<hr /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>XI</h2>
<h3>PRISON</h3>
<p>"Joe," inquired Elsie, "where's your papers?"</p>
<p>She had brought his clothes—dry, folded, and possibly
wearable—back into her bedroom. She had found nothing in the
pockets of the suit except some cigarette-card portraits of famous
footballers, a charred pipe, three French sous, and a broken
jack-knife. These articles, the raiment, and a pair of battered
shoes which she had pushed under the bed and forgotten, seemed to be
all that Joe had to show for more than twenty years of strenuous and
dangerous life on earth—much less even than Elsie could show. The
paucity of his possessions did not trouble her, and scarcely
surprised her, for she knew that very many unmarried men, with no
incentive to accumulate what they could immediately squander in
personal use, had no more reserves than Joe; but the absence of
the sacred "papers" disturbed her. Every man in her world could,
when it came to the point, produce papers of some sort from
somewhere—army-discharge, pension documents, testimonials,
birth-certificate, etc., etc. Even the tramps who flitted in and out
of Rowton House had their papers to which they rightly attached the
greatest importance. No man in Elsie's world could get far along
without papers, unless specially protected by heaven; and, sooner or
later—generally sooner than later—heaven grew tired of protecting.</p>
<p>All day Elsie had been awaiting an opportunity to speak to Joe about his
papers. The opportunity had now come. Mr. Earlforward could be left for
an hour or so. Joe was apparently in less pain. The two bedrooms were
tidied up. Both men had been fed. Joe had had more<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</SPAN></span> quinine. She could
not sponge him again till the morrow. She herself had drunk two cups of
tea, and eaten the last contents of the larder. She had lighted a new
candle—the last candle—in the candlestick. She had brought coal and
mended the fire. The next morning she would have a great deal to do and
to arrange—getting money, marketing, seeing the doctor and Mrs.
Belrose, discussing the funeral with Mr. Earlforward—terrible
anxieties—but for the present she was free.</p>
<p>Joe made no answer. He seemed to be trying to frame sentences. She
encouraged him with a repetition:</p>
<p>"Where's your papers? I can't find 'em nowhere. You haven't lost them,
have ye?" Her brow contracted in apprehension.</p>
<p>"I sold 'em," said Joe, in his deep, vibrating and yet feeble voice. He
looked away.</p>
<p>"Sold 'em, Joe? Ye never sold 'em!"</p>
<p>"Yes I have, I tell ye. I sold 'em yesterday morning."</p>
<p>"But, Joey——"</p>
<p>"I sold 'em yesterday morning to a man as came to meet a man as came out
of Pentonville same time as me."</p>
<p>"Pentonville! Joe, d'ye mean ye've been to prison?" He nodded. "What a
shame!" she exclaimed in protest, not at his having done anything wicked
enough to send him to prison, but at the police having been wicked
enough to send him to prison. She assumed instinctively and positively
that he was an innocent victim of the ruthless blue men whom some people
know only as pilots of perambulators across busy streets.</p>
<p>"There was no option, ye know, so I had fourteen days."</p>
<p>She dropped on her knees at the bedside, and put her left arm under his
neck and threw her right arm over his waist, and with it felt again the
familiar shape of his waist through the bedclothes, and gazed into his
homely, ugly face upon which soft, dark hair—a beard on the chin—was
sprouting. This faith and tenderness made Joe cry.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Tell me," she murmured, scarcely hoping that he would succeed in any
narrative.</p>
<p>"Oh, it's nothin'," Joe replied gloomily. "Armistice Day, ye know. I had
my afternoon, and I went out."</p>
<p>"Were ye in a place, Joe?"</p>
<p>"I had a part-time place in Oxford Street—carrying coal upstairs, and
cleaning brasses and sweeping and errands. And a bed. Yes, in the
basement. Sort of a watchman. Doctor he give me a testimonial. Least, he
sent it me when I wrote and asked him." (No doubt whatever that she had
been unjust to that doctor!) "I went down to Piccadilly to see the
sights, and when it was about dark I see our old divisional general in a
damn big car with two young ladies. There was a block, ye see, in
Piccadilly Circus, and he was stopped by the kerb where them
flower-girls are, ye know, by the fountain, and I was standing there as
close as I am to you, Elsie. We used to call him the Slaughterer. That
was how we called him. We never called him nothin' else. And there he
was with his two rows o' ribbons and his flash women, perhaps they
weren't flash, and I didn't like the look of his face—hard, ye know.
Cruel. We knowed him, we did. And then I thought of the two minutes'
silence, and hats off and stand at 'tention, and the Cenotaph, and it
made me laugh. I laughed at him through the glass. And he didn't like
it, he didn't. I was as close to him as I am to you, ye see. And he lets
down the glass and says something about insultin' behaviour to these
ladies, and I put my tongue out to him. That tore it, that did. That
fair put the lid on. I felt something coming over me—ye know. Then
there was a crowd, and I caught a policeman one on the shoulder. Oh,
they marched me off, three of 'em! The doctor at the station said I was
drunk, me as hadn't had a drop for three days! Next morning the beak he
said he'd treat me lenient because it was Armistice Day, and I'd had
some and I'd fought for the old country, but assaulting an officer of
the law, he couldn't let that pass. No option for that, so he give me
fourteen days."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"But yer master, Joe?"</p>
<p>"It was an old woman."</p>
<p>"Wouldn't she——?"</p>
<p>"No, she wouldn't," said Joe roughly. "And another thing, I didn't go
back there either, afterwards."</p>
<p>"Did ye leave yer things there?"</p>
<p>"Yes. A bag and some things. And I shan't fetch it either."</p>
<p>"<i>I</i> shall!" said Elsie resolutely. "I won't let <i>'er</i> have 'em. I shall
tell her you was taken ill, and I shall bring 'em away."</p>
<p>Joe offered no remark.</p>
<p>"But why did ye sell yer papers, Joe?"</p>
<p>"He give me four-and-six for 'em. I was on me uppers; he give me
four-and-six, and then we went and had a meal after all that skilly and
cocoa and dry bread. No good me going back. I'd left without notice, I
had."</p>
<p>"But why didn't ye come to me straight, Joey?"</p>
<p>Joe didn't answer. After all this inordinate loquacity of his, he had
resumed his great silence.</p>
<p>Elsie still gazed at him. The candle light went down and up. A burst of
heavy traffic shook the bed. And now Elsie had a desire to tell Joe all
about her own story, all about Mr. Earlforward and the death of Mrs.
Earlforward, and the troubles awaiting her in the morning. She wanted to
be confidential, and she wanted to discuss with him a plan for putting
him on his feet again after he was better—for she was sure she could
restore his self-respect to him, and him to his proper position in the
world. But he did not seem interested in anything, not even in herself.
He was absorbed in his aches and pains and fever. And she was very
tired. So, without moving her arms, she just laid her head on his
breast, and was indignant against the whole of mankind on his behalf,
and regarded her harsh, pitiless self as the author of all his
misfortunes and loved him.</p>
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