued.
“How strong your husband is!”
said the girl, clasping her hands impulsively.
“Is he?” said Mrs. Jobling.
“He lifted me up as though I
had been a feather,” responded the girl.
“He just put his arm round my waist and had me
on my feet before I knew where I was.”
“Round your waist?” repeated Mrs. Jobling.
“Where else should I put it?”
broke in her husband, with sudden violence.
His wife made no reply, but sat gazing
in a hostile fashion at the bold, dark eyes and stylish
hat of the visitor.
“I should like to be strong,”
said the latter, smiling agreeably over at Mr. Jobling.
“When I was younger,”
said that gratified man, “I can assure you I
didn’t know my own strength, as the saying is.
I used to hurt people just in play like, without knowing
it. I used to have a hug like a bear.”
“Fancy being hugged like that!”
said the girl. “How awful!” she added,
hastily, as she caught the eye of the speechless Mrs.
Jobling.
“Like a bear,” repeated
Mr. Jobling, highly pleased at the impression he had
made. “I’m pretty strong now; there
ain’t many as I’m afraid of.”
He bent his arm and thoughtfully felt
his biceps, and Mrs. Jobling almost persuaded herself
that she must be dreaming, as she saw the girl lean
forward and pinch Mr. Jobling’s arm. Mr.
Jobling was surprised too, but he had the presence
of mind to bend the other.
“Enormous!” said the girl,
“and as hard as iron. What a prize-fighter
you’d have made!”
“He don’t want to do no
prize-fighting,” said Mrs. Jobling, recovering
her speech; “he’s a respectable married
man.”
Mr. Jobling shook his head over lost
opportunities. “I’m too old,”
he remarked.
“He’s forty-seven,” said his wife.
“Best age for a man, in my opinion,”
said the girl; “just entering his prime.
And a man is as old as he feels, you know.”
Mr. Jobling nodded acquiescence and
observed that he always felt about twenty-two; a state
of affairs which he ascribed to regular habits, and
a great partiality for the company of young people.
“I was just twenty-two when
I married,” he mused, “and my missis was
just six months ”
“You leave my age alone,”
interrupted his wife, trembling with passion.
“I’m not so fond of telling my age to strangers.”
“You told mine,” retorted
Mr. Jobling, “and nobody asked you to do that.
Very free you was in coming out with mine.”
“I ain’t the only one
that’s free,” breathed the quivering Mrs.
Jobling. “I ’ope your ankle is better?”
she added, turning to the visitor.
“Much better, thank you,” was the reply.
“Got far to go?” queried Mrs. Jobling.
The girl nodded. “But I
shall take a tram at the end of the street,”
she said, rising.
Mr. Jobling rose too, and all that
he had ever heard or read about etiquette came crowding
into his mind. A weekly journal patronized by
his wife had three columns regularly, but he taxed
his memory in vain for any instructions concerning
brown-eyed strangers with sprained ankles. He
felt that the path of duty led to the tram-lines.
In a somewhat blundering fashion he proffered his
services; the girl accepted them as a matter of course.
Mrs. Jobling, with lips tightly compressed,
watched them from the door. The girl, limping
slightly, walked along with the utmost composure,
but the bearing of her escort betokened a mind fully
conscious of the scrutiny of the street.
He returned in about half an hour,
and having this time to run the gauntlet of the street
alone, entered with a mien which caused his wife’s
complaints to remain unspoken. The cough of Mr.
Brown, a particularly contagious one, still rang in
his ears, and he sat for some time in fierce silence.
“I see her on the tram,”
he said, at last. “Her name’s Robinson Miss
Robinson.”
“Indeed!” said his wife.
“Seems a nice sort o’
girl,” said Mr. Jobling, carelessly. “She’s
took quite a fancy to you.”
“I’m sure I’m much obliged to her,”
retorted his wife.
“So I so I asked
her to give you a look in now and then,” continued
Mr. Jobling, filling his pipe with great care, “and
she said she would. It’ll cheer you up
a bit.”
Mrs. Jobling bit her lip and, although
she had never felt more fluent in her life, said nothing.
