After the quiet of Little Primpton,
the hurry and the noise of Victoria were a singular
relief to James. Waiting for his luggage, he watched
the various movements of the scene-the
trollies pushed along with warning cries, the porters
lifting heavy packages on to the bellied roof of hansoms,
the people running to and fro, the crowd of cabs; and
driving out, he was exhilarated by the confusion in
the station yard, and the intense life, half gay,
half sordid, of the Wilton Road. He took a room
in Jermyn Street, according to Major Forsyth’s
recommendation, and walked to his club. James
had been out of London so long that he came back with
the emotions of a stranger; common scenes, the glitter
of shops, the turmoil of the Circus, affected him
with pleased surprise, and with a child’s amusement
he paused to stare at the advertisements on a hoarding.
He looked forward to seeing old friends, and on his
way down Piccadilly even expected to meet one or two
of them sauntering along.
As a matter of form, James asked at
his club whether there were any letters for him.
“I don’t think so, sir,”
said the porter, but turned to the pigeon-holes and
took out a bundle. He looked them over, and then
handed one to James.
“Hulloa, who’s this from?”
Suddenly something gripped his heart;
he felt the blood rush to his cheeks, and a cold tremor
ran through all his limbs. He recognised the
handwriting of Mrs. Pritchard-Wallace, and there was
a penny stamp on the envelope. She was in England.
The letter had been posted in London.
He turned away and walked towards
a table that stood near the window of the hall.
A thousand recollections surged across his memory
tumultuously; the paper was scented (how characteristic
that was of her, and in what bad taste!); he saw at
once her smile and the look of her eyes. He had
a mad desire passionately to kiss the letter; a load
of weariness fell from his heart; he felt insanely
happy, as though angry storm-clouds had been torn
asunder, and the sun in its golden majesty shone calmly
upon the earth.... Then, with sudden impulse,
he tore the unopened letter into a dozen pieces and
threw them away. He straightened himself, and
walked into the smoking-room.
James looked round and saw nobody
he knew, quietly took a magazine from the table, and
sat down; but the blood-vessels in his brain throbbed
so violently that he thought something horrible would
happen to him. He heard the regular, quick beating,
like the implacable hammering of gnomes upon some
hidden, distant anvil.
“She’s in London,” he repeated.
When had the letter been posted?
At least, he might have looked at the mark on the
envelope. Was it a year ago? Was it lately?
The letter did not look as though it had been lying
about the club for many months. Had it not still
the odour of those dreadful Parma violets? She
must have seen in the paper his return from Africa,
wounded and ill. And what did she say? Did
she merely write a few cold words of congratulation
or-more?
It was terrible that after three years
the mere sight of her handwriting should have power
to throw him into this state of eager, passionate
anguish. He was seized with the old panic, the
terrified perception of his surrender, of his utter
weakness, which made flight the only possible resistance.
That was why he had destroyed the letter unread.
When Mrs. Wallace was many thousand miles away there
had been no danger in confessing that he loved her;
but now it was different. What did she say in
the letter? Had she in some feminine, mysterious
fashion discovered his secret? Did she ask him
to go and see her? James remembered one of their
conversations.
“Oh, I love going to London!”
she had cried, opening her arms with the charming,
exotic gesticulation which distinguished her from all
other women. “I enjoy myself awfully.”
“What do you do?”
“Everything. And I write
to poor Dick three times a week, and tell him all
I haven’t done.”
“I can’t bear the grass-widow,”
said James.
“Poor boy, you can’t bear
anything that’s amusing! I never knew anyone
with such an ideal of woman as you have-a
gloomy mixture of frumpishness and angularity.”
James did not answer.
“Don’t you wish we were
in London now?” she went on. “You
and I together? I really believe I should have
to take you about. You’re as innocent as
a babe.”
“D’you think so?” said James, rather
hurt.
“Now, if we were in town, on our own, what would
you do?”
“Oh, I don’t know.
I suppose make a little party and dine somewhere, and
go to the Savoy to see the ‘Mikado.’”
Mrs. Wallace laughed.
“I know. A party of four-yourself
and me, and two maiden aunts. And we should be
very prim, and talk about the weather, and go in a
growler for propriety’s sake. I know that
sort of evening. And after the maiden aunts had
seen me safety home, I should simply howl from boredom.
My dear boy, I’m respectable enough here.
When I’m on my own, I want to go on the loose.
Now, I’ll tell you what I want to do if ever
we are in town together. Will you promise to
do it?”
“If I possibly can.”
“All right! Well, you shall
fetch me in the fastest hansom you can find, and remember
to tell the driver to go as quick as ever he dare.
We’ll dine alone, please, at the most expensive
restaurant in London! You’ll engage a table
in the middle of the room, and you must see that the
people all round us are very smart and very shady.
