<h2><SPAN name="XI" id="XI">XI</SPAN><br/> NOBODY</h2>
<p>The only one of them all who perceived anything
like the truth was young Claribel.</p>
<p>Claribel (how she hated the absurd name!) had a
splendid opportunity for observing everything in life,
simply because she was so universally neglected. The
Matchams and the Dorsets and the Duddons (all the
relations, in fact) simply considered her of no importance
at all.</p>
<p>She did not mind this: she took it entirely for
granted, as she did her plainness, her slowness of speech,
her shyness in company, her tendency to heat spots,
her bad figure, and all the other things with which an
undoubtedly all-wise God had seen fit to endow her.
It was only that having all these things, Claribel was
additionally an unfortunate name; but then, most of
them called her Carrie, and the boys "Fetch and Carry"
often enough.</p>
<p>She was taken with the others to parties and teas,
in order, as she very well knew, that critical friends
and neighbors should not say that "the Dorsets always
neglected that plain child of theirs, poor thing."</p>
<p>She sat in a corner and was neglected, but that she
did not mind in the least. She liked it. It gave her,
all the more, the opportunity of watching people, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</SPAN></span>
game that she liked best in all the world. She played
it without any sense at all that she had unusual powers.
It was much later than this that she was to realise her
gifts.</p>
<p>It was this sitting in a corner in the Horton flat
that enabled her to perceive what it was that had happened
to her Cousin Tom. Of course, she knew from
the public standpoint well enough what had happened
to him—simply that he had been wounded three times,
once in Gallipoli and twice in France; that he had received
the D.S.O. and been made a Major. But it was
something other than that that she meant. She knew
that all the brothers and the sisters, the cousins, the
uncles and the aunts proclaimed gleefully that there was
nothing the matter with him at all. "It's quite wonderful,"
they all said, "to see the way that dear Tom
has come back from the war just as he went into it.
His same jolly, generous self. Everyone's friend. Not
at all conceited. How wonderful that is, when he's
done so well and has all that money!"</p>
<p>That was, Claribel knew, the thing that everyone
said. Tom had always been her own favourite. He
had not considered her the least little bit more than
he had considered everyone else. He always was kind.
But he gave her a smile and a nod and a pat, and she
was grateful.</p>
<p>Then he had always seemed to her a miraculous creature;
his whole history in the war had only increased
that adoration. She loved to look at him, and certainly
he must, in anyone's eyes, have been handsome,
with his light, shining hair, his fine, open brow, his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</SPAN></span>
slim, straight body, his breeding and distinction and
nobility.</p>
<p>To all of this was suddenly added wealth—his uncle,
the head of the biggest biscuit factory in England, dying
and leaving him everything. His mother and he
had already been sufficiently provided for at his father's
death; but he was now, through Uncle Bob's love for
him, an immensely rich man. This had fallen to him
in the last year of the war, when he was recovering from
his third wound. After the Armistice, freed from the
hospital, he had taken a delightful flat in Hortons (his
mother preferred the country, and was cosy with dogs,
a parrot, a butler, and bees in Wiltshire), and it was
here that he gave his delightful parties. It was here
that Claribel, watching from her corner, made her
great discovery about him.</p>
<p>Her discovery quite simply was that he did not exist;
that he was dead, that "there was nobody there."</p>
<p>She did not know what it was that caused her just
to be aware of her ghostly surprise. She had in the
beginning been taken in as they all had been. He had
seemed on his first return from the hospital to be the
same old Tom whom they had always known. For
some weeks he had used a crutch, and his cheeks were
pale, his eyes were sunk like bright jewels into dark
pouches of shadow.</p>
<p>He had said very little about his experiences in
France; that was natural, none of the men who had
returned from there wished to speak of it. He had
thrown himself with apparent eagerness into the dancing,
the theatres, the house-parties, the shooting, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</SPAN></span>
flirting—all the hectic, eager life that seemed to be
pushed by everyone's hands into the dark, ominous
silence that the announcement of the Armistice had
created.</p>
<p>Then how they all had crowded about him! Claribel,
seated in her dark little corner, had summoned
them one by one—Mrs. Freddie Matcham with her
high, bright colour and wonderful hair, her two daughters,
Claribel's cousins, Lucy and Amy, so pretty and
so stupid, the voluminous Dorsets, with all their Beaminster
connections, Hattie Dorset, Dollie Pym-Dorset,
Rose and Emily; then the men—young Harwood
Dorset, who was no good at anything, but danced so
well, Henry Matcham, capable and intelligent would
he only work, Pelham Duddon, ambitious and grasping;
then her own family, her elder sisters, Morgraunt
(what a name!), who married Rex Beaminster, and
they hadn't a penny, and Lucile, unmarried, pretty
and silly, and Dora, serious and plain and a miser—Oh!