Her husband lit his pipe, and after a rapid glance
in her direction took up an old newspaper and began
to read.
He astonished Mrs. Jobling next day
by the gift of a geranium in full bloom. Surprise
impeded her utterance, but she thanked him at last
with some warmth, and after a little deliberation
decided to put it in the bedroom.
Mr. Jobling looked like a man who
has suddenly discovered a flaw in his calculations.
“I was thinking of the front parlor winder,”
he said, at last.
“It’ll get more sun upstairs,” said
his wife.
She took the pot in her arms, and
disappeared. Her surprise when she came down
again and found Mr. Jobling rearranging the furniture,
and even adding a choice ornament or two from the
kitchen, was too elaborate to escape his notice.
“Been going to do it for some time,” he
remarked.
Mrs. Jobling left the room and strove
with herself in the scullery. She came back pale
of face and with a gleam in her eye which her husband
was too busy to notice.
“It’ll never look much
till we get a new hearthrug,” she said, shaking
her head. “They’ve got one at Jackson’s
that would be just the thing; and they’ve got
a couple of tall pink vases that would brighten up
the fireplace wonderful. They’re going
for next to nothing, too.”
Mr. Jobling’s reply took the
form of uncouth and disagreeable growlings. After
that phase had passed he sat for some time with his
hand placed protectingly in his trouser-pocket.
Finally, in a fierce voice, he inquired the cost.
Ten minutes later, in a state fairly
evenly divided between pleasure and fury, Mrs. Jobling
departed with the money. Wild yearnings for courage
that would enable her to spend the money differently,
and confront the dismayed Mr. Jobling in a new hat
and jacket, possessed her on the way; but they were
only yearnings, twenty-five years’ experience
of her husband’s temper being a sufficient safeguard.
Miss Robinson came in the day after
as they were sitting down to tea. Mr. Jobling,
who was in his shirt-sleeves, just had time to disappear
as the girl passed the window. His wife let her
in, and after five remarks about the weather sat listening
in grim pleasure to the efforts of Mr. Jobling to
find his coat. He found it at last, under a chair
cushion, and, somewhat red of face, entered the room
and greeted the visitor.
Conversation was at first rather awkward.
The girl’s eyes wandered round the room and
paused in astonishment on the pink vases; the beauty
of the rug also called for notice.
“Yes, they’re pretty good,”
said Mr. Jobling, much gratified by her approval.
“Beautiful,” murmured
the girl. “What a thing it is to have money!”
she said, wistfully.
“I could do with some,”
said Mr. Jobling, with jocularity. He helped
himself to bread and butter and began to discuss money
and how to spend it. His ideas favored retirement
and a nice little place in the country.
“I wonder you don’t do it,” said
the girl, softly.
Mr. Jobling laughed. “Gingell
and Watson don’t pay on those lines,” he
said. “We do the work and they take the
money.”
“It’s always the way,”
said the girl, indignantly; “they have all the
luxuries, and the men who make the money for them all
the hardships. I seem to know the name Gingell
and Watson. I wonder where I’ve seen it?”
“In the paper, p’r’aps,” said
Mr. Jobling.
“Advertising?” asked the girl.
Mr. Jobling shook his head. “Robbery,”
he replied, seriously. “It was in last
week’s paper. Somebody got to the safe and
got away with nine hundred pounds in gold and bank-notes.”
“I remember now,” said the girl, nodding,
“Did they catch them?”
“No, and not likely to,” was the reply.
Miss Robinson opened her big eyes
and looked round with an air of pretty defiance.
“I am glad of it,” she said.
“Glad?” said Mrs. Jobling,
involuntarily breaking a self-imposed vow of silence.
“Glad?”
The girl nodded. “I like
pluck,” she said, with a glance in the direction
of Mr. Jobling; “and, besides, whoever took it
had as much right to it as Gingell and Watson; they
didn’t earn it.”
Mrs. Jobling, appalled at such ideas,
glanced at her husband to see how he received them.
“The man’s a thief,” she said, with
great energy, “and he won’t enjoy his
gains.”
“I dare say I dare
say he’ll enjoy it right enough,” said
Mr. Jobling, “if he ain’t caught, that
is.”
