<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></SPAN>CHAPTER III</h2>
<p class="subhead">KRAKATOA VILLA, AND HOW THE ELECTROCUTED TRAVELLER WENT THERE IN A
CAB. A CURIOUS WELCOME TO A PERFECT STRANGER. THE STRANGER'S LABEL.
A CANCELLED MEMORY. BACK LIKE A BAD SHILLING</p>
<p>Krakatoa was a semi-detached villa, a few minutes' walk from
Shepherd's Bush Station. It looked like a showily dressed wife of a
shabby husband; for the semi-detached other villa next door had been
standing to let for years, and its compo front was in a state of
decomposition from past frosts, and its paint was parched and thin
in the glare of the present June sun, and peeling and dripping
spiritlessly from the closed shutters among the dead flies behind
the cracked panes of glass that had quite forgotten the meaning of
whitening and water, and that wouldn't hack out easy by reason of
the putty having gone 'ard. One knew at a glance that if the
turncock was to come, see, and overcome the reluctance of the
allotted cock-to-be-turned, the water would burst out at every pore
of the service-pipes in that house, except the taps; and would know
also that the adept who came to soften their hearts and handles
would have to go back for his tools, and would be a very long time
away.</p>
<p>Krakatoa, on the other hand, was resplendent with stone-colour, and
smelt strongly of it. And its door you could see through the glass
of into the hall, when its shutters were not thumb-screwed up over
the panes, was painted a green that staggered the reason, and smelt
even more strongly than the stone-colour. And all the paint was so
thick that the beadings on the door were dim memories, and all the
execution on the sculptured goblets on pedestals flanking the steps
in the front garden was as good as spoiled. And the paint simmered
in the sun, and here and there it blistered and altogether suggested
that Krakatoa, like St. Nicholas, might have halved its coats with
the beggar next door—given him, suppose, one flat and one round
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</SPAN></span>
coat. Also, that either the job had been 'urried, and not giv'
proper time to dry, or that the summer had come too soon, and we
should pay for it later on, you see if we didn't!</p>
<p>The coatless and woe-begone villa next door had almost lost its
name, so faded was the lettering on the gate-post that was putting
out its bell-handle to the passer-by, even as the patient puts out
his tongue to the doctor. But experts in palimpsests, if they had
penetrated the superscriptions in chalk and pencil of idle
authorship, would have found that it was The Retreat. Probably this
would have been revealed even if the texts had been merely
Bowdlerised with Indian-rubber or a sponge, because there were a
good many objectionable passages.</p>
<p>But The Retreat <i>was</i> a retreat, and smelt strong of the Hermits,
who were cats. Krakatoa was not a volcano, except so far as
eruptions on the paint went. But then it had become Krakatoa through
a mistake; for the four coats of paint at the end of the first seven
years, as per agreement, having completely hidden the first name,
Saratoga, and the builders' retention of it having been
feeble—possibly even affected by newspaper posters, for it was not
long after the date of the great eruption—the new name had crept in
in the absence of those who could have corrected it, but had gone to
Brighton to get out of the smell of the paint.</p>
<p>When they returned, Mr. Prichard, the builder, though shocked and
hurt at the discovery that the wrong name had been put up, was
strongly opposed to any correction or alteration, especially as it
would always show if altered back. You couldn't make a job of it;
not to say a proper job. Besides, the names were morally the same,
and it was absurd to allow a variation in the letters to impose on
our imagination. The two names had been applied to very different
turns-out abroad, certainly; but then they did all sorts of things
abroad. If Saratoga, why not Krakatoa? Mr. Prichard was entrenched
in a stronghold of total ignorance of literary matters, and his
position, that mere differences of words ought not to tell upon a
healthy mind, was difficult to shake, especially as he had the coign
of vantage. He had only to remain inanimate, and what could a
(presumably) widow lady with one small daughter do against him? So
at the end of the first seven years, what had been Saratoga became
Krakatoa, and remained so.</p>
<div>
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</SPAN></span></div>
<p>And it was in the back garden of the again newly painted villa,
seven years later, that the lady of the house, who was watering the
garden in the cool of the afternoon, asked her excited daughter, who