Claribel knew them all! She wondered, as she
sat there, how she <i>could</i> know them all as she did, and,
after that, how they could be so unaware that she <i>did</i>
know them! She did not feel herself preternaturally
sharp—only that they were unobservant or simply, perhaps,
that they had better things to observe.</p>
<p>The thing, of course, that they were all just then
observing was Tom and his money. The two things
were synonymous, and if they couldn't have the money
without Tom, they must have him with it. Not that
they minded having Tom—he was exactly what they
felt a man should be—beautiful to look at, easy and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</SPAN></span>
happy and casual, a splendid sportsman, completely
free of that tiresome "analysis" stuff that some of the
would-be clever ones thought so essential.</p>
<p>They liked Tom and approved of him, and oh! how
they wanted his money! There was not one of them
not in need of it! Claribel could see all their dazzling,
shining eyes fixed upon those great piles of gold, their
beautiful fingers crooked out towards it. Claribel did
not herself want money. What she wanted, more than
she allowed herself to think, was companionship and
friendship and affection.... And that she was inclined
to think she was fated never to obtain.</p>
<p>The day when she first noticed the thing that was
the matter with Tom, was one wet, stormy afternoon
in March; they were all gathered together in Tom's
lovely sitting-room in Hortons.</p>
<p>Tom, without being exactly clever about beautiful
things, had a fine sense of the way that he wished to
be served, and the result of this was that his flat was
neat and ordered, everything always in perfect array.
His man, Sheraton, was an ideal man; he had been
Tom's servant before the war, and now, released from
his duties, was back again; there was no reason why
he should ever now depart from them, he having, as
he once told Claribel, a contemptuous opinion of women.
Under Sheraton's care, that long, low-ceilinged room,
lined with bookcases (Tom loved fine bindings), with
its gleaming, polished floor, some old family portraits
and rich curtains of a gleaming dark purple—to Claribel
this place was heaven. It would not, of course,
have been so heavenly had Tom not been so perfect<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</SPAN></span>
a figure moving against the old gold frames, the curtains,
the leaping fire, looking so exactly, Claribel
thought "the younger image of old Theophilus Duddon,
stiff and grand up there on the wall in his white stock
and velvet coat, Tom's great-grandfather."</p>
<p>On this particular day, Claribel's sister, Morgraunt
Beaminster and Lucile, Mrs. Matcham, Hattie Dorset,
and some men were present. Tom was sitting over the
rim of a big leather chair near the fire, his head tossed
back laughing at one of Lucile's silly jokes. Mrs.
Matcham was at the table, "pouring out," and Sheraton,
rather stout but otherwise a fine example of the Admirable
Crichton, handed around the food. They were
laughing, as they always did, at nothing at all, Lucile's
shrill, barking laugh above the rest. From the babel
Claribel caught phrases like "Dear old Tom!" "But
he didn't—he hadn't got the intelligence." "Tom,
you're a pet...." "Oh, but of <i>course</i> not. What
stuff! Why, Harriet herself ...!" Through it all
Sheraton moved with his head back, his indulgent indifference,
his supremely brushed hair. It was just
then Claribel caught the flash from Mrs. Matcham's
beautiful eyes. Everyone had their tea; there was
nothing left for her to do. She sat there, her lovely
hands crossed on the table in front of her, her eyes
lost, apparently, in dim abstraction. Claribel saw that
they were not lost at all, but were bent, obliquely, with
a concentrated and almost passionate interest, upon Tom.
Mrs. Matcham wanted something, and she was determined
this afternoon to ask for it. What was it?
Money? Her debts were notorious. Jewels? She<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</SPAN></span>
was insatiable there ... Freddie Matcham couldn't
give her things. Old Lord Ferris wanted to, but
wasn't allowed to.... Claribel knew all this, young
though she was. There remained, then, as always,
Tom.</p>
<p>Thrilled by this discovery of Mrs. Matcham's eyes,
Claribel pursued her discoveries further, and the next
thing that she saw was that Lucile also was intent upon
some prize. Her silly, bright little eyes were tightened
for some very definite purpose. They fastened
upon Tom like little scissors. Claribel knew that Lucile
had developed recently a passion for bridge and, being
stupid.... Yes, Lucile wanted money. Claribel
allowed herself a little shudder of disgust. She was
only seventeen and wore spectacles, and was plain, but
at that moment she felt herself to be infinitely superior
to the whole lot of them. She had her own private
comfortable arrogances.</p>
<p>It was then, while she was despising them, that she
made her discovery about Tom. She looked across at
him wondering whether he had noticed any of the things
that had struck her. She at the same time sighed, seeing
that she had made, as she always did, a nasty
sloppy mess in her saucer, and knowing that Morgraunt
(the watchdog of the family) would be certain to notice
and scold her for it.</p>
<p>She looked across at Tom and discovered suddenly
that he wasn't there. The shell of him was there, the
dark clothes, the black tie with the pearl pin, the white
shirt, the faintly-coloured clear-cut mask with the shining
hair, the white throat, the heavy eye-lashes—the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</SPAN></span>
shell, the mask, nothing else. She could never remember
afterwards exactly what it was that made her certain
that nobody was there. Lucile was talking to
him, eagerly, repeating, as she always did, her words
over and over again. He was, apparently, looking up
at her, a smile on his lips. Morgraunt, so smart with
the teasing blue feather in her hat, was looking across
at them intent upon what Lucile was saying. He was
apparently looking at Lucile, and yet his eyes were dead,
sightless, like the eyes of a statue. In his hand he
apparently held a cigarette, and yet his hand was of
marble, no life ran through the veins. Claribel even
fancied, so deeply excited had she become, that you
could see the glitter of the fire through his dark body
as he sat carefully balanced on the edge of the chair.</p>
<p>There was Nobody there, and then, as she began to
reflect, there never had been anybody since the Armistice.
