<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>The Lodger</h1>
<h2 class="no-break">by Marie Belloc Lowndes</h2>
<hr />
<h2>Contents</h2>
<table summary="" >
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap01">CHAPTER I.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap02">CHAPTER II.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap03">CHAPTER III.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap04">CHAPTER IV.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap05">CHAPTER V.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap06">CHAPTER VI.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap07">CHAPTER VII.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap09">CHAPTER IX.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap10">CHAPTER X.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap11">CHAPTER XI.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap12">CHAPTER XII.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap13">CHAPTER XIII.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap14">CHAPTER XIV.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap15">CHAPTER XV.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap16">CHAPTER XVI.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap17">CHAPTER XVII.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap18">CHAPTER XVIII.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap19">CHAPTER XIX.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap20">CHAPTER XX.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap21">CHAPTER XXI.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap22">CHAPTER XXII.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap23">CHAPTER XXIII.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap24">CHAPTER XXIV.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap25">CHAPTER XXV.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap26">CHAPTER XXVI.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap27">CHAPTER XXVII.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p class="letter">
“Lover and friend hast thou put far from me, and mine acquaintance into
darkness.”<br/>
P<small>SALM</small> lxxxviii. 18</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap01"></SPAN>CHAPTER I.</h2>
<p>Robert Bunting and Ellen his wife sat before their dully burning,
carefully-banked-up fire.</p>
<p>The room, especially when it be known that it was part of a house standing in a
grimy, if not exactly sordid, London thoroughfare, was exceptionally clean and
well-cared-for. A casual stranger, more particularly one of a Superior class to
their own, on suddenly opening the door of that sitting-room; would have
thought that Mr. and Mrs. Bunting presented a very pleasant cosy picture of
comfortable married life. Bunting, who was leaning back in a deep leather
arm-chair, was clean-shaven and dapper, still in appearance what he had been
for many years of his life—a self-respecting man-servant.</p>
<p>On his wife, now sitting up in an uncomfortable straight-backed chair, the
marks of past servitude were less apparent; but they were there all the
same—in her neat black stuff dress, and in her scrupulously clean, plain
collar and cuffs. Mrs. Bunting, as a single woman, had been what is known as a
useful maid.</p>
<p>But peculiarly true of average English life is the time-worn English proverb as
to appearances being deceitful. Mr. and Mrs. Bunting were sitting in a very
nice room and in their time—how long ago it now seemed!—both
husband and wife had been proud of their carefully chosen belongings.
Everything in the room was strong and substantial, and each article of
furniture had been bought at a well-conducted auction held in a private house.</p>
<p>Thus the red damask curtains which now shut out the fog-laden, drizzling
atmosphere of the Marylebone Road, had cost a mere song, and yet they might
have been warranted to last another thirty years. A great bargain also had been
the excellent Axminster carpet which covered the floor; as, again, the
arm-chair in which Bunting now sat forward, staring into the dull, small fire.
In fact, that arm-chair had been an extravagance of Mrs. Bunting. She had
wanted her husband to be comfortable after the day’s work was done, and
she had paid thirty-seven shillings for the chair. Only yesterday Bunting had
tried to find a purchaser for it, but the man who had come to look at it,
guessing their cruel necessities, had only offered them twelve shillings and
sixpence for it; so for the present they were keeping their arm-chair.</p>
<p>But man and woman want something more than mere material comfort, much as that
is valued by the Buntings of this world. So, on the walls of the sitting-room,
hung neatly framed if now rather faded photographs—photographs of Mr. and
Mrs. Bunting’s various former employers, and of the pretty country houses
in which they had separately lived during the long years they had spent in a
not unhappy servitude.</p>
<p>But appearances were not only deceitful, they were more than usually deceitful
with regard to these unfortunate people. In spite of their good
furniture—that substantial outward sign of respectability which is the
last thing which wise folk who fall into trouble try to dispose of—they
were almost at the end of their tether. Already they had learnt to go hungry,
and they were beginning to learn to go cold. Tobacco, the last thing the sober
man foregoes among his comforts, had been given up some time ago by Bunting.