“I believe he is the sort of
man I should like,” declared Miss Robinson,
obstinately.
“I dare say,” said Mrs.
Jobling; “and I’ve no doubt he’d
like you. Birds of a ”
“That’ll do,” said
her husband, peremptorily; “that’s enough
about it. The guv’nors can afford to lose
it; that’s one comfort.”
He leaned over as the girl asked for
more sugar and dropped a spoonful in her cup, expressing
surprise that she should like her tea so sweet.
Miss Robinson, denying the sweetness, proffered her
cup in proof, and Mrs. Jobling sat watching with blazing
eyes the antics of her husband as he sipped at it.
“Sweets to the sweet,”
he said, gallantly, as he handed it back.
Miss Robinson pouted, and, raising
the cup to her lips, gazed ardently at him over the
rim. Mr. Jobling, who certainly felt not more
than twenty-two that evening, stole her cake and received
in return a rap from a teaspoon. Mr. Jobling
retaliated, and Mrs. Jobling, unable to eat, sat looking
on in helpless fury at little arts of fascination which
she had discarded at Mr. Jobling’s
earnest request soon after their marriage.
By dint of considerable self-control,
aided by an occasional glance from her husband, she
managed to preserve her calm until he returned from
accompaning the visitor to her tram. Then her
pent-up feelings found vent. Quietly scornful
at first, she soon waxed hysterical over his age and
figure. Tears followed as she bade him remember
what a good wife she had been to him, loudly claiming
that any other woman would have poisoned him long
ago. Speedily finding that tears were of no avail,
and that Mr. Jobling seemed to regard them rather
as a tribute to his worth than otherwise, she gave
way to fury, and, in a fine, but unpunctuated passage,
told him her exact opinion of Miss Robinson.
“It’s no good carrying
on like that,” said Mr. Jobling, magisterially,
“and, what’s more, I won’t have it.”
“Walking into my house and making
eyes at my ’usband,” stormed his wife.
“So long as I don’t make
eyes at her there’s no harm done,” retorted
Mr. Jobling. “I can’t help her taking
a fancy to me, poor thing.”
“I’d poor thing her,” said his wife.
“She’s to be pitied,”
said Mr. Jobling, sternly. “I know how she
feels. She can’t help herself, but she’ll
get oyer it in time. I don’t suppose she
thinks for a moment we have noticed her her her
liking for me, and I’m not going to have her
feelings hurt.”
“What about my feelings?” demanded his
wife.
“You have got me,” Mr. Jobling
reminded her.
The nine points of the law was Mrs.
Jobling’s only consolation for the next few
days. Neighboring matrons, exchanging sympathy
for information, wished, strangely enough, that Mr.
Jobling was their husband. Failing that they
offered Mrs. Jobling her choice of at least a hundred
plans for bringing him to his senses.
Mr. Jobling, who was a proud man,
met their hostile glances as he passed to and from
his work with scorn, until a day came when the hostility
vanished and gave place to smiles. Never so many
people in the street, he thought, as he returned from
work; certainly never so many smiles. People
came hurriedly from their back premises to smile at
him, and, as he reached his door, Mr. Joe Brown opposite
had all the appearance of a human sunbeam. Tired
of smiling faces, he yearned for that of his wife.
She came out of the kitchen and met him with a look
of sly content. The perplexed Mr. Jobling eyed
her morosely.
“What are you laughing at me for?” he
demanded.
“I wasn’t laughing at you,” said
his wife.
She went back into the kitchen and
sang blithely as she bustled over the preparations
for tea. Her voice was feeble, but there was a
triumphant effectiveness about the high notes which
perplexed the listener sorely. He seated himself
in the new easy-chair procured to satisfy
the supposed aesthetic tastes of Miss Robinson and
stared at the window.
“You seem very happy all of
a sudden,” he growled, as his wife came in with
the tray.
“Well, why shouldn’t I
be?” inquired Mrs. Jobling. “I’ve
got everything to make me so.”
Mr. Jobling looked at her in undisguised amazement.
“New easy-chair, new vases,
and a new hearth-rug,” explained his wife, looking
round the room. “Did you order that little
table you said you would?”