Tom had never returned from France; only a
framework with clothes hung upon it, a doll, an automaton,
did Tom's work and fulfilled his place. Tom's soul
had remained in France. He did not really hear what
Lucile was saying. He did not care what any of them
were doing, and that, of course, accounted for the wonderful
way that, during these past weeks, he had acquiesced
in every one of their proposals. They had many
of them commented on Tom's extraordinary good nature
now that he had returned. "You really could do anything
with him that you pleased," Claribel had heard
Morgraunt triumphantly exclaim. Well, so you can
with a corpse!...</p>
<p>As she stared at him and realised the dramatic import<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</SPAN></span>
of her discovery, she was suddenly filled with pity. Poor
Tom! How terrible that time in France must have
been to have killed him like that, and nobody had known.
They had thought that he had taken it so easily, he
had laughed and jested with the others, had always returned
to France gaily.... How terrified he must have
been—before he died!</p>
<p>As she watched him, he got up from the chair and
stood before the fire, his legs spread out. The others
had gathered in a corner of the room, busied around
Hattie, who was trying some new Jazz tunes on the
piano. Mrs. Matcham got up from her table and went
over to Tom and began eagerly to talk to him. Her
hands were clasped behind her beautiful back, and Claribel
could see how the fingers twisted and untwisted
again and again over the urgency of her request.</p>
<p>Claribel saw Tom's face. The mask was the lovelier
now because she knew that there was no life behind
it. She saw the lips smile, the eyes shine, the head
bend. It was to her as though someone were turning
an electric button behind there in the middle of his
back....</p>
<p>He nodded. Mrs. Matcham laughed. "Oh, you
darling!" Claribel heard her cry. "If you only knew
what you've done for me!"</p>
<p>The party was over. They all began to go.</p>
<p>Claribel was right. There was Nobody there.</p>
<p>When everybody had gone that evening and the body
of Tom was alone, it surveyed the beautiful room.</p>
<p>Tom's body (which may for the moment be conveniently<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</SPAN></span>
but falsely called Tom) looked about and felt
a wave of miserable, impotent uselessness.</p>
<p>Tom summoned Sheraton.</p>
<p>"Clear all these things away," he said.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"I'm going out."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir." "Dinner jacket to-night, sir?"</p>
<p>"No, I'm not dressing." He went to the door, then
turned round. "Sheraton!"</p>
<p>"Yes sir!"</p>
<p>"What's the matter with me?"</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon, sir!"</p>
<p>"What's the matter with me? You know what I
mean as well as I do. Ever since I came back....
I can't take an interest in anything—not in anything
nor in anybody. To-day, for instance, I didn't hear
a word that they were saying, not one of them, and
they made enough noise, too! I don't care for anything,
I don't want anything, I don't like anything,
I don't hate anything. It's as though I were asleep—and
yet I'm not asleep either. What's the matter with
me, Sheraton?"</p>
<p>Sheraton's eyes, that had been so insistently veiled
by decent society, as expressionless as a pair of marbles,
were suddenly human; Sheraton's voice, which
had been something like the shadow of a real voice,
was suddenly full of feeling.</p>
<p>"Why, sir, of course I've noticed ... being with
you before the war and all, and being fond of you, if
you'll forgive my saying so, so that I always hoped
that I'd come back to you. Why, if you ask me, sir,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</SPAN></span>
it's just the bloody war—that's all it is. I've felt something
of the same kind myself. I'm getting over it a
bit. It'll pass, sir. The war leaves you kind o' dead.
People don't seem real any more. If you could get fond
of some young lady, Mr. Duddon, I'm sure...."</p>
<p>"Thanks, Sheraton. I dare say you're right." He
went out.</p>
<p>It was a horrible night. The March wind was tearing
down Duke Street, hurling itself at the windows,
plucking with its fingers at the doors, screaming and
laughing down the chimneys. The decorous decencies
of that staid bachelor St. James's world seemed to be
nothing to its mood of wilful bad temper. Through
the clamour of banging doors and creaking windows the
bells of St. James's Church could be heard striking
seven o'clock.</p>
<p>The rain was intermittent, and fell in sudden little
gusts, like the subsiding agonies of a weeping child.
Every once and again a thin wet wisp of a moon showed
dimly grey through heavy piles of driving cloud. Tom
found Bond Street almost deserted of foot passengers.</p>
<p>Buttoning his high blue collar up about his neck,
he set himself to face the storm. The drive of the
rain against his cheeks gave him some sort of dim satisfaction
after the close warm comfort of his flat.</p>
<p>Somewhere, far, far away in him, a voice was questioning
him as to why he had given Mrs. Matcham
that money. The voice reminded him of what indeed
he very well knew, that it was exactly like throwing
water down a well, that it would do Millie Matcham
no good, that it was wasted money.... Well, he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</SPAN></span>
didn't care. The voice was too far away, and altogether
had too little concern with him to disturb him very
deeply. Nothing disturbed him, damn it—nothing,
nothing, nothing!</p>
<p>When he was almost upon Grosvenor Street, a sudden
gust of wind drove at him so furiously that, almost
without knowing what he was doing, instinctively he
stepped back to take shelter beneath a wooden boarding.
Here a street lamp gave a pale yellow colour to
the dark shadows, and from its cover the street shot
like a gleaming track of steel into the clustered lights
of Oxford Street.</p>
<p>Tom was aware that two people had taken shelter
in the same refuge. He peered at their dim figures.