It always makes me feel so virtuous to look at disreputable
women! Do I shock you?”
“Not more than usual.”
“How absurd you are! Then
we’ll go to the Empire. And after that we’ll
go somewhere else, and have supper where the people
are still smarter and still shadier; and then we’ll
go to Covent Garden Ball. Oh, you don’t
know how I long to go on the rampage sometimes!
I get so tired of propriety.”
“And what will P. W. say to all this?”
“Oh, I’ll write and tell
him that I spent the evening with some of his poor
relations, and give eight pages of corroborative evidence.”
James thought of Pritchard-Wallace,
gentlest and best-humoured of men. He was a great
big fellow, with a heavy moustache and kind eyes; always
ready to stand by anyone in difficulties, always ready
with comfort or with cheery advice; whoever wanted
help went to him as though it were the most natural
thing in the world. And it was touching to see
the dog-like devotion to his wife; he had such confidence
in her that he never noticed her numerous flirtations.
Pritchard-Wallace thought himself rather a dull stick,
and he wanted her to amuse herself. So brilliant
a creature could not be expected to find sufficient
entertainment in a quiet man of easy-going habits.
“Go your own way, my girl,”
he said; “I know you’re all right.
And so long as you keep a place for me in the bottom
of your heart, you can do whatever you like.”
“Of course, I don’t care
two straws for anyone but you, silly old thing!”
And she pulled his moustache and kissed
his lips; and he went off on his business, his heart
swelling with gratitude, because Providence had given
him the enduring love of so beautiful and enchanting
a little woman.
“P. W. is worth ten of
you,” James told her indignantly one day, when
he had been witness to some audacious deception.
“Well, he doesn’t think so. And that’s
the chief thing.”
James dared not see her. It was
obviously best to have destroyed the letter.
After all, it was probably nothing more than a curt,
formal congratulation, and its coldness would nearly
have broken his heart. He feared also lest in
his never-ceasing thought he had crystallised his
beloved into something quite different from reality.
His imagination was very active, and its constant
play upon those few recollections might easily have
added many a false delight. To meet Mrs. Wallace
would only bring perhaps a painful disillusion; and
of that James was terrified, for without this passion
which occupied his whole soul he would be now singularly
alone in the world. It was a fantastic, charming
figure that he had made for himself, and he could
worship it without danger and without reproach.
Was it not better to preserve his dream from the sullen
irruption of fact? But why would that perfume
come perpetually entangling itself with his memory?
It gave the image new substance; and when he closed
his eyes, the woman seemed so near that he could feel
against his face the fragrance of her breath.
He dined alone, and spent the hours
that followed in reading. By some chance he was
able to find no one he knew, and he felt rather bored.
He went to bed with a headache, feeling already the
dreariness of London without friends.
Next morning James wandered in the
Park, fresh and delightful with the rhododendrons;
but the people he saw hurt him by their almost aggressive
happiness-vivacious, cheerful, and careless,
they were all evidently of opinion that no reasonable
creature could complain with the best of all possible
worlds. The girls that hurried past on ponies,
or on bicycles up and down the well-kept road, gave
him an impression of light-heartedness which was fascinating,
yet made his own solitude more intolerable. Their
cheeks glowed with healthiness in the summer air, and
their gestures, their laughter, were charmingly animated.
He noticed the smile which a slender Amazon gave to
a man who raised his hat, and read suddenly in their
eyes a happy, successful tenderness. Once, galloping
towards him, he saw a woman who resembled Mrs. Wallace,
and his heart stood still. He had an intense
longing to behold her just once more, unseen of her;
but he was mistaken. The rider approached and
passed, and it was no one he knew.
Then, tired and sore at heart, James
went back to his club. The day passed monotonously,
and the day after he was seized by the peculiar discomfort
of the lonely sojourner in great cities. The thronging,
busy crowd added to his solitariness. When he
saw acquaintances address one another in the club,
or walk along the streets in conversation, he could
hardly bear his own friendlessness; the interests of
all these people seemed so fixed and circumscribed,
their lives were already so full, that they could
only look upon a new-comer with hostility. He
would have felt less lonely on a desert island than
in the multitudinous city, surrounded by hurrying
strangers. He scarcely knew how he managed to
drag through the day, tired of the eternal smoking-room,
tired of wandering about. The lodgings which
Major Forsyth had recommended were like barracks;
a tall, narrow house, in which James had a room at
the top, looking on to a blank wall. They were
dreadfully cheerless. And as James climbed the
endless stairs he felt an irritation at the joyous
laughter that came from other rooms. Behind those
closed, forbidding doors people were happy and light
of heart; only he was alone, and must remain perpetually
imprisoned within himself. He went to the theatre,
but here again, half insanely, he felt a barrier between
himself and the rest of the audience. For him
the piece offered no illusions; he could only see
painted actors strutting affectedly in unnatural costumes;
the scenery was mere painted cloth, and the dialogue
senseless inanity. With all his might James wished
that he were again in Africa, with work to do and
danger to encounter. There the solitude was never
lonely, and the nights were blue and silent, rich
with the countless stars.
He had been in London a week.
One day, towards evening, while he walked down Piccadilly,
looking aimlessly at the people and asking himself
what their inmost thoughts could be, he felt a hand
on his shoulder, and a cheery voice called out his
name.
“I knew it was you, Parsons!
Where the devil have you sprung from?”
He turned round and saw a man he had
known in India. Jamie’s solitude and boredom
had made him almost effusive.
“By Jove, I am glad to see you!”
he said, wringing the fellow’s hand. “Come
and have a drink. I’ve seen no one for days,
and I’m dying to have some one to talk to.”
“I think I can manage it.
I’ve got a train to catch at eight; I’m
just off to Scotland.”
Jamie’s face fell.
“I was going to ask you to dine with me.”
“I’m awfully sorry! I’m afraid
I can’t.”
They talked of one thing and another,
till Jamie’s friend said he must go immediately;
they shook hands.
“Oh, by the way,” said
the man, suddenly remembering, “I saw a pal of
yours the other day, who’s clamouring for you.”
“For me?”
James reddened, knowing at once, instinctively,
that it could only be one person.
“D’you remember Mrs. Pritchard-Wallace?
She’s in London. I saw her at a party,
and she asked me if I knew anything about you.
She’s staying in Half Moon Street, at 201.
You’d better go and see her. Good-bye!
I must simply bolt.”
He left James hurriedly, and did not
notice the effect of his few words.... She still
thought of him, she asked for him, she wished him to
go to her. The gods in their mercy had sent him
the address; with beating heart and joyful step, James
immediately set out. The throng in his way vanished,
and he felt himself walking along some roadway of
ethereal fire, straight to his passionate love-a
roadway miraculously fashioned for his feet, leading
only to her. Every thought left him but that
the woman he adored was waiting, waiting, ready to
welcome him with that exquisite smile, with the hands
which were like the caresses of Aphrodite, turned
to visible flesh. But he stopped short.
“What’s the good?” he cried, bitterly.
Before him the sun was setting like
a vision of love, colouring with softness and with
quiet the manifold life of the city. James looked
at it, his heart swelling with sadness; for with it
seemed to die his short joy, and the shadows lengthening
were like the sad facts of reality which crept into
his soul one by one silently.
“I won’t go,” he
cried; “I daren’t! Oh, God help me,
and give me strength!”
He turned into the Green Park, where
lovers sat entwined upon the benches, and in the pleasant
warmth the idlers and the weary slept upon the grass.
James sank heavily upon a seat, and gave himself over
to his wretchedness.
The night fell, and the lamps upon
Piccadilly were lit, and in the increasing silence
the roar of London sounded more intensely. From
the darkness, as if it were the scene of a play, James
watched the cabs and ’buses pass rapidly in
the light, the endless procession of people like disembodied
souls drifting aimlessly before the wind. It was
a comfort and a relief to sit there unseen, under
cover of the night. He observed the turmoil with
a new, disinterested curiosity, feeling strangely as
if he were no longer among the living. He found
himself surprised that they thought it worth while
to hurry and to trouble. The couples on the benches
remained in silent ecstasy; and sometimes a dark figure
slouched past, sorrowful and mysterious.
At last James went out, surprised
to find it was so late. The theatres had disgorged
their crowds, and Piccadilly was thronged, gay, vivacious,
and insouciant. For a moment there was a certain
luxury about its vice; the harlot gained the pompousness
of a Roman courtesan, and the vulgar debauchee had
for a little while the rich, corrupt decadence of art
and splendour.
James turned into Half Moon Street,
which now was all deserted and silent, and walked
slowly, with anguish tearing at his heart, towards
the house in which lodged Mrs. Wallace. One window
was still lit, and he wondered whether it was hers;
it would have been an exquisite pleasure if he could
but have seen her form pass the drawn blind. Ah,
he could not have mistaken it! Presently the
light was put out, and the whole house was in darkness.
He waited on, for no reason-pleased to be
near her. He waited half the night, till he was
so tired he could scarcely drag himself home.
In the morning James was ill and tired,
and disillusioned; his head ached so that he could
hardly bear the pain, and in all his limbs he felt
a strange and heavy lassitude. He wondered why
he had troubled himself about the woman who cared
nothing-nothing whatever for him. He
repeated about her the bitter, scornful things he had
said so often. He fancied he had suddenly grown
indifferent.
“I shall go back to Primpton,”
he said; “London is too horrible.”