And even Mrs. Bunting—prim, prudent, careful woman as she was in her
way—had realised what this must mean to him. So well, indeed, had she
understood that some days back she had crept out and bought him a packet of
Virginia.</p>
<p>Bunting had been touched—touched as he had not been for years by any
woman’s thought and love for him. Painful tears had forced themselves
into his eyes, and husband and wife had both felt in their odd, unemotional
way, moved to the heart.</p>
<p>Fortunately he never guessed—how could he have guessed, with his slow,
normal, rather dull mind?—that his poor Ellen had since more than once
bitterly regretted that fourpence-ha’penny, for they were now very near
the soundless depths which divide those who dwell on the safe tableland of
security—those, that is, who are sure of making a respectable, if not a
happy, living—and the submerged multitude who, through some lack in
themselves, or owing to the conditions under which our strange civilisation has
become organised, struggle rudderless till they die in workhouse, hospital, or
prison.</p>
<p>Had the Buntings been in a class lower than their own, had they belonged to the
great company of human beings technically known to so many of us as the poor,
there would have been friendly neighbours ready to help them, and the same
would have been the case had they belonged to the class of smug, well-meaning,
if unimaginative, folk whom they had spent so much of their lives in serving.</p>
<p>There was only one person in the world who might possibly be brought to help
them. That was an aunt of Bunting’s first wife. With this woman, the
widow of a man who had been well-to-do, lived Daisy, Bunting’s only child
by his first wife, and during the last long two days he had been trying to make
up his mind to write to the old lady, and that though he suspected that she
would almost certainly retort with a cruel, sharp rebuff.</p>
<p>As to their few acquaintances, former fellow-servants, and so on, they had
gradually fallen out of touch with them. There was but one friend who often
came to see them in their deep trouble. This was a young fellow named Chandler,
under whose grandfather Bunting had been footman years and years ago. Joe
Chandler had never gone into service; he was attached to the police; in fact
not to put too fine a point upon it, young Chandler was a detective.</p>
<p>When they had first taken the house which had brought them, so they both
thought, such bad luck, Bunting had encouraged the young chap to come often,
for his tales were well worth listening to—quite exciting at times. But
now poor Bunting didn’t want to hear that sort of stories—stories
of people being cleverly “nabbed,” or stupidly allowed to escape
the fate they always, from Chandler’s point of view, richly deserved.</p>
<p>But Joe still came very faithfully once or twice a week, so timing his calls
that neither host nor hostess need press food upon him—nay, more, he had
done that which showed him to have a good and feeling heart. He had offered his
father’s old acquaintance a loan, and Bunting, at last, had taken 30s.
Very little of that money now remained: Bunting still could jingle a few
coppers in his pocket; and Mrs. Bunting had 2s. 9d.; that and the rent they
would have to pay in five weeks, was all they had left. Everything of the
light, portable sort that would fetch money had been sold. Mrs. Bunting had a
fierce horror of the pawnshop. She had never put her feet in such a place, and
she declared she never would—she would rather starve first.</p>
<p>But she had said nothing when there had occurred the gradual disappearance of
various little possessions she knew that Bunting valued, notably of the
old-fashioned gold watch-chain which had been given to him after the death of
his first master, a master he had nursed faithfully and kindly through a long
and terrible illness. There had also vanished a twisted gold tie-pin, and a
large mourning ring, both gifts of former employers.</p>
<p>When people are living near that deep pit which divides the secure from the
insecure—when they see themselves creeping closer and closer to its dread
edge—they are apt, however loquacious by nature, to fall into long
silences. Bunting had always been a talker, but now he talked no more. Neither
did Mrs. Bunting, but then she had always been a silent woman, and that was
perhaps one reason why Bunting had felt drawn to her from the very first moment
he had seen her.</p>
<p>It had fallen out in this way. A lady had just engaged him as butler, and he
had been shown, by the man whose place he was to take, into the dining-room.
There, to use his own expression, he had discovered Ellen Green, carefully
pouring out the glass of port wine which her then mistress always drank at
11.30 every morning. And as he, the new butler, had seen her engaged in this
task, as he had watched her carefully stopper the decanter and put it back into
the old wine-cooler, he had said to himself, “That is the woman for
me!”</p>
<p>But now her stillness, her—her dumbness, had got on the unfortunate
man’s nerves. He no longer felt like going into the various little shops,
close by, patronised by him in more prosperous days, and Mrs. Bunting also went
afield to make the slender purchases which still had to be made every day or
two, if they were to be saved from actually starving to death.</p>
<p class="p2">
Suddenly, across the stillness of the dark November evening there came the
muffled sounds of hurrying feet and of loud, shrill shouting outside—boys
crying the late afternoon editions of the evening papers.</p>
<p>Bunting turned uneasily in his chair. The giving up of a daily paper had been,
after his tobacco, his bitterest deprivation. And the paper was an older habit
than the tobacco, for servants are great readers of newspapers.</p>
<p>As the shouts came through the closed windows and the thick damask curtains,
Bunting felt a sudden sense of mind hunger fall upon him.</p>
<p>It was a shame—a damned shame—that he shouldn’t know what was
happening in the world outside! Only criminals are kept from hearing news of
what is going on beyond their prison walls. And those shouts, those hoarse,
sharp cries must portend that something really exciting had happened, something
warranted to make a man forget for the moment his own intimate, gnawing
troubles.</p>
<p>He got up, and going towards the nearest window strained his ears to listen.
There fell on them, emerging now and again from the confused babel of hoarse
shouts, the one clear word “Murder!”</p>
<p>Slowly Bunting’s brain pieced the loud, indistinct cries into some sort
of connected order. Yes, that was it—“Horrible Murder! Murder at
St. Pancras!” Bunting remembered vaguely another murder which had been
committed near St. Pancras—that of an old lady by her servant-maid. It
had happened a great many years ago, but was still vividly remembered, as of
special and natural interest, among the class to which he had belonged.</p>
<p>The newsboys—for there were more than one of them, a rather unusual thing
in the Marylebone Road—were coming nearer and nearer; now they had
adopted another cry, but he could not quite catch what they were crying. They
were still shouting hoarsely, excitedly, but he could only hear a word or two
now and then. Suddenly “The Avenger! The Avenger at his work
again!” broke on his ear.</p>
<p>During the last fortnight four very curious and brutal murders had been
committed in London and within a comparatively small area.</p>
<p>The first had aroused no special interest—even the second had only been
awarded, in the paper Bunting was still then taking in, quite a small
paragraph.</p>
<p>Then had come the third—and with that a wave of keen excitement, for
pinned to the dress of the victim—a drunken woman—had been found a
three-cornered piece of paper, on which was written, in red ink, and in printed
characters, the words,</p>
<p class="center">
“THE AVENGER”</p>
<p>It was then realised, not only by those whose business it is to investigate
such terrible happenings, but also by the vast world of men and women who take
an intelligent interest in such sinister mysteries, that the same miscreant had
committed all three crimes; and before that extraordinary fact had had time to
soak well into the public mind there took place yet another murder, and again
the murderer had been to special pains to make it clear that some obscure and
terrible lust for vengeance possessed him.</p>
<p>Now everyone was talking of The Avenger and his crimes! Even the man who left
their ha’porth of milk at the door each morning had spoken to Bunting
about them that very day.</p>
<p class="p2">
Bunting came back to the fire and looked down at his wife with mild excitement.
Then, seeing her pale, apathetic face, her look of weary, mournful absorption,
a wave of irritation swept through him. He felt he could have shaken her!</p>
<p>Ellen had hardly taken the trouble to listen when he, Bunting, had come back to
bed that morning, and told her what the milkman had said. In fact, she had been
quite nasty about it, intimating that she didn’t like hearing about such
horrid things.</p>
<p>It was a curious fact that though Mrs. Bunting enjoyed tales of pathos and
sentiment, and would listen with frigid amusement to the details of a breach of
promise action, she shrank from stories of immorality or of physical violence.
In the old, happy days, when they could afford to buy a paper, aye, and more
than one paper daily, Bunting had often had to choke down his interest in some
exciting “case” or “mystery” which was affording him
pleasant mental relaxation, because any allusion to it sharply angered Ellen.</p>
<p>But now he was at once too dull and too miserable to care how she felt.</p>
<p>Walking away from the window he took a slow, uncertain step towards the door;
when there he turned half round, and there came over his close-shaven, round
face the rather sly, pleading look with which a child about to do something
naughty glances at its parent.</p>
<p>But Mrs. Bunting remained quite still; her thin, narrow shoulders just showed
above the back of the chair on which she was sitting, bolt upright, staring
before her as if into vacancy.</p>
<p>Bunting turned round, opened the door, and quickly he went out into the dark
hall—they had given up lighting the gas there some time ago—and
opened the front door.</p>
<p>Walking down the small flagged path outside, he flung open the iron gate which
gave on to the damp pavement. But there he hesitated. The coppers in his pocket
seemed to have shrunk in number, and he remembered ruefully how far Ellen could
make even four pennies go.</p>
<p>Then a boy ran up to him with a sheaf of evening papers, and Bunting, being
sorely tempted—fell. “Give me a <i>Sun</i>,” he said roughly,
“<i>Sun</i> or <i>Echo!</i>”</p>
<p>But the boy, scarcely stopping to take breath, shook his head. “Only
penny papers left,” he gasped. “What’ll yer ’ave,
sir?”</p>
<p>With an eagerness which was mingled with shame, Bunting drew a penny out of his
pocket and took a paper—it was the <i>Evening Standard</i>—from the
boy’s hand.</p>
<p>Then, very slowly, he shut the gate and walked back through the raw, cold air,
up the flagged path, shivering yet full of eager, joyful anticipation.</p>
<p>Thanks to that penny he had just spent so recklessly he would pass a happy
hour, taken, for once, out of his anxious, despondent, miserable self. It
irritated him shrewdly to know that these moments of respite from carking care
would not be shared with his poor wife, with careworn, troubled Ellen.</p>
<p>A hot wave of unease, almost of remorse, swept over Bunting. Ellen would never
have spent that penny on herself—he knew that well enough—and if it
hadn’t been so cold, so foggy, so—so drizzly, he would have gone
out again through the gate and stood under the street lamp to take his
pleasure. He dreaded with a nervous dread the glance of Ellen’s cold,
reproving light-blue eye. That glance would tell him that he had had no
business to waste a penny on a paper, and that well he knew it!</p>
<p>Suddenly the door in front of him opened, and he heard a familiar voice saying
crossly, yet anxiously, “What on earth are you doing out there, Bunting?
Come in—do! You’ll catch your death of cold! I don’t want to
have you ill on my hands as well as everything else!” Mrs. Bunting rarely
uttered so many words at once nowadays.</p>
<p>He walked in through the front door of his cheerless house. “I went out
to get a paper,” he said sullenly.</p>
<p>After all, he was master. He had as much right to spend the money as she had;
for the matter of that the money on which they were now both living had been
lent, nay, pressed on him—not on Ellen—by that decent young chap,
Joe Chandler. And he, Bunting, had done all he could; he had pawned everything
he could pawn, while Ellen, so he resentfully noticed, still wore her wedding
ring.</p>
<p>He stepped past her heavily, and though she said nothing, he knew she grudged
him his coming joy. Then, full of rage with her and contempt for himself, and
giving himself the luxury of a mild, a very mild, oath—Ellen had very
early made it clear she would have no swearing in her presence—he lit the
hall gas full-flare.</p>
<p>“How can we hope to get lodgers if they can’t even see the
card?” he shouted angrily.</p>
<p>And there was truth in what he said, for now that he had lit the gas, the
oblong card, though not the word “Apartments” printed on it, could
be plainly seen out-lined against the old-fashioned fanlight above the front
door.</p>
<p>Bunting went into the sitting-room, silently followed by his wife, and then,
sitting down in his nice arm-chair, he poked the little banked-up fire. It was
the first time Bunting had poked the fire for many a long day, and this
exertion of marital authority made him feel better. A man has to assert himself
sometimes, and he, Bunting, had not asserted himself enough lately.</p>
<p>A little colour came into Mrs. Bunting’s pale face. She was not used to
be flouted in this way. For Bunting, when not thoroughly upset, was the mildest
of men.</p>
<p>She began moving about the room, flicking off an imperceptible touch of dust
here, straightening a piece of furniture there.</p>
<p>But her hands trembled—they trembled with excitement, with self-pity,
with anger. A penny? It was dreadful—dreadful to have to worry about a
penny! But they had come to the point when one has to worry about pennies.
Strange that her husband didn’t realise that.</p>
<p>Bunting looked round once or twice; he would have liked to ask Ellen to leave
off fidgeting, but he was fond of peace, and perhaps, by now, a little bit
ashamed of himself, so he refrained from remark, and she soon gave over what
irritated him of her own accord.</p>
<p>But Mrs. Bunting did not come and sit down as her husband would have liked her
to do. The sight of him, absorbed in his paper as he was, irritated her, and
made her long to get away from him. Opening the door which separated the
sitting-room from the bedroom behind, and—shutting out the aggravating
vision of Bunting sitting comfortably by the now brightly burning fire, with
the <i>Evening Standard</i> spread out before him—she sat down in the cold
darkness, and pressed her hands against her temples.</p>
<p>Never, never had she felt so hopeless, so—so broken as now. Where was the
good of having been an upright, conscientious, self-respecting woman all her
life long, if it only led to this utter, degrading poverty and wretchedness?
She and Bunting were just past the age which gentlefolk think proper in a
married couple seeking to enter service together, unless, that is, the wife
happens to be a professed cook. A cook and a butler can always get a nice
situation. But Mrs. Bunting was no cook. She could do all right the simple
things any lodger she might get would require, but that was all.</p>
<p>Lodgers? How foolish she had been to think of taking lodgers! For it had been
her doing. Bunting had been like butter in her hands.</p>
<p>Yet they had begun well, with a lodging-house in a seaside place. There they
had prospered, not as they had hoped to do, but still pretty well; and then had
come an epidemic of scarlet fever, and that had meant ruin for them, and for
dozens, nay, hundreds, of other luckless people. Then had followed a business
experiment which had proved even more disastrous, and which had left them in
debt—in debt to an extent they could never hope to repay, to a
good-natured former employer.</p>
<p>After that, instead of going back to service, as they might have done, perhaps,
either together or separately, they had made up their minds to make one last
effort, and they had taken over, with the trifle of money that remained to
them, the lease of this house in the Marylebone Road.</p>
<p>In former days, when they had each been leading the sheltered, impersonal, and,
above all, financially easy existence which is the compensation life offers to
those men and women who deliberately take upon themselves the yoke of domestic
service, they had both lived in houses overlooking Regent’s Park. It had
seemed a wise plan to settle in the same neighbourhood, the more so that
Bunting, who had a good appearance, had retained the kind of connection which
enables a man to get a job now and again as waiter at private parties.</p>
<p>But life moves quickly, jaggedly, for people like the Buntings. Two of his
former masters had moved to another part of London, and a caterer in Baker
Street whom he had known went bankrupt.</p>
<p>And now? Well, just now Bunting could not have taken a job had one been offered
him, for he had pawned his dress clothes. He had not asked his wife’s
permission to do this, as so good a husband ought to have done. He had just
gone out and done it. And she had not had the heart to say anything; nay, it
was with part of the money that he had handed her silently the evening he did
it that she had bought that last packet of tobacco.</p>
<p>And then, as Mrs. Bunting sat there thinking these painful thoughts, there
suddenly came to the front door the sound of a loud, tremulous, uncertain
double knock.</p>
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