He saw at once that they were old—an old man and
an old woman.</p>
<p>He did not know what it was that persuaded him
to stare at them as though they could be of any importance
to him. Nothing could be of any importance
to him, and he was attracted, perhaps, rather by a kind
of snivelling, sniffling noise that one of them made.
The old lady—she had a terrible cold. She sneezed
violently, and the old man uttered a scornful "chut-chut"
like an angry, battered bird. Then he peered
up at Tom and said in a complaining, whining voice:</p>
<p>"What a night!"</p>
<p>"Yes, it is," said Tom. "You'd better get home."</p>
<p>His eyes growing accustomed to the gloom, he saw
the pair distinctly. The old man was wearing a high
hat, battered and set rakishly on the side of his head.
The collar of a threadbare overcoat was turned up high<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</SPAN></span>
over his skinny neck. He wore shabby black gloves.
The old lady, sheltering behind the old man, was less
easily discerned. She was a humped and disconcerted
shadow, with a feather in her hat and a sharp nose.</p>
<p>"You'd better be getting home," Tom repeated, wondering
to himself that he stayed.</p>
<p>The old man peered up at him.</p>
<p>"You're out for no good, I reckon," he mumbled.
"Waiting like this on a night like this." There was
a note in his voice of scornful patronage.</p>
<p>"I'm not out for anything particular," said Tom.
"Simply taking a walk." The old lady sneezed again.
"You'd really better be going home. Your wife's got
a terrible cold."</p>
<p>"She's not my wife," said the old man. "She's my
sister, if you want to know."</p>
<p>"I don't want to know especially," said Tom. "Well,
good-night: I see the rain's dropped."</p>
<p>He stepped out into Bond Street, and then (on looking
back he could never define precisely the impulse
that drove him) he hurried back to them.</p>
<p>"You'd better let me get you a cab or something,"
he said. "You really ought to go home."</p>
<p>The old man snarled at him. "You let us alone,"
he said. "We haven't done you any harm."</p>
<p>The impulse persisted.</p>
<p>"I'm going to get you a cab," he said. "Whether you
like it or no."</p>
<p>"None of your bloody philanthropy," said the old
man. "I know you. M'rier and me's all right."</p>
<p>It was Maria then who took the next step in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</SPAN></span>
affair. Tom, although he was afterwards to have a
very considerable knowledge of that old lady, could
never definitely determine as to whether the step that
she took was honest or no. What she did was to collapse
into the sodden pavement in a black and grimy
heap. The feather stood out from the collapse with a
jaunty, ironical gesture.</p>
<p>"'Ere, M'rier," said the old man, very much as
though he were addressing a recalcitrant horse, "you
get hup."</p>
<p>No sound came from the heap. Tom bent down.
He touched her soiled velvet coat, lifted an arm, felt
the weight sink beneath him. "Well," he said, almost
defiantly, to the old man, "what are you going to
do now?"</p>
<p>"She's always doing it," he answered, "and at the
most aggravating moments." Then with something
that looked suspiciously like a kick, he repeated: "You
get hup, M'rier."</p>
<p>"Look here, you can't do that," Tom cried. "What
an old devil you are! We've got to get her out of
this."</p>
<p>A voice addressed them from the street: "Anything
the matter?" it said.</p>
<p>Tom turned and found that the driver of a taxi had
pulled up his machine and was peering into the shadow.</p>
<p>"Yes. There's been an accident," Tom said. "This
lady's fainted. We'd better get her home."</p>
<p>"Where's she going to?" said the driver suspiciously.</p>
<p>"What business is that of yours?" cried the old
man furiously. "You just leave us alone."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"No, you couldn't do that," Tom answered. "There'll
be a policeman here in a moment, and he'll have you
home whether you want it or not. You never can lift
her yourself, and you can't leave her there. You'd
better help me get her into the cab!"</p>
<p>The old man began to gargle strangely in his throat.</p>
<p>"Policeman!" he seemed to say. "If I 'ad my
way——"</p>
<p>"Well, for once you haven't," said Tom shortly.
"Here, driver, help me lift her in."</p>
<p>"Where's she going?" he repeated.</p>
<p>"If you don't help me at once I'll see that a policeman
is here. I've got your number. You'll hear from
me in the morning."</p>
<p>The man got off his box, cursing. He hesitated a
moment, then came across. Together he and Tom lifted
the inert mass, pushed it through the door of the cab
and settled it in the seat.</p>
<p>"Makin' my cab dirty and all," growled the driver.</p>
<p>"Well," said Tom to the old man, "are you going
to see your sister home? If not, I shall take her to
the nearest hospital."</p>
<p>For a moment the old man remained perched up
against the wall, his top hat flaunting defiance to the
whole world. Suddenly, as though he had been pushed,
he came across to the driver.</p>
<p>"Eleven D Porker's Buildings, Victoria," he said.</p>
<p>"B?" asked the driver.</p>
<p>"D, you damned fool," the old man almost shouted.</p>
<p>"Thought you said B," remarked the driver very
amiably.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The old man got in. He was on one side of the
motionless Maria, Tom on the other.</p>
<p>That was a remarkable and even romantic ride. The
roads were slippery, and the driver, it appeared, a little
drunk. The cab rocked like a drunken boat, and the
watery moon, now triumphant over the clouds, the
gleaming pavement, the houses, gaunt in the uncertain
moonlight, and thin as though they had been cut from
black paper, seemed to be inebriated too. Maria shared
in the general irresponsibility, lurching from side to
side, and revealing, now that her hat was on Tom's
lap, an ancient peeked face with as many lines on it
as an Indian's, and grey, untidy hair. She seemed a
lifeless thing enough, and yet Tom had a strange notion
that one eye was open, and not only watching, but
winking as well.</p>
<p>It would have been the natural thing to have opened
her dress and given her air, to have poured whisky or
brandy down her throat, to have tickled her with feathers!