“Yes,” growled Mr. Jobling.
“Pay for it?” inquired his wife, with
a trace of anxiety.
“Yes,” said Mr. Jobling again.
Mrs. Jobling’s face relaxed.
“I shouldn’t like to lose it at the last
moment,” she said. “You ’ave
been good to me lately, Bill; buying all these nice
things. There’s not many women have got
such a thoughtful husband as what I have.”
“Have you gone dotty? or what?” enquired
her bewildered husband.
“It’s no wonder people
like you,” pursued Mrs. Jobling, ignoring the
question, and smiling again as she placed three chairs
at the table. “I’ll wait a minute
or two before I soak the tea; I expect Miss Robinson
won’t be long, and she likes it fresh.”
Mr. Jobling, to conceal his amazement
and to obtain a little fresh air walked out of the
room and opened the front door.
“Cheer oh!” said the watchful
Mr. Brown, with a benignant smile.
Mr. Jobling scowled at him.
“It’s all right,”
said Mr. Brown. “You go in and set down;
I’m watching for her.”
He nodded reassuringly, and, not having
curiosity enough to accept the other’s offer
and step across the road and see what he would get,
shaded his eyes with his hand and looked with exaggerated
anxiety up the road. Mr. Jobling, heavy of brow,
returned to the parlor and looked hard at his wife.
“She’s late,” said
Mrs. Jobling, glancing at the clock. “I
do hope she’s all right, but I should feel anxious
about her if she was my gal. It’s a dangerous
life.”
“Dangerous life!” said
Mr. Jobling, roughly. “What’s a dangerous
life?”
“Why, hers,” replied his
wife, with a nervous smile. “Joe Brown told
me. He followed her ’ome last night, and
this morning he found out all about her.”
The mention of Mr. Brown’s name
caused Mr. Jobling at first to assume an air of indifference;
but curiosity overpowered him.
“What lies has he been telling?” he demanded.
“I don’t think it’s
a lie, Bill,” said his wife, mildly. “Putting
two and two ”
“What did he say?” cried Mr. Jobling,
raising his voice.
“He said, ‘She she’s
a lady detective,’” stammered Mrs. Jobling,
putting her handkerchief to her unruly mouth.
“A tec!” repeated her husband. “A
lady tec?”
Mrs. Jobling nodded. “Yes, Bill. She she she ”
“Well?” said Mr. Jobling, in exasperation.
“She’s being employed by Gingell and Watson,”
said his wife.
Mr. Jobling sprang to his feet, and
with scarlet face and clinched fists strove to assimilate
the information and all its meaning.
“What what did she
come here for? Do you mean to tell me she thinks
I took the money?” he said, huskily, after a
long pause.
Mrs. Jobling bent before the storm. “I
think she took a fancy to you,
Bill,” she said, timidly.
Mr. Jobling appeared to swallow something;
then he took a step nearer to her. “You
let me see you laugh again, that’s all,”
he said, fiercely. “As for that Jezzybill ”
“There she is,” said his
wife, as a knock sounded at the door. “Don’t
say anything to hurt her feelings, Bill. You said
she was to be pitied. And it must be a hard life
to ’ave to go round and flatter old married
men. I shouldn’t like it.”
Mr. Jobling, past speech, stood and
glared at her. Then, with an inarticulate cry,
he rushed to the front door and flung it open.
Miss Robinson, fresh and bright, stood smiling outside.
Within easy distance a little group of neighbors were
making conversation, while opposite Mr. Brown awaited
events.
“What d’you want?” demanded Mr.
Jobling, harshly.
Miss Robinson, who had put out her
hand, drew it back and gave him a swift glance.
His red face and knitted brows told their own story.
“Oh!” she said, with a
winning smile, “will you please tell Mrs. Jobling
that I can’t come to tea with her this evening?”
“Isn’t there anything
else you’d like to say?” inquired Mr. Jobling,
disdainfully, as she turned away.
The girl paused and appeared to reflect.
“You can say that I am sorry to miss an amusing
evening,” she said, regarding him steadily.
“Good-by.”
Mr. Jobling slammed the door.