had just come home in a cab, what on earth could have prompted her
to do such a mad thing, such a perfectly <i>insane</i> thing! We shall
see what it was immediately.</p>
<p>"Oh, Sally, Sally!" exclaimed that young person's still young and
very handsome mother. "What <i>will</i> the child do next?"</p>
<p>"Oh, mamma, mamma!" answers Sally, just on the edge of a burst of
tears; "what <i>was</i> I to do? What <i>could</i> I do? It was all my fault
from the beginning. You <i>know</i> I couldn't leave him to be taken to
the police-station, or the hospital, or——"</p>
<p>"Yes, of course you could! Why not?"</p>
<p>"And not know what became of him, or anything? Oh, mother!"</p>
<p>"You silly child! Why on earth couldn't you leave him to the railway
people?"</p>
<p>"And run away and leave him alone? Oh, <i>mother</i>!"</p>
<p>"But you don't even know his name."</p>
<p>"Mamma, dear, how <i>should</i> I know his name? Don't you see, it was
just like this." And then Miss Sally Nightingale repeats, briefly
and rapidly, for the second time, the circumstances of her interview
in the railway-carriage and its tragic ending. Also their sequel on
the railway platform, with the partial recovery of the stunned or
stupefied man, his inability to speak plainly, the unsuccessful
search in his pockets for something to identify him, and the final
decision to put him in a cab and take him to the workhouse
infirmary, pending discovery of his identity. The end of her story
has a note of relief in it:</p>
<p>"And it was then I saw Dr. Vereker on the platform."</p>
<p>"Oh, you saw Dr. Vereker?"</p>
<p>"Of course I did, and he came with me. He's always so kind, you
know, and he knew the station people, so...."</p>
<p>"Where is he now?"</p>
<p>"Outside in the cab. He stopped to see after the man. We couldn't
both come away, so I came to tell you."</p>
<p>"You stupid chit! why couldn't you tell me at first? There, don't
cry and be a goose!"</p>
<div>
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</SPAN></span></div>
<p>But Sally disclaims all intention of crying. Her mother discards the
watering-pot and an apron, and suppresses appearances of gardening;
then goes quickly through the house, passes down the steps between
the scarlet geraniums in the over-painted goblets, through the gate
on which Saratoga ought to be, and Krakatoa is, written, and finds a
four-wheeled cab awaiting developments. One of its occupants alights
and meets her on the pavement. A rapid colloquy ensues in
undertones, ending in the slightly raised voice of the young man,
who is clearly Dr. Vereker.</p>
<p>"Of course, you're perfectly right—perfectly right. But you'll have
to make my peace with Miss Sally for me."</p>
<p>"A chit of a girl like that! Fancy a responsible man like you
letting himself be twisted round the finger of a young monkey. But
you men are all alike."</p>
<p>"Well, you know, really, what Miss Sally said was quite true—that
it was only a step out of the way to call here. And she had got this
idea that it was all her fault."</p>
<p>"Was it?"</p>
<p>"I can only go by what she says." The girl comes into the
conversation through the gate. She may perhaps have stopped for a
word or two with cook and a house-and-parlourmaid, who are deeply
interested, in the rear.</p>
<p>"It <i>was</i> my fault," she said. "If it hadn't been for me, it would
never have happened. Do see how he is now, Dr. Vereker."</p>
<p>It is open to surmise that the first strong impulse of generosity
having died down under the corrective of a mother, our young lady is
gradually seeing her way to interposing Dr. Vereker as a buffer
between herself and the subject of the conversation, for she does
not go to the cab-door to look in at him. The doctor does. The
mother holds as aloof as possible, not to get entangled into any
obligations.</p>
<p>"Get him away to the infirmary, or the station at once," she says.
"That's the best thing to be done. They'll take care of him till his
friends come to claim him. Of course, they'll come. They always do."
The doctor seems to share this confidence, or affects to do so.</p>
<p>"Sure to. His friends or his servants," says he. "But he can't
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</SPAN></span>
give
any account of himself yet. Of course, I don't know what he'll be
able to do to-morrow morning."</p>
<p>He resumes his place in the cab beside its occupant, who, except for
an entire want of animation, looks much like what he did in the
railway-carriage—the same strong-looking man with well-marked
cheek-bones, very thick brown hair and bushy brows, a skin rather
tanned, and a scar on the bridge of the nose; very strong hands with
a tattoo-mark showing on the wrist and an abnormal crop of hair on
the back, running on to the fingers, but flawed by a scar or two.