Tom did none of these things: afterwards he
imagined that his inaction was due to the fact that
he knew all the time that she had not really fainted.</p>
<p>Not a word was exchanged during the journey. They
drove down Victoria Street, turned off on the right of
Westminster Cathedral, and drew up in a narrow, dirty
street.</p>
<p>A high block had "Porker's Buildings" printed in
large, ugly letters on the fanlight near the door.</p>
<p>"You'd better help me lift her in," Tom said to the
driver. "The old man's not good for anything."</p>
<p>The driver grunted, but helped Maria into the street.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</SPAN></span>
The fresh night air seemed to refresh her. She sighed
and then sneezed.</p>
<p>"Maybe she can walk herself," said the driver.</p>
<p>The door opened of itself, and Tom was in a dark,
dingy hall with a faint gas-jet like a ghostly eye to
guide him. The old man started up the stairs.</p>
<p>"Can you walk a bit?" Tom asked the old lady.</p>
<p>She nodded. Tom paid the driver and the door
closed behind him. It was a hard fight to conquer
the stairs, and Maria clung like a heavy bag round
her deliverer's neck; but on the third floor the old
man unlocked a door, walked in before them and lighted
a candle. He then sat himself down with his back
to them, pulled a grimy piece of newspaper out of his
pocket, and was apparently at once absorbed in reading.</p>
<p>The room was a wretched enough place. One of
the windows was stuffed with brown paper; a ragged
strip of carpet covered only a section of the cracked
and dirty boards. There was a grimy bed; the fireplace
was filled with rubbish.</p>
<p>Tom helped Maria on to the bed and looked about
him. Then in a sudden fit of irritation he went up
to the old man and shook him by the shoulder.</p>
<p>"Look here," he said. "This won't do. You've got
to do something for her. She may die in the night,
or anything. I'll fetch a doctor, if that's what you
want, or get something from the chemist's——"</p>
<p>"Oh! go to hell!" said the old man without turning.</p>
<p>An impulse of rage seized Tom, and he caught the
old man by the collar, swung him out of the chair,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</SPAN></span>
shook him until he was breathless and coughing, then
said:</p>
<p>"Now be civil."</p>
<p>The old man collapsed on the bed near his sister,
struggled for breath, then screamed:</p>
<p>"You damned aristocrat! I'll have you up before
the courts for this; invading a man's peaceable
'ome——"</p>
<p>Then Maria unexpectedly interfered. She sat up,
smoothing her hair with her old trembling fingers. "I'm
sure," she said, in a mincing, apologetic voice, "that
we ought to be grateful to the gentleman, Andrew. If
it 'adn't been for him, I'm sure I don't know where
we'd 'ave been. It's your wicked temper you're always
losing. I've told you of it again and again—I'm much
better now, thank you, sir, and I'm sure I'm properly
grateful."</p>
<p>Tom looked around him, then back at the two old
people.</p>
<p>"What a filthy place," he said. "Haven't you got
anybody to look after you?"</p>
<p>"Me daughter run away with a musical gentleman,"
said Maria. "Me 'usband died of D.T.'s three years
back. Andrew and meself's alone now. We get the
Old Age Pension, and manage very nicely, thank you."</p>
<p>"Well, I'm coming back to-morrow," said Tom
fiercely, turning on the old man. "Do you hear that?"</p>
<p>"If yer do," said Andrew, "I'll 'ave the perlice after
you."</p>
<p>"Oh, no 'e won't," said Maria. "That's only 'is little
way. I'm sure we'll be pleased to see you."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Tom put some money on the bed and left.</p>
<p>Out in the street he paused. What was the matter
with him? He stood in the street looking up at the
Westminster Cathedral Tower and the thin sheeting
of sky now clear—a pale, boundless sea in which two
or three little stars were remotely sailing. What was
the matter with him?</p>
<p>He felt a strange stirring and trembling about him.
He had some of the pain and hurt that a man feels
when he is first revived from some drowning adventure.
But it was a pain and hurt of the soul, not of
the body. His heart beat expectantly, as though around
the corner of the lonely street a wonderful stranger
might suddenly be expected to appear. He even
strained his eyes against the shadows, piercing them
and finding only more shadows behind them.</p>
<p>He even felt tired and exhausted, as though he had
but now passed through a great emotional experience.</p>
<p>And all these sensations were clear and precious to
him. He treasured them, standing there, breathing
deeply, as though he were in new air of some high altitude.
The boom of Big Ben came suddenly across the
silence like a summoning voice across waste, deserted
country, and he went home....</p>
<p>When he awoke next morning he was aware that
something had happened to him, and he did not know
what it was. He lay there definitely beating back an
impulse to spring out of bed, hurry through his bath,
dress, and have breakfast, and then—what? He had
not felt such an impulse since his return from France,
and it could not be that he felt it now simply because<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</SPAN></span>
he had, last night, met two dirty, bedraggled old people
and helped them home.</p>
<p>He laughed. Sheraton, hanging his shirt on the
back of a chair, turned.</p>
<p>"Well, you're feeling better this morning, sir," he
said.</p>
<p>"Yes, I am," said Tom, "and I'm damned if I know
why." Nevertheless, although he did not know why,
before the morning was out he found himself once more
behind Victoria Street and climbing the stairs of
Porker's Buildings. He had strange experiences that
morning. To many they would have been disappointing.
The old man was silent: not a word would he
say. His attitude was one of haughty, autocratic superiority.
Maria disgusted Tom. She was polite,
cringing even, and as poisonous as a snake. She stated
her wants quite modestly: had it not been for her age
you would have thought her a typical image of the
down-trodden, subjected poor. Her eyes glittered.</p>
<p>"Well, you <i>are</i> a nasty old creature." Tom turned
from her and shook Andrew by the shoulder.</p>
<p>"Well?" said Andrew.</p>
<p>"There's nothing now I can do?" asked Tom.</p>
<p>"Except get out," said Andrew.</p>
<p>Another old woman came in—then a young man.
A fine specimen this last—a local prize-fighter, it appeared—chest
like a wall, thick, stumpy thighs, face
of a beetroot colour, nose twisted, ears like saucers. The
old woman, Maria's friend, was voluble. She explained
a great deal to Tom. She was used, it seemed, to speaking
in public. They could afford, she explained, to be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</SPAN></span>
indifferent to the "Quality" now, because a time was
very shortly coming when they would have everything,
and the Quality nothing. It had happened far away
in Russia, and it was about to happen here. A good
thing too.... At last the poor people could appear
as they really were, hold their heads up. Only a month
or two....</p>
<p>"You're a Bolshevist," said Tom.</p>
<p>Long words did not distress the old lady. "A fine
time's coming," she said.</p>
<p>Maria did not refuse the food and the finery and the
money. "You think," said Tom, as a final word to
her old lady friend, "that I'm doing this because I'm
charitable, because I love you, or some nonsense of
that kind. Not at all. I'm doing it because I'm interested,
and I haven't been interested in anything for
months."</p>
<p>He arranged with the pugilist to be present at his
next encounter, somewhere in Blackfriars, next Monday
night.</p>
<p>"It's against the Bermondsey Chick," Battling Bill
explained huskily. "I've got one on him. Your
money's safe enough...."</p>
<p>Tom gave Maria a parting smile.</p>
<p>"I don't like you," he said, "and I can see that you
positively hate me, but we're getting along very
nicely...."</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>It is at this point that Claribel again takes up the
narrative. It was, of course, not many days before, in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</SPAN></span>
Tom's own world, "What's happened to Tom?" was on
everyone's lips.</p>
<p>Claribel was interested as anyone, and she had, of
course, her own theories. These theories changed from
day to day, but the fact, patent to the world and beyond
argument, was that Tom was "Nobody" no
longer. Life had come back to him; he was eagerly,
passionately "out" upon some secret quest.</p>
<p>It amused Claribel to watch her friends and relations
as they set forth, determined to lay bare Tom's mystery.
Mrs. Matcham, who had her own very definite reasons
for not allowing Tom to escape, declared that of course
it was a "woman." But this did not elucidate the puzzle.
Had it been some married woman, Tom would
not have been so perfectly "open" about his disappearances.
He never denied for a moment that he disappeared;
he rather liked them to know that he did. It
was plainly nothing of which he was ashamed. He had
been seen at no restaurants with anyone—no chorus-girl,
no girl at all, in fact. Dollie Pym-Dorset, who was
a little sharper than the others, simply because she was
more determinedly predatory, declared that Tom was
learning a trade.</p>
<p>"He will turn up suddenly one day," she said, "as a
chauffeur, or an engineer, or a bootblack. He's trying
to find something to fill up his day."</p>
<p>"He's found it," Lucile cried with her shrill laugh.
"Whatever it is, it keeps him going. He's never in;
Sheraton declares he doesn't know where he goes. It's
disgusting...."</p>
<p>Old Lord Ferris, who took an indulgent interest in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</SPAN></span>
all the Duddon developments because of his paternal
regard for Mrs. Matcham, declared that it was one of
these new religions. "They're simply all over the place;
a feller catches 'em as he would the measles. Why, I
know a chap...."</p>
<p>But no. Tom didn't look as though he had found a
new religion. He had made no new resolutions, dropped
no profanities, lost in no way his sense of humour. No,
it didn't look like a religion.</p>
<p>Claribel's convictions about it were not very positive.
She was simply so glad that he had become "Somebody"
again, and she had perhaps a malicious pleasure in the
disappointment of "the set." It amused her to see the
golden purse slipping out of their eager fingers, and
they so determined to stay it.</p>
<p>The pursuit continued for weeks. Everyone was
drawn into it. Even old Lord John Beaminster, who
was beset with debts and gout, stirred up his sister
Adela to see whether she couldn't "discover" something....</p>
<p>It was Henry Matcham who finally achieved the revelation.
He came bursting in upon them all. The secret
was out. Tom had turned "pi——" He was working
down in the East End to save souls.</p>
<p>The news was greeted with incredulity. "Tom soul-saving?
Impossible! Tom the cynic, the irreligious,
the despiser of dogma, the arbitrator of indifference—Incredible."</p>
<p>But Matcham knew. There could be no doubt. A
man he knew in Brooks's had a brother, a parson in an
East-End Settlement. The parson knew Tom well,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</SPAN></span>
said he was always down there, in the men's clubs and
about the streets.</p>
<p>They looked at one another in dismay. Claribel
laughed to see them. What was to be done? Tom must
be saved, of course; but how? No plan could be evoked.