Add to this the chief thing you would recollect him by, an
Elizabethan beard, and you will have all the particulars about him
that a navy-blue serge suit, with shirt to match, allows to be seen
of him. But you will have an impression that could you see his skin
beyond the sun-mark limit on his hands and neck, you would find it
also tattooed. Yet you would not at once conclude he was a sailor;
rather, your conclusion might go on other lines, but always
assigning to him a rough adventurous outdoor life.</p>
<p>When the doctor got into the cab and shut the door himself, he took
too much for granted. He assumed the driver, without whom, if your
horse has no ambition at all beyond tranquillity and an empty
nosebag, your condition is that of one camping out; or as one in a
ship moored alongside in dock, the kerbstone playing the part of the
quay. Boys will then accumulate, and undervalue your appearance and
belongings. And impossible persons, with no previous or subsequent
existence, will endeavour to see their way to the establishment of a
claim on you. And you will be rather grateful than otherwise that a
policeman without active interests should accrue, and communicate to
them the virus of dispersal, however long its incubation may be. You
will then probably do as Dr. Vereker did, and resent the driver's
disappearance. The boys, mysteriously in his, each other's, and the
policeman's confidence (all to your exclusion), will be able to
quicken his movements, and he will come trooping from the horizon,
on or beyond which is Somebody's Entire.</p>
<p>All this came to pass in due course, and the horse, deprived of his
nosebag, returned to his professional obligations. But it was a
shabby horse in a shabby cab, to which he imparted movement by
falling forwards and saving himself just before he reached
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</SPAN></span>
the
ground. His reins were visibly made good with stout pack-thread, and
he had a well-founded contempt for his whip, which seemed to come to
an end too soon, and always to hit something wooden before it
reached any sensitive part of his person. But he did get off at
last, and showed that, as Force is a mode of motion, so Weakness is
a mode of slowness, and one he took every advantage of.</p>
<p>The mother and daughter stood looking after the vanishing label,
that stated that the complication of inefficiencies in front of it
was one of twelve thousand and odd—pray Heaven, more competent
ones!—in the Metropolis, and had nearly turned to go into the
house, when the very much younger sister (that might have been)
addressed the very much, but not impossibly, older one thus:</p>
<p>"Mamma, he said he knew somebody of our name!"</p>
<p>"Well, Miss Fiddlestick!"—with an implication of what of that? Were
there not plenty of Nightingales in the world? Miss Sally is
perceptive about this.</p>
<p>"Yes, but he said Rosalind."</p>
<p>"Where?"</p>
<p>"He didn't say where. That's all he said—Rosalind."</p>
<p>As the two stand together watching the retreating cab we are able to
see that our first impression of them, derived perhaps from their
relative ages only, was an entirely false one as far as size went.
The daughter is nearly as tall as her mother, and may end by being
as big a woman when she has completely graduated, taken her degree,
in womanhood. But for all that we, who have looked at both faces,
know that when they turn round we shall see on the shoulders of the
one youth, inexperience, frankness, and expectation of things to
come; on those of the other a head that keeps all the mere physical
freshness of the twenties, if not quite the bloom of the teens,
but—expressed Heaven knows how!—experience, reserve, and
retrospect on things that have been once and are not, and that we
have no right to assume to be any concern of ours. Equally true of
all faces of forty, do we understand you to say? Well, we don't know
about that. It was all very strong in this face.</p>
<p>We can look again, when they turn round. But they don't; for number
twelve thousand and odd has come to a standstill, and
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</SPAN></span>
its
energumenon has come down off its box, and is "fiddlin' at something
on the 'orse's 'ed." So cook says, evidently not impressed with that
cab. The doctor looks out and confers; then gets out and comes back
towards the house. The girl and her mother walk to meet him.</p>
<p>"Never saw such a four-wheeler in my life! The harness is tied up
with string, and the rein's broken. The idiot says if he had a stout
bit of whipcord, he could make it square." No sooner have the words
passed the doctor's lips than Miss Sally is off on a whipcord quest.</p>
<p>"I wish the child wouldn't always be in such a hurry," says her
mother. "Now she won't know where to get it."</p>
<p>She calls after her ineffectually. The doctor suggests that he shall
follow with instructions. Yes, suppose he does? There is precisely
the thing wanted in the left-hand drawer of the table in the
hall—the drawer the handle comes off. This seems unpromising, but
the doctor goes, and transmission of messages ensues, heard within
the house.</p>
<p>Left alone, Mrs. Nightingale, the elder Rosalind, seems reflective.
"A funny thing, too!" she says aloud to herself. She is thinking,
clearly, of how this man in the cab, who can't give any account of
himself, once knew a Rosalind Nightingale.</p>
<p>Probably the handle has come off the drawer, for they are a long
time over that string. Curiosity has time to work, and has so much
effect that the lady seems to determine that, after all, she would
like to see the man. Now that the cab is so far from the door, even
if she spoke to him, she would not stand committed to anything. It
is all settled, arranged, ratified, that he shall go to the
police-station, or the infirmary, "or somewhere."</p>
<p>When the string, and Dr. Vereker, and Sally the daughter come out of
the house, both exclaim. And the surprise they express is that the
mother of the latter should have walked all the way after the cab,
and should be talking to the man in it! It is not consistent with
her previous attitude.</p>
<p>"Now, isn't that like mamma?" says Sally. If so, why be so
astonished at it?—is a question that suggests itself to her hearer.
But self-confutation is not a disorder for his treatment. Besides,
the doctor likes it, in this case. His own surprise at mamma's
conduct is unqualified by any intimate acquaintance with
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</SPAN></span>
her
character. She may be inconsistency itself, for anything he knows.</p>
<p>"Is she going to turn the cab round and bring him to the house,
after all?" It looks like it.</p>
<p>"I'm so glad," Sally replies to the doctor.</p>
<p>"I hope you won't repent it in sackcloth and ashes."</p>
<p>"I shan't. Why do you think I shall?"</p>
<p>"How do you know you won't?"</p>
<p>"You'll see!" Sally pinches her red lips tight over her two rows of
pearls, and nods confirmation. Her dark eyes look merry under the
merry eyebrows, and the lip-pinch makes a dimple on her chin—a
dimple to remember her by. She is a taking young lady, there is no
doubt of it. At least, the doctor has none.</p>
<p>"Yes, Sally, it's all quite right." Thus her mother, arriving a
little ahead of the returning cab. "Now, don't dispute with me,
child, but do just as I tell you. We'll have him in the
breakfast-room; there's fewer steps." She seems to have made up her
mind so completely that neither of the others interposes a word. But
she replies, moved by a brain-wave, to a question that stirred in
the doctor's mind.</p>
<p>"Oh yes; he has spoken. He spoke to me just now. I'll tell you
presently. Now let's get him out. No, never mind calling cook. You
take him on that side, doctor.... That's right!"</p>
<p>And then the man, whose name we still do not know, found himself
half supported, half standing alone, on the pavement in front of a
little white eligible residence smelling of new paint. He did not
the least know what had happened. He had only a vague impression
that if some one or something, he couldn't say what, would only give
up hindering him, he would find something he was looking for. But
how could he find it if he didn't know what it was? And that he was
quite in the dark about. The half-crown and the pretty girl who had
given it to him, the train-guard and his cowardice about
responsibility, the public-spirited gentleman, the railway-carriage
itself, to say nothing of all the exciting experiences of the
morning—all, all had vanished, leaving behind only the trace of the
impulse to search. Nothing else! He stood looking bewildered, then
spoke thickly.</p>
<div>
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</SPAN></span></div>
<p>"I am giving trouble," said he. Then the two ladies and the
gentleman, whom he saw dimly and did not know, looked at one
another, each perhaps to see if one of the others would speak first.
In the end the lady who was a woman nodded to the gentleman to
speak, and then the lady who was a girl confirmed her by what was
little more than an intention to nod, not quite unmixed with a
mischievous enjoyment at the devolution of the duty of speech on the
gentleman. It twinkled in her closed lips. But the gentleman didn't
seem overwhelmed with embarrassment. He spoke as if he was used to
things.</p>
<p>"You have had an accident, sir.... On the railway.... In the
Twopenny Tube.... Yes, you'll remember all about it presently....
Yes, I'm a doctor.... Yes, we want you to come in and sit down and
rest till you're better.... No, it won't be a long job. <i>You'll</i>
soon come round.... What?... Oh no, no trouble at all! It's this
lady's house, and she wants you to come in." The speaker seems to
guess at the right meanings, as one guesses in the jaws of the
telephone, perhaps with more confidence. But there was but little
audible articulation on the other's part.</p>
<p>He seemed not to want much support—chiefly guidance. He was taken
down the half-dozen steps that flanked a grass slope down to a stone
paving, and through a door under the more numerous steps he had
escaped climbing, and into a breakfast-room flush with the kitchen,
opening on a small garden at the back. There was the marriage of
Queen Victoria and Prince Albert over the chimney-piece, and a
tortoiseshell cat with a collar on the oilskin cover of a square
table, who rose as though half resenting strange visitors; then,
after stretching, decided on some haven less liable to disturbance,
and went through the window to it without effort, emotion, or sound.
There was a clock under a glass cover on the chimney-piece whose
works you could see through, with a fascinating ratchet movement of
perfect grace and punctuality. Also a vertical orange-yellow glass
vase, twisted to a spiral, and full of spills. Also the leaning
tower of Pisa, done small in alabaster. He could see all these
things quite plainly, and but that his tongue seemed to have struck
work, could have described them. But he could not make himself out,
nor how and why he came to be there at all. Where ought
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</SPAN></span>
he to have
been, he asked himself? And, to his horror, he could not make that
out either. Never mind. Patience was the word, clearly. Let him shut
his eyes as he sat there, in the little breakfast-room, with the
flies continually droning in the ceiling, and an especially large
bluebottle busy in the window, who might just as easily have gone
out and enjoyed the last hour of a long evening in a glorious
sunshine, but who mysteriously preferred to beat himself for ever
against a closed pane of glass, a self-constituted prisoner between
it and a gauze blind—let him shut his eyes, and try to think out
what it all meant, what it was all about.</p>
<p>All that he was perfectly certain of, at that moment, was that he
was awake, with a contused pain all over, and a very stiff left hand
and foot. And that, knowing he had been insensible, he was striving
hard to remember what something was that had happened just before he
became insensible. He had nearly got it, once or twice. Yes, now he
<i>had</i> got it, surely! No, he hadn't. It was gone again.</p>
<p>A mind that is struggling to remember some particular thing does not
deal with other possibilities of oblivion. We all know the painful
phenomenon of being perfectly aware what it is we are trying to
remember, feeling constantly close to it, but always failing to
grasp it. We know what it will sound like when we say it, what it
will mean, where it was on the page we read it on. Oh dear
yes!—quite plainly. The only thing we can't remember for the life
of us is—what it <i>was</i>!</p>
<p>And while we are making stupendous efforts to recapture some such
thing, does it ever occur to any of us to ask if we may not be
mistaken in our tacit assumption that we are quite certain to
remember everything else as soon as we try? That, in fact, it may be
our memory-faculty itself that is in fault and that we are only
failing to recall one thing because at the moment it is that one
sole thing, and no other, that we are trying our brains against.</p>
<p>It was so in the pause of a few minutes in which this man we write
of, left to himself and the ticking of the clock, and hearing,
through the activity of the bluebottle and the monotony of the
ceiling flies, the murmur of a distant conversation between his late
companions, who for the moment had left him alone, tried in
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</SPAN></span>
vain to
recover his particular thread of memory, without any uneasiness
about the innumerable skeins that made up the tissue of his record
of a lifetime.</p>
<p>When the young doctor returned, he found him still seated where he
had left him, one hand over his eyes, the other on his knee. As he
sat—for the doctor watched him from the door for a moment—he moved
and replaced either hand at intervals, with implied distress in the
movements. They gave the impression of constant attempt constantly
baffled. The doctor, a shrewd-seeming young man with an attentive
pale eye, and very fair hair, seemed to understand.</p>
<p>"Let me recommend you to be quiet and rest. Be quite quiet. You will
be all right when you have slept on it. Mrs. Nightingale—that's the
lady you saw just now; this is her house—will see that you are
properly taken care of."</p>
<p>Then the man tried to speak; it was with an effort.</p>
<p>"I wish to thank—I must thank——"</p>
<p>"Never mind thanks yet. All in good time. Now, what do you think you
can take—to eat or drink?"</p>
<p>"Nothing—nothing to eat or drink."</p>
<p>"Well, you know best. However, there's tea coming; perhaps you'll go
so far as a cup of tea? You would be the better for it."</p>
<hr class="minor" />
<p>Rosalind junior, or Sally, slept in the back bedroom on the
first-floor—that is to say, if we ignore the basement floor and
call the one flush with the street-door step the ground-floor. We
believe we are right in doing so. Rosalind senior, the mother, slept
in the front one. It wasn't too late for tea, they had decided, and
thereupon they had gone upstairs to revise and correct.</p>
<p>After a certain amount of slopping and splashing in the back room,
uncorroborated by any in the front, Sally called out to her mother,
on the disjointed lines of talk in real life:</p>
<p>"I like this soap! Have you a safety-pin?" Whereto her mother
replied, speaking rather drowsily and perfunctorily:</p>
<p>"Yes, but you must come and get it."</p>
<p>"It's so nice and oily. It's not from Cattley's?"</p>
<p>"Yes, it is."</p>
<p>"I thought it was. Where's the pin?" At this point she came into her
mother's room, covering her slightly <i>retroussé</i> nose
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</SPAN></span>
with her
fresh-washed hands, to enjoy the aroma of Cattley's soap.</p>
<p>"In the little pink saucer. Only don't mess my things about."</p>
<p>"Headache, mammy dear?" For her mother was lying back on the bed,
with her eyes closed. The speaker left her hands over her nostrils
as she spoke, to do full justice to the soap, pausing an instant in
her safety-pin raid for the answer:</p>
<p>"I've been feeling the heat. It's nothing. You go down, and I'll
come."</p>
<p>"Have some eau-de-Cologne?" But, alas! there was no eau-de-Cologne.</p>
<p>"Never mind. You go down, and I'll follow. I shall be all right
after a cup of tea." And Sally, after an intricate movement with a
safety-pin, an openwork lace cuff that has lost a button, and a
white wrist, goes down three accelerandos of stair-lengths, with
landing pauses, and ends with a dining-room door staccato. But she
isn't long gone, for in two minutes the door reopens, and she comes
upstairs as fast, nearly, as she went down. In her hand she carries,
visibly, Johann Maria Farina.</p>
<p>"Where on earth did you find that?" says her mother.</p>
<p>"The man had it. Wasn't it funny? He heard me say to Dr. Vereker
that I was so sorry I'd not been able to eau-de-Cologne your
forehead, and he began speaking and couldn't get his words. Then he
got this out of his pocket. I remember one of the men at the station
said something about his having a bottle, but I thought he meant a
pocket-flask. He looks the sort of man that would have a
pocket-flask and earrings."</p>
<p>Her mother doesn't seem to find this inexplicable, nor to need
comment. Rather the contrary. Sally dabs her brow with
eau-de-Cologne, beneficially, for she seems better, and says now go;
she won't be above a couple of minutes. Nor is she, in the sense in
which her statement has been accepted, for she comes downstairs
within seven by the clock with the dutiful ratchet movement.</p>
<hr class="minor" />
<p>When she came within hearing of those in the room below, she heard a
male voice that was not Dr. Vereker's. Yes, the man (whom we still
cannot speak of by a name) was saying something—slowly,
perhaps—but fairly articulately and intelligibly.
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</SPAN></span>
She went very
deliberately, and listened in the doorway. She looked very pale, and
very interested—a face of fixed attention, of absorption in
something she was irresolute about, rather than of doubt about what
she heard; an expression rather out of proportion to the concurrent
facts, as we know them.</p>
<p>"What is so strange"—this is what the man was saying, in his slow
way—"is that I could find words to tell you, if I could remember
what it is I have to tell. But when I try to bring it back, my head
fails. Tell me again, mademoiselle, about the railway-carriage."
Sally wondered why she was mademoiselle, but recognised a tone of
deference in his use of the word. She did as he asked her, slightly
interrupting her narrative to make sure of getting the tea made
right as she did so.</p>
<p>"I trod on your foot, you know. (One, two, three spoonfuls.) Surely
you must remember that? (Four, and a little one for the pot.)"</p>
<p>"I have completely forgotten it."</p>
<p>"Then I was sorry, and said I would have come off sooner if I had
known it was a foot. You <i>must</i> remember that?" The man half smiled
as he shook a slow-disclaiming head—one that would have remembered
so gladly, if it could. "Then," continues Sally, "I saw your
thumb-ring for rheumatism."</p>
<p>"My thumb-ring!" He presses his fingers over his closed eyes, as
though to give Memory a better chance by shutting off the visible
present, then withdraws them. "No, I remember no ring at all."</p>
<p>"How extraordinary!"</p>
<p>"I remember a violent concussion <i>somewhere</i>—I can't say where—and
then finding myself in a cab, trying to speak to a lady whose face
seemed familiar to me, but who she could be I had not the slightest
idea. Then I tried to get out of the cab, and found I could not
move—or hardly."</p>
<p>"Look at mamma again! Here she is, come." For Mrs. Nightingale has
come into the room, looking white. "Yes, mother dear, I have. Quite
full up to the brim. Only it isn't ready to pour yet." This last
concerns the tea.</p>
<p>Mrs. Nightingale moves round behind the tea-maker, and comes
full-face in front of her guest. One might have fancied that the
hand that held the pocket-handkerchief that caused the smell
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</SPAN></span>
of
eau-de-Cologne that came in with her was tremulous. But then that
very eau-de-Cologne was eloquent about the recent effect of the
heat. Of course, she was a little upset. Nothing strikes either the
doctor or Mademoiselle Sally as abnormal or extraordinary. The
latter resumes:</p>
<p>"Surely, sir! Oh, you must, you <i>must</i> remember about the name
Nightingale?"</p>
<p>"This young gentleman said it just now. <i>Your</i> name, madame?"</p>
<p>"Certainly, my name," says the lady addressed. But Sally
distinguishes:</p>
<p>"Yes, but I didn't mean that. I meant when I took the ring from you,
and was to pay for it. Sixpence. And you had no change for
half-a-crown. And then I gave you my mother's card to send it to us
here. One-and-elevenpence, because of the postage. Why, surely you
can remember that!" She cannot bring herself to believe him. Dr.
Vereker does, though, and tells him not to try recollecting; he will
only put himself back. "Take the tea and wait a bit," is the
doctor's advice. For Miss Sally is transmitting a cup of tea with
studied equilibrium. He receives it absently, leaving it on the
table.</p>
<p>"I do not know if you will know what I mean," he says, "but I have a
sort of feeling of—of being frightened; for I have been trying to
remember things, and I find I can remember almost nothing. Perhaps I
should say I cannot remember <i>at all</i>—can't do any recollecting, if
you understand." Every one can understand—at least, each says so.
Sally goes on, half <i>sotto voce</i>: "You can recollect your own name,
I suppose?" She speaks half-way between soliloquy and dialogue. The
doctor throws in counsel, aside, for precaution.</p>
<p>"You'll only make matters worse, like that. Better leave him quite
alone."</p>
<p>But the man's hearing doesn't seem to have suffered, for he catches
the remark about his name.</p>
<p>"I can't tell," he says. "I am not so sure. Of course, I can't have
forgotten my own name, because that's impossible. I will tell it you
in a minute.... Oh dear!..."</p>
<p>The young doctor seemed to disapprove highly of these efforts, and
to wish to change the conversation. "Let it alone now," said
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</SPAN></span>
he.
"Only for a little. Would you kindly allow me to see your arm
again?"</p>
<p>"Let him drink his tea first." This is from Miss Sally, the
tea-priestess. "Another cup?" But no; he won't take another cup,
thanks.</p>
<p>"Now let's have the coat off, and get another look at the arm; never
mind apologizing." But the patient had not contemplated apology. It
was the stiffness made him slow. However, he got his coat off, and
drew the blue shirt off his left arm. He had a fine hand and arm,
but the hand hung inanimate, and the fingers looked scorched. Dr.
Vereker began feeling the arm at intervals all the way up, and
asking each time questions about the degree of sensibility.</p>
<p>"I couldn't say whether it's normal or not up there." So the patient
testified. And Mrs. Nightingale, who was watching the examination
intently, suggested trying the other arm in the same place for
comparison.</p>
<p>"You didn't see the other arm at the station, doctor?" she said.</p>
<p>"Didn't I?"</p>
<p>"I was asking."</p>
<p>"Well, no. Now I come to think of it, I don't think I did. We'll
have a look now, anyhow."</p>
<p>"<i>You're</i> a nice doctor!" This is from Miss Sally; a little
confidential fling at the profession. She is no respecter of
persons. Her mother would, no doubt, check her—a pert little
monkey!—only she is absorbed in the examination.</p>
<p>The doctor, as he ran back the right-arm sleeve, uttered an
exclamation. "Why, my dear sir," cried he, "here we have it! What
more can we want?"—and pointed at the arm. And Sally said, as
though relieved: "He's got his name written on him plain enough,
anyhow!" Her mother gave a sigh of relief, or something like it, and
said, "Yes." The patient himself seemed quite as much perplexed as
pleased at the discovery, saying only, in a subdued way: "It <i>must</i>
be my name." But he did not seem to accept at all readily the name
tattooed on his arm: "A. Fenwick, 1878."</p>
<p>"Whose name can it be if it is not yours?" said Mrs. Nightingale.
She fixed her eyes on his face, as though to watch his effort
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</SPAN></span>
of
memory. "Try and think." But the doctor protested.</p>
<p>"Don't do anything of the sort," said he. "It's very bad for him,
Mrs. Nightingale. He <i>mustn't</i> think. Just let him rest."</p>
<p>The patient, however, could not resign himself without a struggle to
this state of anonymous ambiguity. His bewilderment was painful to
witness. "If it were my name," he said, speaking slowly and not very
clearly, "surely it would bring back the first name. I try to recall
the word, and the effort is painful, and doesn't succeed." His
hostess seemed much interested, even to the extent of ignoring the
doctor's injunctions.</p>
<p>"Very curious! If you heard the name now, would you recollect it?"</p>
<p>"I <i>wish</i> you wouldn't try these experiments," says the doctor.
"They won't do him <i>any</i> good. <i>Rest's</i> the thing."</p>
<p>"I think I would rather try," says Fenwick, as we may now call him.
"I will be quiet if I can get this right."</p>
<p>Mrs. Nightingale begins repeating names that begin with A. "Alfred,
Augustus, Arthur, Andrew, Algernon——"</p>
<p>Fenwick's face brightens. "That's it!" says he. "Algernon. I knew it
quite well all the time, of course. But I couldn't—couldn't....
However, I don't feel that I shall make myself understood."</p>
<p>"I can't make out," said Sally, "how you came to remember the bottle
of eau-de-Cologne."</p>
<p>"I did not remember it. I do not now. I mean, how it came to be in
the pocket. I can remember nothing else that was there—would have
been, that is. There is nothing else there now, except my cigar-case
and a pocket-book with nothing much in it. I can tell nothing about
my watch. A watch ought to be there."</p>
<p>"There, there!" says the doctor; "you will remember it all
presently. Do take my advice and be quiet, and sit still and don't
talk."</p>
<p>But half an hour or more after, although he had taken this advice,
Fenwick remembered nothing, or professed to have remembered nothing.
He seemed, however, much more collected, and except on the
memory-point nearly normal.</p>
<p>When the doctor, looking at his watch, referred to his obligation
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</SPAN></span>
to keep another engagement, Fenwick rose, saying that he was now
perfectly well able to walk, and he would intrude no longer on his
hostesses' hospitality. This would have been perfectly reasonable,
but for one thing. It had come out that his pockets were empty, and
he was evidently quite without any definite plan as to what he
should do next, or where he should go. He was only anxious to
relieve his new friends of an encumbrance. He was evidently the sort
of person on whom the character sat ill; one who would always be
most at ease when shifting for himself; such a one as would reply to
any doubt thrown on his power of doing so, that he had been in many
a worse plight than this before. Yet you would hardly have classed
him on that account as an adventurer, because that term implies
unscrupulousness in the way one shifts for oneself. His face was a
perfectly honourable one. It was a face whose strength did not
interfere with its refinement, and there was a pleasant candour in
the smile that covered it as he finally made ready to depart with
the doctor. He should never, he said, know how to be grateful enough
to madame and her daughter for their kindness to him. But when
pressed on the point of where he intended to go, and how they should
hear what had become of him, he answered vaguely. He was undecided,
but, of course, he would write and tell them as they so kindly
wished to hear of him. Would mademoiselle give him the address
written down?</p>
<p>They found themselves—at least, the doctor and Sally
did—inferring, from his refreshed manner and his confidence about
departing, that his memory was coming back, or would come back. It
might have seemed needless inquisitiveness to press him with further
questions. They left the point alone. After all, they had no more
right to catechize him about himself than if he had been knocked
down by a cart outside the door, and brought into the house
unconscious—a thing which might quite well have happened.</p>
<p>Mrs. Nightingale seemed very anxious he should not go away quite
unprovided with money. She asked Dr. Vereker to pass him on a loan
from her before he parted with him. He could post it back when it
was quite convenient, so the doctor was to tell him. The doctor
asked, Wasn't a sovereign a large order? But she seemed to think
not. "Besides," said she, "it makes it certain
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</SPAN></span>
we shall not lose
sight of him. I'm not sure we ought to let him go at all," added
she. She seemed very uneasy about it—almost exaggeratedly so, the
doctor thought. But he was reassuring and confident, and she allowed
his judgment to overrule hers. But he must bring him back without
scruple if he saw reason to do so. He promised, and the two departed
together, the gait and manner of Fenwick giving rise to no immediate
apprehension.</p>
<p>"How rum!" said Sally, when they had gone. "I never thought I should
live to see a man electrocuted."</p>
<p>"A man what?"</p>
<p>"Well, half-electrocuted, then. I say, mother——"</p>
<p>"What, dear?" She is looking very tired, and speaks absently. Sally
makes the heat responsible again in her mind, and continues:</p>
<p>"I don't believe his name's Algernon at all! It's Arthur, or Andrew,
or something of that sort."</p>
<p>"You're very wise, poppet. Why?"</p>
<p>"Because you stopped such a long time after Algernon. It was like
cheating at Spiritualism. You <i>must</i> say the alphabet quite
steady—A—B—C—D——" Sally sketches out the proper attitude for
the impartial inquirer. "Or else you're an accomplice."</p>
<p>"You're a puss! No, <i>his</i> name's Algernon, right enough.... I mean,
I've no doubt it's Algernon. Why shouldn't it be?"</p>
<p>"No reason at all. Dr. Vereker's is Conrad, so, of course, there's
no reason why his shouldn't be Algernon." Satisfactory and
convincing! At least, the speaker thinks so, and is perfectly
satisfied. Her mother doesn't quarrel with the decision.</p>
<p>"Kitten!" she says suddenly. And then in reply to her daughter's,
"What's up, mammy dear?" she suggests that they shall walk out in
front—it is a quiet, retired sort of cul-de-sac road, ending in a
fence done over with tar, with nails along the top like the letter
<i>L</i> upside down—in the cool. "It's quite delicious now the sun's
gone down, and Martha can make supper another half-hour late."
Agreed.</p>
<p>The mother pauses as they reach the gate. "Who's that talking?" she
asks, and listens.</p>
<p>"Nobody. It's only the sparrows going to bed."</p>
<div>
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</SPAN></span></div>
<p>"No, no; not that! Shish! be quiet! I'm sure I heard Dr. Vereker's
voice——"</p>
<p>"How could you? He's home by now."</p>
<p>"Do be quiet, child!" She continues listening.</p>
<p>"Why not look round the corner and see if it isn't him?"</p>
<p>"Well, I was going to; only you and the sparrows make such a
chattering.... There, I knew it would be that! Why doesn't he bring
him back here, at once?" For at the end of the short road are Dr.
Vereker and Fenwick, the latter with his hand on the top of a post,
as though resting. They must have been there some minutes.</p>
<p>"Fancy their having got no further than the fire-alarm!" says Sally,
who takes account of her surroundings.</p>
<p>"Of course, I ought never to have let him go." Thus her mother, with
decision in her voice. "Come on, child!"</p>
<p>She seems greatly relieved at the matter having settled itself—so
Sally thinks, at least.</p>
<p>"We got as far as this," Dr. Vereker says—rather meaninglessly, if
you come to think of it. It is so very obvious.</p>
<p>"And now," says Mrs. Nightingale, "how is he to be got back again?
That's the question!" She seems not to have the smallest doubt about
the question, but much about the answer. It is answered, however,
with the assistance of the previous police-constable, who reappears
like a ghost. And Mr. Fenwick is back again within the little white
villa, much embarrassed at the trouble he is giving, but unable to
indicate any other course. Clearly, it would never do to accept the
only one he can suggest—that he should be left to himself, leaning
on the fire-alarm, till the full use of his limbs should come back
to him.</p>
<p>Mrs. Nightingale, who is the person principally involved, seems
quite content with the arrangement. The doctor, in his own mind, is
rather puzzled at her ready acquiescence; but, then, the only
suggestion he could make would be that he should do precisely the
same good office himself to this victim of an electric current of a
good deal too many volts—too many for private consumption—or cab
him off to the police-station or the workhouse. For Mr. Fenwick
continues quite unable to give any account of his past or his
belongings, and can only look forward to recollecting himself, as it
were, to-morrow morning.</p>
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