"Well, the first thing we must do," said Mrs. Matcham,
"is to get a plain statement from himself about it."</p>
<p>They sent Claribel as their ambassador, realising,
suddenly, that "she had some sense," and that Tom
liked her.</p>
<p>She told him, with a twinkle in her eye, what they
wanted.</p>
<p>"They're all very much upset by what you're doing,
Tom. They don't want to lose you, you see. They're
fond of you. And they don't think it <i>can</i> be good for
you being all the time with Bolsheviks and dirty foreigners.
You'll only be taken in by them, they think,
and robbed; and that they can't bear. Especially they
think that now after the war everyone ought to stand
together, shoulder to shoulder, you know, class by class.
That's the way Henry Matcham puts it.</p>
<p>"Of course, they admire you very much, what you're
doing—they think it very noble. But all this slumming
seems to them ... what did Dollie call it?... Oh,
yes, <i>vieux jeu</i> ... the sort of thing young men did in
the nineties, centuries ago. Oxford House, and all that.
It seems rather stupid to them to go back to it now, especially
when the war's shown the danger of Bolshevism."</p>
<p>Tom laughed. "Why, Carrie," he said, "how well
you know them!"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She laughed too. "Anyway," she said, "I know you
better than they do."</p>
<p>Tom agreed that it would be a very good thing for
them all to meet.</p>
<p>"They've got what's happened just a trifle wrong,"
he said. "It's only fair to clear things up."</p>
<p>They all appeared on the appointed day—Mrs.
Matcham, as president, in a lovely rose-coloured tulle
for which she was just a little too old, Hattie, Dollie,
Harwood Dorset, Henry Matcham, Pelham Duddon,
Morgraunt and Lucile, Dora, and of course Claribel.
The event had the appearance of one of the dear old
parties.</p>
<p>The flat was just as beautiful, the tea as sumptuous,
Sheraton as perfect. They hung around the same
chairs, the same table, in all their finery and beauty
and expense. They were as sure of conquest as they
had ever been.</p>
<p>Tom sat on the red leather top of the fire-guard and
faced them.</p>
<p>Mrs. Matcham led the attack.</p>
<p>"Now, dear old Tom," she said, in that cooing and
persuasive voice of hers, so well known and so well
liked; "you know that we all love you."</p>
<p>"Yes, I know you do," said Tom, grinning.</p>
<p>"We do. All of us. You've just been a hero, and
we're all proud to death of you. It's only our pride
and our love for you that allows us to interfere. We
don't <i>want</i> to interfere, but we do want to know what's
happening. Henry has heard that you're working down
in the East End, doing splendidly, and it's just like<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</SPAN></span>
your dear old noble self, but is it wise? Are you
taking advice? Won't those people down there do you
in, so to speak? I know that this is a time, of course,
when we've all got to study social conditions. No
thinking man or woman can possibly look round and <i>not</i>
see that there is a great deal ... a whole lot ...
well, anyway, you know what I mean, Tom. But is it
right, without consulting any of us, to go down to all
those queer people? They can't like you really, you
know. It's only for what they can get out of you, and
all that. After all, your <i>own</i> people <i>are your own
people</i>, aren't they, Tom dear?"</p>
<p>"I don't know." Tom looked up at her smiling.
"But I don't think that's exactly the point. They
may be or they may not.... Look here. You've got
one or two wrong ideas about this. I want you to have
the truth, and then we won't have to bother one another
any more. You talk about my working and being
noble, and so on. That's the most awful Tommy-rot.
I'll tell you exactly what happened. I came back from
France. At least, no, I didn't come back; but my body
came back, if you know what I mean. I stayed over
there. At least, I suppose that is what happened. I
didn't know myself what it was. I just know that I
didn't exist. You all used to come to tea here and be
awfully nice and so on, but I didn't hear a word any of
you said. I hope that doesn't sound rude, but I'm trying
to tell exactly what occurred. I didn't know what
was the matter with me—I wasn't anybody at all. I
was Nobody. I didn't exist; and I asked Sheraton, and
he didn't know either. And then, one night——"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Tom paused. The dramatic moment had come. He
knew the kind of thing that they were expecting, and
when he thought of the reality he laughed.</p>
<p>"One night—well, you won't believe me, I suppose,
if I tell you I was very unhappy—no, unhappy is too
strong—I was just nothing at all. You'd all been here
to tea, and I went out for a walk down Bond Street to
clear my head. It was raining and I found two old
things taking shelter under a wooden standing. The
old lady fainted while I was talking to them, and I saw
them home—And—well, that's all!"</p>
<p>"That's all!" cried Millie Matcham. "Do you mean,
Tom, that you fell in love with the old woman!"</p>
<p>Her laugh was shrill and anxious.</p>
<p>He laughed back. "Fell in love! That's just like
you, Millie. You think that love must be in it every
time. There isn't any love in this—and there isn't any
devotion, or religion, or high-mindedness, or trying to
improve them, or any of the things you imagine. On
the contrary, <i>they</i> hate <i>me</i>, and I don't think that I'm
very fond of <i>them</i>—except that I suppose one has a sort
of affection for anybody who's brought one back to life
again—when one didn't want to die!"</p>
<p>Henry Matcham broke in: "Tom, look here—upon
my word, I don't believe that one of us has the least
idea <i>what</i> you're talking about."</p>
<p>Tom looked around at them all and, in spite of himself,
he was surprised at the change in their faces. The
surprise was a shock. They were no longer regarding
him with a gaze of tender, almost proprietary, interest.
The eyes that stared at his were almost hostile, at any<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</SPAN></span>
rate suspicious, alarmed. Alarmed about what? Possibly
his sanity—possibly the misgiving that in a moment
he was going to do or say something that would
shock them all.</p>
<p>He realised as he looked at them that he had come,
quite unexpectedly, upon the crisis of his life. They
could understand it were he philanthropic, religious,
sentimental. They were prepared for those things;
they had read novels, they knew that such moods did
occur. What they were not prepared for, what they
most certainly would not stand, was exactly the explanation
that he was about to give them. That would insult
them, assault the very temple of their most sacred assurances.
As he looked he knew that if he now spoke
the truth he would for ever cut himself off from them.
They would regard his case as hopeless. It would be
in the future "Poor Tom."</p>
<p>He hated that—and for what was he giving them
up? For the world that distrusted him, disbelieved in
him, and would kill him if it could....</p>
<p>The Rubicon was before him. He looked at its
swirling waters, then, without any further hesitation, he
crossed it. He was never to return again....</p>
<p>"I'm sorry to disappoint you all," he said. "There's
no sentimental motive behind my action—no desire to
make any people better, nothing fine at all. It simply
is, as I've said already, that those two people brought
me back to life again. I don't know what, except that
I was suddenly interested in them. I didn't like them,
and they <i>hated</i> me. Now I've become interested in
their friends and relations. I don't want to <i>improve</i><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</SPAN></span>
them. They wouldn't let me if I did. I came back
from France nobody at all. What happened there had
simply killed all my interest in life. And—I'm awfully
sorry to say it—but none of you brought my interest
back. I think the centre of interests changed. It's as
though there were some animal under the floor, and
the part of the room that he's under is the part that
you look at, because he's restless and it quivers. Well,
he's shifted his position, that's all. You aren't on the
interesting part of the floor any longer. I do hate to
be rude and personal—but you have driven me to it.
All of you are getting back to exactly what you were
before the war: there's almost no change at all! And
you're none of you interesting. I'm just as bad—but
I want to go where the interesting human beings are,
and there are more in the dirty streets than the clean
ones. In books like <i>Marcella</i>, years ago people went
out of their own class because they wanted to do 'good.'
I don't want to do good to anyone, but I do want to keep
alive now that I've come back to life again. And—that's
all there is to it," he ended lamely.</p>
<p>He had done as he had expected. He had offended
them all mortally. He was arrogant, proud, supercilious,
and a little mad. And they saw, finally, that
they had lost him. No more money for any of them.</p>
<p>"Well," said Henry Matcham at last, "if you want
to know, Tom, I think that's about the rottenest explanation
I've ever heard. Of course, you're covering
something up. But I'm sure we don't want to penetrate
your secret if you don't like us to."</p>
<p>"There <i>isn't</i> any secret." Tom was beginning to be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</SPAN></span>
angry. "I tell you for the hundredth time I'm not
going to start soup kitchens, or found mission rooms, or
anything like that, but I don't want any more of these
silly tea-parties or perpetual revues, or—or——"</p>
<p>"Or any of us," Dollie, her cheeks flushed with angry
colour, broke in. "All Tom's been trying to explain to
us is that he thinks we're a dull lot, and the Bolsheviks
in the slums are more lively——"</p>
<p>"No," Tom broke in; "Dollie, that isn't fair. I
don't want to pick and choose according to class any
more. I don't want to be anything ever again with a
name to it—like a Patriot, or a Democrat, or a Bolshevik,
or an Anti-Bolshevik, or a Capitalist. I'm going
by Individuals wherever they are. I—Oh, forgive me,"
he broke off, "I'm preaching; I didn't mean to. It's a
thing I hate. But it's so strange—you none of you
know how strange it is—being dead, so that you felt
nothing, and minded nothing, and thought nothing, and
then suddenly waking——"</p>
<p>But they had had enough. Tommy was trying to
teach them. Teach <i>them</i>! And <i>Tommy</i>!...</p>
<p>They "must be going"—sadly, angrily, indignantly
they melted away. Tom was very sorry: there was
nothing to be done.</p>
<p>Only Claribel, taking his hand for a moment,
whispered:</p>
<p>"It's all right. They'll all come back later. They'll
be wanting things."</p>
<p>They were gone—all of them. He was alone in his
room. He drew back the curtains and looked down over<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</SPAN></span>
the grey misty stream of Duke Street scattered with the
marigolds of the evening lights.</p>
<p>He threw open a window, and the roar of London
came up to him like the rattle-rattle-rattle of a weaver's
shuttle.</p>
<p>He laughed. He was happier than he had ever been
before. The whole world seemed to be at his feet, and
he no longer wished to judge it, to improve it, to dictate
to it, to dogmatise it, to expect great things of it,
to be disappointed in it....</p>
<p>He would never do any of those things again.</p>
<p>He addressed it:</p>
<p>"I did passionately wish you to be improved," he
said, "but I didn't love you. Now I know you will never
be improved, but I love you dearly—all of you, not a
bit of you. Life simply isn't long enough for all I'm
going to see!"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />