<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
<p class="subhead">HOW MAJOR ROPER MET THAT BOY, AND GOT UPSTAIRS AT BALL STREET. AN
INTERVIEW BETWEEN ASTHMA AND BRONCHITIS. HOW SALLY PINIONED THE
PURPLE VETERAN, AND THERE WAS NO BOY. HOW THE GOVERNOR DONE
HOARCKIN', AND GOT QUALIFIED FOR A SUBJECT OF PSYCHICAL RESEARCH</p>
<p>Old Jack's powers of self-delusion were great indeed if, when he
started on his short journey, he really believed the fog had mended.
At least, it was so dense that he might never have found his way
without assistance. This he met with in the shape of a boy with a
link, whom Sally at once identified from his description, given when
the Major had succeeded in getting up the stairs and was resting in
the sitting-room near the old sabre on the wall, wiping his eyes
after his effort. Colonel Lund was half-unconscious after a bad
attack, and it was best not to disturb him. Fenwick had not
returned, and no one was very easy about him. But every one affirmed
the reverse, and joined in a sort of Creed to the effect that the
fog was clearing. It wasn't and didn't mean to for some time. But
the unanimity of the creed fortified the congregation, as in other
cases. No two believers doubted it at once, just as no two Alpine
climbers, strung together on the moraine of a glacier, lose their
foothold at the same time.</p>
<p>"I know that boy," said Sally. "His nose twists, and gives him a
presumptuous expression, and he has a front tooth out and puts his
tongue through. Also his trousers are tied on with strings."</p>
<p>"Everlastin' young beggar, if ever there was one," says the old
soldier, in a lucid interval when speech is articulate. But he is
allowing colloquialism to run riot over meaning. No everlasting
person can ever have become part of the past if you think of it. He
goes on to say that the boy has had twopence and is to come back for
fourpence in an hour, or threepence if you can see
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the gas-lamps,
because then a link will be superfluous. Sally recognises the boy
more than ever.</p>
<p>"I wonder," she says, "if he's waiting outside. Because the party of
the house might allow him inside. Do you think I could ask, mother?"</p>
<p>"You might <i>try</i>, kitten," is the reply, not given sanguinely. And
Sally goes off, benevolent. "Even when your trousers are tied up
with string, a fog's a fog," says she to herself.</p>
<p>"I knoo our friend Lund first of all...." Thus the Major, nodding
towards the bedroom door.... "Why, God bless my soul, ma'am, I knew
Lund first of all, forty-six years ago in Delhi. Forty—six—years!
And all that time, if you believe me, he's been the same obstinate
moole. Never takin' a precaution about anythin', nor listening to a
word of advice!" This is about as far as he can go without a choke.
Rosalind goes into the next room to get a tumbler of water. The
nurse, who is sitting by the fire, nods towards the bed, and
Rosalind goes close to it to hear. "What is it, dear?" She speaks to
the invalid as to a little child.</p>
<p>"Isn't that Old Jack choking? I know his choke. What does he come
out for in weather like this? What does he mean? Send him back....
No, send him in here." The nurse puts in a headshake as protest. But
for all that, Sally finds, when she returns, that the two veterans
are contending together against their two enemies, bronchitis and
asthma, with the Intelligence Department sadly interrupted, and the
enemy in possession of all the advantageous points.</p>
<p>"He oughtn't to try to talk," says Rosalind. "But he will." She and
Sally and the nurse sit on in the fog-bound front room. The
gas-lights have no heart in them, and each wears a nimbus. Rosalind
wishes Gerry would return, aloud. Sally is buoyant about him; <i>he's</i>
all right, trust <i>him</i>! What about the everlasting young beggar?</p>
<p>"I persuaded Mrs. Kindred," says Sally. "And we looked outside for
him, and he'd gone."</p>
<p>"Fancy a woman being named Kindred!"</p>
<p>"When people are so genteel one can believe anything! But what do
you think the boy's name is?... Chancellorship! Isn't that queer?
She knows him—says he's always about in the
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neighbourhood. He
sleeps in the mews behind Great Toff House."</p>
<p>Her mother isn't listening. She rises for a moment to hear what she
may of how the talk in the next room goes on; and then, coming back,
says again she wishes Gerry was safe indoors, and Sally again says,
"Oh, <i>he's</i> all right!" The confidence these two have in one another
makes them a couple apart—a sort of league.</p>
<p>What Mrs. Fenwick heard a scrap of in the next room would have been,
but for the alarums and excursions of the two enemies
aforementioned, a consecutive conversation as follows:</p>
<p>"You're gettin' round, Colonel?"</p>
<p>"A deal better, Major. I want to speak to <i>you</i>."</p>
<p>"Fire away, old Cockywax! You remember Hopkins?—Cartwright
Hopkins—man with a squint—at Mooltan—expression of his, 'Old
Cockywax.'"</p>
<p>"I remember him. Died of typhoid at Burrampore. Now you listen to
me, old chap, and don't talk—you only make yourself cough."</p>
<p>"It's only the dam fog. <i>I'm</i> all right."</p>
<p>"Well, shut up. That child in the next room—it's her I want to talk
about. You're the only man, as far as I know, that knows the story.
She doesn't. She's not to be told."</p>
<p>"Mum's the word, sir. Always say nothin', that's my motto.
Penderfield's daughter at Khopal—at least, he was her father. One
dam father's as good as another, as long as he goes to the devil."
This may be a kind of disclaimer of inheritance as a factor to be
reckoned with, an obscure suggestion that human parentage is without
influence on character. It is not well expressed.</p>
<p>"Listen to me, Roper. You know the story. That's the only man I
can't say God forgive him to. God forgive <i>me</i>, but I can't."</p>
<p>"Devil take me if I can!... Yes, it's all right. They're all in the
next room...."</p>
<p>"But the woman was worse. She's living, you know...."</p>
<p>"I know—shinin' light—purifying society—that's her game! I'd
purify <i>her</i>, if I had my way."</p>
<p>"Come a bit nearer—my voice goes. I've thought it all out. If the
girl, who supposes herself to be the daughter of her mother's
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husband, tries to run you into a corner—you understand?"</p>
<p>"I understand."</p>
<p>"Well, don't you undeceive her. Her mother has never told her
<i>anything</i>. She doesn't suppose she had any hand in the divorce. She
thinks his name was Graythorpe, and doesn't know he wasn't her
father. Don't you undeceive her—promise."</p>
<p>But the speaker is so near the end of his tether that the Major has
barely time to say, "Honour bright, Colonel," when the bronchial
storm bursts. It may be that the last new anodyne, which is
warranted to have all the virtues and none of the ill-effects of
opium, had also come to the end of <i>its</i> tether. Mrs. Fenwick came
quickly in, saying he had talked too much; and Sally, following her,
got Major Roper away, leaving the patient to her mother and the
nurse. The latter knew what it would be with all this talking—now
the temperature would go up, and he would have a bad night, and what
would Dr. Mildmay say?</p>
<p>Till the storm had subsided and a new dose of the sedative had been
given, Sally and Old Jack stood waiting in sympathetic pain—you
know what it is when you can do nothing. The latter derived some
insignificant comfort from suggestions through his own choking that
all this was due to neglect of his advice. When only moans and heavy
breathing were left, Sally went back into the bedroom. Her mother
was nursing the poor old racked head on her bosom, with the
sword-hand of the days gone by in her own. She said without speaking
that he would sleep presently, and the fewer in the room the better,
and Sally left them so, and went back.</p>
<p>Yes, the Major would take some toddy before he started for home. And
it was all ready, lemons and all, in the black polished wood
cellaret, with eagles' claws for feet. Sally got the ingredients out
and began to make it. But first she gently closed the door between
the rooms, to keep the sound of their voices in.</p>
<p>"You really did see my father, though, Major?" There seemed to be a
good deal of consideration before the answer came, not all to be
accounted for by asthma.</p>
<p>"Yes—certainly—oh yes. I saw Mr. Graythorpe once or twice. Another
spoonful—that's plenty." A pause.</p>
<div>
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<p>"Now, don't spill it. Take care, it's very hot. That's right."
Another pause. "Major Roper...."</p>
<p>"Yes, my dear. What?"</p>
<p>"<i>Do</i> tell me what he was like."</p>
<p>"Have you never seen his portrait?"</p>
<p>"Mother burnt it while I was small. She told me. Do tell me what you
recollect him like."</p>
<p>"Fine handsome feller—well set up. Fine shot, too! Gad! that was a
neat thing! A bullet through a tiger two hundred yards off just
behind the ear."</p>
<p>"But I thought <i>his</i> name was Harrisson." The Major has got out of
his depth entirely through his own rashness. Why couldn't he leave
that tiger alone? Now he has to get into safe water again.</p>
<p>A good long choke is almost welcome at this moment. While it goes on
he can herald, by a chronic movement of a raised finger, his
readiness to explain all as soon as it stops. He catches at his
first articulation, so that not a moment may be lost. There were
<i>two</i> tigers—that's the explanation. Harrisson shot one, and
Graythorpe the other. The cross-examiner is dissatisfied.</p>
<p>"Which was the one that shot the tiger two hundred yards off, just
behind the ear?"</p>
<p>The old gentleman responds with a spirited decision: "Your father,
my dear, your father. That tiger round at my rooms—show it you if
you like—that skin was given me by a feller named Harrisson, in the
Commissariat—quite another sort of Johnny. He was down with the
Central Indian Horse—quite another place!" He dwells on the
inferiority of this shot, the smallness of the skin, the close
contiguity of its owner. A very inferior affair!</p>
<p>But, being desperately afraid of blundering again, he makes the fact
he admits, that he had confoozed between the two cases, a reason for
a close analysis of the merits of each. This has no interest for
Sally, who, indeed, had only regarded the conversation, so far, as a
stepping-stone she now wanted to leap to the mainland from. After
all, here she is face-to-face with a man who actually knows the
story of the separation, and can talk of it without pain. Why should
she not get something from him, however little? You see, the idea of
a something that could
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not be told was necessarily foreign to a
mind some somethings could not be told to. But she felt it would be
difficult to account to Major Roper for her own position. The fact
that she knew nothing proved that her mother and Colonel Lund had
been anxious she should know nothing. She could not refer to an
outsider over their heads. Still, she hoped, as Major Roper was
deemed on all hands an arrant old gossip, that he might accidentally
say something to enlighten her. She prolonged the conversation in
this hope.</p>
<p>"Was that before I was born?"</p>
<p>"The tiger-shootin'? Well, reely, my dear, I shouldn't like to say.
It's twenty years ago, you see. No, I couldn't say—couldn't say
when it was." He is beginning to pack himself in a long woollen
scarf an overcoat with fur facings will shortly cover in, and is, in
fact, preparing to evacuate a position he finds untenable. "I must
be thinkin' of gettin' home," he says. Sally tries for a word more.</p>
<p>"Was it before he and mother fell out?" It is on the Major's lips to
say, "Before the proceedings?" but he changes the expression.</p>
<p>"Before the split? Well, no; I should say after the split.
Yes—probably after the split." But an unfortunate garrulity prompts
him to say more. "After the split, I should say, and before
the——"—and then he feels he is in a quagmire, and flounders to
the nearest land—"before your father went away to Australia." Then
he discerns his own feebleness, recognising the platitude of this
last remark. For nobody could shoot tigers in an Indian jungle after
he had gone off to Australia. Clearly the sooner he gets away the
better.</p>
<p>A timely choking-fit interposes to preserve its victim from further
questioning. The patient in the next room is asleep or torpid, so he
omits farewells. Sally's mother comes out to say good-night, and
Sally goes down the staircase with him and his asthma, feeling that
it is horrible and barbarous to turn him out alone in the dense
blackness. Perhaps, however, the peculiar boy with the strange name
will be there. That would be better than nothing. Sally feels there
is something indomitable about that boy, and that fog nourishes and
stimulates it.</p>
<p>But, alas!—there is no boy. And yet it certainly would be
fourpence
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if he came back. For, though it may be possible to see the
street gas-lamps without getting inside the glass, you can't see
them from the pavement. Nevertheless, the faith that "it" is
clearing having been once founded, lives on itself in the face of
evidence, even as other faiths have done before now. So the creed is
briefly recited, and the Major disappears with the word good-night
still on his lips, and his cough, gasp, or choke dies away in the
fog as he vanishes.</p>
<p>Somebody is whistling "Arr-hyd-y-nos" as he comes from the other
side in the darkness—somebody who walks with a swinging step and a
resonant foot-beat, some one who cares nothing for fogs. Fenwick's
voice is defiant of it, exhilarated and exhilarating, as he ceases
to be a cloud and assumes an outline. Sally gives a kiss to frozen
hair that crackles.</p>
<p>"What's the kitten after, out in the cold? How's the Major?"</p>
<p>"Which? <i>Our</i> Major? He's a bit better, and the temperature's
lower." Sally believed this; a little thermometer thing was being
wielded as an implement of optimism, and had lent itself to
delusions.</p>
<p>"Oh, how scrunchy you are, your hands are all ice! Mamma's been
getting in a stew about <i>you</i>, squire." On which Fenwick, with the
slightest of whistles, passes Sally quickly and goes four steps at a
time up the stairs, still illuminated by Sally's gas-waste. For she
had left the lights at full cock all the way up.</p>
<p>"My dearest, you never got my telegram?" This is to Rosalind, who
has come out on the landing to meet him. But the failure of the
telegram—lost in the fog, no doubt—is a small matter. What shelves
it is the patient grief on the tired, handsome face Fenwick finds
tears on as he kisses it. Sally has the optimism all to herself now.
Her mother knows that her old friend and protector will not be here
long—that, of course, has been true some time. But there's the
suffering, present and to come.</p>
<p>"We needn't stop the chick hoping a little still if she likes." She
says it in a whisper. Sally is on the landing below; she hears the
whispering, and half guesses its meaning. Then she suppresses the
last gas-tap, and follows on into the front room, where the three
sit talking in undertones for perhaps an hour.</p>
<div>
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<p>Yes, that monotonous sound is the breathing of the patient in the
next room, under the new narcotic which has none of the bad effects
of opium. The nurse is there watching him, and wondering whether it
will be a week, or twenty-four hours. She derives an impression from
something that the fog really is clearing at last, and goes to the
window to see. She is right, for at a window opposite are dimly
visible, from the candles on either side of the mirror, two white
arms that are "doing" the hair of a girl whose stays are much too
tight. She is dressing for late dinner or an early party. Then the
nurse, listening, understands that the traffic has been roused from
its long lethargy. "I thought I heard the wheels," she says to
herself. Then Sally also becomes aware of the sound in the traffic,
and goes to <i>her</i> window in the front room.</p>
<p>"You see I'm right," she says. "The people are letting their fires
out, and the fog's giving. Now I'm going to take you home,
Jeremiah." For the understanding is that these two shall return to
Krakatoa Villa, leaving Rosalind to watch with the nurse. She will
get a chop in half an hour's time. She can sleep on the sofa in the
front room if she feels inclined. All which is duty carried out or
arranged for.</p>
<p>After her supper Rosalind sat on by herself before the fire in the
front room. She did not want to be unsociable with the nurse; but
she wanted to think, alone. A weight was on her mind; the thought
that the dear old friend, who had been her father and refuge, should
never know that she again possessed her recovered husband on terms
almost as good as if that deadly passage in her early life had never
blasted the happiness of both. He would die, and it would have made
him so happy to know it. Was she right in keeping it back now? Had
she ever been right?</p>
<p>But if she told him now, the shock of the news might hasten his
collapse. Sudden news need not be bad to cause sudden death. And,
maybe the story would be too strange for him to grasp. Better be
silent. But oh! if he might have shared her happiness!</p>
<p>Drowsiness was upon her before she knew it. Better perhaps sleep a
little now, while he was sleeping. She looked in at him, and spoke
to the nurse. He lay there like a lifeless waxwork—blown through,
like an apparatus out of order, to simulate breath,
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and doing it
badly. How could he sleep when now and then it jerked him so? He
could, and she left him and lay down, and went suddenly to sleep.
After a time that was a journey through a desert, without landmarks,
she was as suddenly waked.</p>
<p>"What?... I thought you spoke...." And so some one had spoken, but
not to her. She started up, and went to where the nurse was
conversing through the open window with an inarticulate person in
the street below, behind the thick window-curtain she had kept
overlapped, to check the freezing air.</p>
<p>"What is it?"</p>
<p>"It's a boy. I can't make out what he says."</p>
<p>"Let me come!" But Rosalind gets no nearer his meaning. She ends up
with, "I'll come down," and goes. The nurse closes the window and
goes back to the bedroom.</p>
<p>The street door opens easily, the Chubb lock being the only
fastening. The moment Rosalind sees the boy near she recognises him.
There is no doubt about the presumptuous expression, or the cause of
it. Also the ostentatious absence of the front tooth, clearly
accounting for inaudibility at a distance.</p>
<p>"What do you want?" asks Rosalind.</p>
<p>"Nothin' at all for myself. I come gratis, I did. There's a many
wouldn't." He is not too audible, even now; but he would be better
if he did not suck the cross-rail of the area paling.</p>
<p>"Why did you come?"</p>
<p>"To bring you the nooze. The old bloke's a friend of yours, missis.
Or p'r'aps he ain't! I can mizzle, you know, and no harm done."</p>
<p>"Oh no, don't mizzle on any account. Tell me about the old bloke. Do
you mean Major Roper?"</p>
<p>"Supposin' I do, why shouldn't I?" This singular boy seems to have
no way of communicating with his species except through defiances
and refutations. Rosalind accepts his question as an ordinary
assent, and does not make the mistake of entering into argument.</p>
<p>"Is he ill?" The boy nods. "Is he worse?" Another nod. "Has he gone
home to his club?" The boy evidently has a revelation to make, but
would consider it undignified to make it except as a denial of
something to the contrary. He sees his way after a brief
reflection.</p>
<div>
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<p>"He ain't gone. He's been took."</p>
<p>"He's been taken? How has he been taken?"</p>
<p>"On a perambulance. Goin' easy! But he didn't say nothin'. Not harf
a word!"</p>
<p>"Had he fainted?" But this boy has another characteristic—when he
cannot understand he will not admit it. He keeps silence, and goes
on absorbing the railing. Rosalind asks further: "Was he dead?"</p>
<p>"It'd take a lawyer to tell that, missis."</p>
<p>"I can't stand here in the cold, my boy. Come in, and come up and
tell us." So he comes up, and Rosalind speaks to the nurse in the
other room, who comes; and then they turn seriously to getting the
boy's story.</p>
<p>He is all the easier for examination from the fact that he is
impressed, if not awed, by his surroundings. All the bounce is
knocked out of him, now that his foot is no longer on his native
heath, the street. Witness that the subject of his narrative, who
would certainly have been the old bloke where there was a paling to
suck, has become a simple pronoun, and no more!</p>
<p>"I see him afore, missis," he says. "That time wot I lighted him
round for twopence. And he says to come again in three-quarters of
an hour. And I says yes, I says. And he says not to be late. Nor yet
I shouldn't, only the water run so slow off the main, and I was
kep.... Yes, missis—a drorin' of it off in their own pails at the
balkny house by the mooze, where the supply is froze...."</p>
<p>"I see, you got a job to carry up pails of water from that thing
that sticks up in the road?"</p>
<p>"Yes, missis; by means of the turncock. Sim'lar I got wet. But I
didn't go to be late. It warn't much, in the manner of speakin'. I
was on his 'eels, clost."</p>
<p>"You caught him?"</p>
<p>"Heard him hoarckin' in the fog, and I says to my mate—boy by the
name of 'Ucklebridge, only chiefly called Slimy, to distinguish
him—I says—I says that was my guv'nor, safe and square, by the
token of the sound of it. And then I catches him up in the fog,
follerin' by the sound. My word, missis, he <i>was</i> bad! Wanted to
holler me over the coals, he did, for behind my
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</SPAN></span>
time. I could hear
him wantin' to do it. But he couldn't come by the breath."</p>
<p>Poor Old Jack! The two women look at each other, and then say to the
boy: "Go on."</p>
<p>"Holdin' by the palins, he was, and goin' slow. Then he choked it
off like, and got a chanst for a word, and he says: 'Now, you young
see-saw'—that's what he said, missis, 'see-saw'—'just you stir
your stumps and cut along to the clubbus: and tell that dam
red-faced fool Mulberry to look sharp and send one of the young
fellers to lend an arm, and not to come hisself.' And then he got
out a little flat bottle of something short, and went for a nip; but
the cough took him, and it sprouted over his wropper and was
wasted."</p>
<p>The women look at each other again. The nurse sees well into the
story, and says quickly under her breath to Rosalind: "He'd been
told what to do if he felt it coming. A drop of brandy might have
made the difference." The boy goes on as soon as he is waited for.</p>
<p>"Mr. Mulberry he comes runnin' hisself, and a couple more on 'em!
And then they all calls me a young varmint by reason of the guv'nor
having got lost. But a gentleman what comes up, he says all go
opposite ways, he says, and you'll hear him in the fog. So I runs up
a parsage, and in the middle of the parsage I tumbles over the
guv'nor lyin' acrost the parsage. Then I hollers, and then they
come."</p>
<p>"Oh dear!" says Rosalind; for this boy had that terrible power of
vivid description which flinches at no realism—<i>seems</i> to enjoy the
horror of it; does not really. Probably it was only his intense
anxiety to communicate <i>all</i>, struggling with his sense of his lack
of language—a privilege enjoyed by guv'nors. But Rosalind feels the
earnestness of his brief epic. He winds it up:</p>
<p>"But the guv'nor, he'd done hoarckin'. Nor he never spoke. The
gentleman I told you, he says leave him lyin' a minute, he says, and
he runs. Then back he comes with the apoarthecary—him with the red
light—and they rips the guv'nor's sleeves up, spilin' his coat. And
they prokes into his arm with a packin'-needle. Much use it done!
And then they says, it warn't the fog, and I called 'em a liar. 'Cos
it's a clearin' off, they says. It warn't, not much. I see the
perambulance come, and they shoved
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him in, and I hooked it off, and
heard 'em saying where's that young shaver, they says; he'll be
wanted for his testament. So I hooked it off."</p>
<p>"And where did you go?"</p>
<p>"To a wisit on a friend, I did. Me and Slimy—him I mentioned afore.
And he says, he says, to come on here—on'y later. So then I come on
here."</p>
<p>Rosalind finds herself, in the face of what she feels must mean Old
Jack's sudden death, thinking how sorry she is she can command no
pair of trousers of a reasonable size to replace this boy's drenched
ones—a pair that would need no string. A crude brew of hot toddy,
and most of the cake that had appealed to Major Roper in vain, and
never gone back to the cellaret, were the only consolations
possible. They seemed welcome, but under protest.</p>
<p>"Shan't I carry of 'em outside, missis?"</p>
<p>"On the stairs, then." This assent is really because both women
believe he will be comfortabler there than in the room. "Where are
you going to sleep?" Rosalind asks, as he takes the cake and tumbler
away to the stairs. She puts a gas-jet on half-cock.</p>
<p>"Twopenny doss in Spur Street, off of 'Orseferry Road, Westminster."
This identification is to help Rosalind, as she may not be able to
spot this particular doss-house among all she knows.</p>
<p>"Do you always sleep there?"</p>
<p>"No, missis! Weather permitting, in our mooze—on the 'eap. The
'orse-keeper gives a sack in return for a bit of cleanin', early,
before comin' away."</p>
<p>"What are you?" says Rosalind. She is thinking aloud more than
asking a question. But the boy answers:</p>
<p>"I'm a wife, I am. Never learned no tride, ye see!... Oh yes; I've
been to school—board-school scollard. But they don't learn you no
tride. You parses your standards and chucks 'em." This incredible
boy, who deliberately called himself a waif (that was his meaning),
was it possible that he had passed through a board-school? Well,
perhaps he was the highest type of competitive examinee, who can
learn everything and forget everything.</p>
<div>
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</SPAN></span></div>
<p>"But you have a father?"</p>
<p>"I could show him you. But he don't hold with teachin' his sons
trides, by reason of their gettin' some of his wiges. He's in the
sanitary engineering himself, but he don't do no work." Rosalind
looks puzzled. "That's his tride—sanitary engineering, lavatries,
plumbin', and fittin'. Been out of work better than three years. He
can jint you off puppies' tails, though, at a shillin'. But he don't
only get a light job now and again, 'cos the tride ain't wot it was.
They've been shearin' of 'em off of late years. Thank you, missis."
The refreshments have vanished as by magic, and Rosalind gives the
boy the rest of the cake and a coin, and he goes away presumably to
the doss-house he smells so strong of, having been warmed, that a
flavour of the heap in the mews would have been welcome in exchange.
So Rosalind thinks as she opens the window a moment and looks out.
She can quite see the houses opposite. The fog has cleared till the
morning.</p>
<p>Perhaps it is the relenting of the atmospheric conditions, or
perhaps it is the oxygen that the patient has been inhaling off and
on, that has slightly revived him. Or perhaps it is the champagne
that comes up through a tap in the cork, and reminds Rosalind's
ill-slept brain of something heard very lately—what on earth
exactly was it? Oh, she knows! Of course, the thing in the street
the sanitary engineer's son drew the pails of water at for the house
with the balcony. It is pleasanter to know; might have fidgeted her
if she had not found out. But she is badly in want of sleep, that's
the truth!</p>
<p>"I thought Major Roper was gone, Rosey." He can talk through his
heavy breathing. It must be the purer air.</p>
<p>"So he is, dear. He went two hours ago." She sits by him, taking his
hand as before. The nurse is, by arrangement, to take her spell of
sleep now.</p>
<p>"I suppose it's my head. I thought he was here just now—just this
minute."</p>
<p>"No, dear; you've mixed him up with Gerry, when he came in to say
good-night. Major Roper went away first. It wasn't seven o'clock."
But there is something excited and puzzled in the patient's voice as
he answers—something that makes her feel creepy.</p>
<div>
<!-- Page 273 -->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</SPAN></span></div>
<p>"Are you <i>sure</i>? I mean, when he came back into the room with his
coat on."</p>
<p>"You are dreaming, dear! He never came back. He went straight away."</p>
<p>"Dreaming! Not a bit of it. You weren't here." He is so positive
that Rosalind thinks best to humour him.</p>
<p>"I suppose I was speaking to Mrs. Kindred. What did he come back to
say, dear?"</p>
<p>"Oh, nothing! At least, I had told him not to chatter to Sallykin
about the old story, and he came back, I suppose, to say he
wouldn't." He seemed to think the incident, as an incident, closed;
but presently goes on talking about things that arise from it.</p>
<p>"Old Jack's the only one of them all that knew anything about
it—that Sallykin is likely to come across. Pellew knew, of course;
but he's not an old chatterbox like Roper."</p>
<p>Ought not Rosalind to tell the news that has just reached her? She
asks herself the question, and answers it: "Not till he rallies,
certainly. If he does not rally, why then——!" Why then he either
will know or won't want to.</p>
<p>She has far less desire to tell him this than she has to talk of the
identity of her husband. She would almost be glad, as he is to
die—her old friend—that she should have some certainty beforehand
of the exact time of his death, so that she might, only for an hour,
have a companion in her secrecy. If only he and she might have borne
the burden of it together! She reproached herself, now that it was
too late, with her mistrust of his powers of retaining a secret. See
how keenly alive he was to the need of keeping Sally's parentage in
the dark! And <i>that</i> was what the whole thing turned on. Gerry's
continued ignorance might be desirable, but was a mere flea-bite by
comparison. In her strained, sleepless, overwrought state the wish
that "the Major" should know of her happiness while they could still
speak of it together grew from a passing thought of how nice it
might have been, that could not be, to a dumb dominant longing that
it should be. Still, after all, the only fear was that he should
talk to Gerry; and how easy to keep Gerry out of the room! And
suppose he did talk! Would Gerry believe him? There was risky ground
there, though.</p>
<div>
<!-- Page 274 -->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</SPAN></span></div>
<p>She was not sorry when no more speech came through the heavy
breathing of the invalid. He had talked a good deal, and a
semi-stupor followed, relieving her from the strong temptation she
had felt to lead him back to their past memories, and feel for some
means of putting him in possession of the truth. As the tension of
her mind grew less, she became aware this would have been no easy
thing to do. Then, as she sat holding the old hand, and wondering
that anything so frail could still keep in bond a spirit weary of
its prison, drowsiness crept over her once more, all the sooner for
the monotonous rhythm of the heavy breath. Consciousness gave place
to a state of mysterious discomfort, complicated with intersecting
strings and a grave sense of responsibility, and then to oblivion.
After a few thousand years, probably minutes on the clock, a jerk
woke her.</p>
<p>"Oh dear! I was asleep."</p>
<p>"You might give me another nip of the champagne, Rosey dear. And
then you must go and lie down. I shall be all right. Is it late?"</p>
<p>"Not very. About twelve. I'll look at my watch." She does so, and it
is past one. Then the invalid, being raised up towards his
champagne, has a sudden attack of coughing, which brings in the
nurse as a reserve. Presently he is reinstated in semi-comfort, half
a tone weaker, but with something to say. And so little voice to say
it with! Rosalind puts her ear close, and repeats what she catches.</p>
<p>"Why did Major Roper come back? He didn't, dear. He went away about
seven, and has not been here since."</p>
<p>"He was in the room just this minute." The voice is barely audible,
the conviction of the speaker absolute. He is wandering. The nurse's
mind decides, in an innermost recess, that it won't be very long
now.</p>
<hr class="minor" />
<p>Rosalind looked out through a spot she had rubbed clean on the
frozen window-pane, and saw that it was bright starlight. The fog
had gone. That boy—he was asleep at the twopenny doss, and the
trousers were drying. What a good thing that he should be totally
insensitive to atmosphere, as no doubt he was.</p>
<p>The hardest hours for the watcher by a sick-bed are those that
<!-- Page 275 -->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</SPAN></span>
cannot be convinced that they belong to the previous day. One
o'clock may be coaxed or bribed easily enough into winking at a
pretence that it is only a corollary of twelve; two o'clock protests
against it audibly, and every quarter-chime endorses its claim to be
to-morrow; three o'clock makes short work of an imposture only a
depraved effrontery can endeavour to foist upon it. Rosalind was
aware of her unfitness to sit up all night—all this next night—but
nursed the pretext that it had not come, and that it was still
to-day, until a sense of the morning chill, and something in the way
the sound of each belated cab confessed to its own scarcity,
convinced her of the uselessness of further effort. Then she
surrendered the point, short of the stroke of three, and exchanged
posts with the nurse, who promised to call her at once should it
seem necessary to do so. Sleep came with a rush, and dreamless
oblivion. Then, immediately, the hand of the nurse on her shoulder,
and her voice, a sudden shock in the absolute stillness:</p>
<p>"I thought it better to wake you, Mrs. Nightingale. I am <i>so</i>
sorry...."</p>
<p>"Oh dear! how long have I slept?" Rosalind's mind leaped through a
second of unconsciousness of where she is and what it's all about to
a state of intense wakefulness. "What o'clock is it?"</p>
<p>"It's half-past six. I should have left you to have your sleep out,
only he wanted you.... Yes, he woke up and asked for you, and then
asked again. He's hardly coughed."</p>
<p>"I'll come." Rosalind tried for alacrity, but found she was quite
stiff. The fire was only a remnant of red glow that collapsed feebly
as the nurse touched it with the poker. It was a case for a couple
of little gluey wheels, and a good contribution to the day's fog,
already in course of formation, with every grate in London panting
to take shares. Rosalind did not wait to see the black column of
smoke start for its chimney-pot, but went straight to the patient's
bedside.</p>
<p>"Is that Rosey? I can't see very well. Come and sit beside me. I
want you." He was speaking more easily than before, so his hearer
thought. Could it be a change for the better? She put her finger on
the pulse, but it was hard to find. The fever had left him for the
time being, but its work was done. It was
<!-- Page 276 -->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</SPAN></span>
wonderful, though, that
he should have so much life in him for speech.</p>
<p>"What is it, Major dear?... Let's get the pillow right.... There,
that's better! Yes, dear; what is it?"</p>
<p>"I've got my marching orders, Rosey. I shall be all right. Shan't be
sorry ... when it's over.... Rosey girl, I want you to do something
for me.... Is my watch there, with the keys?"</p>
<p>"Yes, dear; the two little keys."</p>
<p>"The little one opens my desk ... with the brass corners.... Yes,
that one.... Open the top flap, and look in the little left-hand
drawer. Got it?"</p>
<p>"Yes; you want the letters out? There's only one packet."</p>
<p>"That's the lot. Read what's written on them."</p>
<p>"Only 'Emily, 1837.'"</p>
<p>"Quite right! That was your aunt, you know—your father's sister.
Don't cry, darling. Nothing to cry about! I'm only an old chap.
There, there!" Rosalind sat down again by the bed, keeping the
packet of letters in her hand. Presently the old man, who had closed
his eyes as though dozing, opened them and said: "Have you put them
on the fire?"</p>
<p>"No. Was I to?"</p>
<p>"That was what I meant. I thought I said so.... Yes; pop 'em on."
Rosalind went to the fireside and stood hesitating, till the old man
repeated his last words; then threw the love-letters of sixty years
ago in a good hot place in the burning coal. A flare, and they were
white ash trying to escape from a valley of burning rocks; then even
that was free to rise. Maybe the only one who ever read them would
be soon—would be a mere attenuated ash, at least, as far as what
lay on that bed went, so pale and evanescent even now.</p>
<p>"A fool of a boy, Rosey dear," said the old voice, as she took her
place by the bed again. "Just a fool of a boy, to keep them all
those years. And <i>she</i> married to another fellow, and a
great-grandmother. Ah, well!... don't you cry about it, Rosey....
All done now!" She may have heard him wrong, for his voice went to a
whisper. She wondered at the way the cough was sparing him.</p>
<p>Then she thought he was falling asleep again; but presently he
<!-- Page 277 -->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</SPAN></span>
spoke. "I shall do very well now.... Nothing but a little rest ...
that's all I want now. Only there's something I wanted to say about
... about...."</p>
<p>"About Sally?" Rosalind guessed quickly, and certainly.</p>
<p>"Ah ... about the baby. <i>Your</i> baby, Rosey.... That man that was her
father ... he's on my mind...."</p>
<p>"Oh me, forget him, dear—forget him! Leave him to God!" Rosalind
repeated a phrase used twenty years ago by herself in answer to the
old soldier's first uncontrollable outburst of anger against the man
who had made her his victim. His voice rose again above a whisper as
he answered:</p>
<p>"I heard you say so, dear child ... then ... that time. You were
right, and I was wrong. But what I've said—many a time, God forgive
me!—that I prayed he was in hell. I would be glad now to think I
had not said it."</p>
<p>"Don't think of it. Oh, my dear, don't think of it! You never meant
it...."</p>
<p>"Ah, but I did, though; and would again, mind you, Rosey! Only—not
now! Better let him go, for Sallykin's sake.... The child's the
puzzle of it...."</p>
<p>Rosalind thought she saw what he was trying to say, and herself
tried to supplement it. "You mean, why isn't Sally like him?"</p>
<p>"Ah, to be sure! Like father like son, they say. His son's a chip of
the old block. But then—he's his mother's son, too. Two such!—and
then see what comes of 'em. Sallykin's your daughter ... Rosey's
daughter. Sallykin...." He seemed to be drowsing off from mere
weakness; but he had something to say, and his mind made for speech
and found it:</p>
<p>"Yes, Rosey; it's the end of the story. Soon off—I shall be! Not
very long now. Wasn't it foggy?"</p>
<p>"Yes, dear; it was. But it's clear now. It's snowing."</p>
<p>"Then you could send for Jack Roper. Old Jack! He can tell me
something I want to know.... I know he can...."</p>
<p>"But it's the middle of the night, dear. We can't send for him now.
Sally shall go for him again when she comes in the morning. What is
it you want to know?"</p>
<p>"What became of poor Algernon Palliser.... I know Old Jack
<!-- Page 278 -->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</SPAN></span>
knows.... Something he heard.... I forget things ... my head's not
good. Ah, Rosey darling! if I'd been there in the first of it ... I
could have got speech of him. I might have ... might have...."</p>
<p>As the old man's mind wandered back to the terrible time it dragged
his hearer's with it. Rosalind tried to bear it by thinking of what
Sally was like in those days, crumpled, violent, vociferous,
altogether <i>intransigeante</i>. But it was only a moment's salve to a
reeling of the reason she knew must come if this went on. If he
slept it might be averted. She thought he was dropping off, but he
roused himself again to say: "What became of poor Palliser—your
husband?"</p>
<p>Then Rosalind, whose head was swimming, let the fact slip from her
that the dying man had never seen or known her husband in the old
days; only he had always spoken of him as one to be pitied, not
blamed, even as she herself thought of him. Incautiously she now
said, "Poor Gerry!" forgetting that Colonel Lund had never known him
by that name, or so slightly that it did not connect itself. Yet his
mind was marvellously clear, too; for he immediately replied: "I did
not mean Fenwick. I meant your first husband. Poor boy! poor fellow!
What became of him?"</p>
<p>"<i>His</i> name was Algernon, too," was all the answer she could think
of. It was a sort of forlorn hope in nettle-grasping. Then she saw
it had little meaning in it for her listener. His voice went on,
almost whispering:</p>
<p>"Many a time I've thought ... if we could have found the poor boy
... and shown him Sally ... he might have ... might have...."</p>
<p>Rosalind could bear it no longer. Whoever reads this story
carelessly may see little excuse for her that she should lose her
head at the bedside of a dying man. It was really no matter for
surprise that she should do so. Consider the perpetual tension of
her life, the broken insufficient sleep of the last two days, the
shock of "Old Jack's" sudden death a few hours since! Small blame to
her, to our thinking, if she did give way! To some it may even seem,
as to us, that the course she took was best in the end. And, indeed,
her self-control stood by her to the last; it was a retreat in
perfect order, not a flight. Nor did she,
<!-- Page 279 -->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</SPAN></span>
perhaps, fully measure
how near her old friend was to his end, or release—a better name,
perhaps.</p>
<p>"Major dear, I have something I must tell you." The old eyelids
opened, and his eyes turned to her, though he remained
motionless—quite as one who caught the appeal in the tension of her
voice and guessed its meaning.</p>
<p>"Rosey darling—yes; tell me now." His voice tried to rise above a
whisper; an effort seemed to be in it to say: "Don't keep anything
back on my account."</p>
<p>"So I will, dear. Shut your eyes and lie quiet and listen. I want to
tell you that I know that my first husband is not dead.... Yes,
dear; don't try to speak. You'll see when I tell you.... Algernon
Palliser is not dead, though we thought he must be. He went away
from Lahore after the proceedings, and he did go to Australia, no
doubt, as we heard at the time; but after that he went to America,
and was there till two years ago ... and then he came to England."
The old man tried to speak, but this time his voice failed, and
Rosalind thought it best to go straight on. "He came to England,
dear, and met with a bad accident, and lost his memory...."</p>
<p>"<i>What!</i>" The word came so suddenly and clearly that it gave her new
courage to go on. She <i>must</i> tell it all now, and she felt sure he
was hearing and understanding all she said.</p>
<p>"Yes, dear; it's all true. Let me tell it all. He lost his memory
completely, so that he did not know his own name...."</p>
<p>"My God!"</p>
<p>"Did not know his own name, dear—did not know his own name—did not
know the face of the wife he lost twenty years ago—all, all a
blank!... Yes, yes; it was he himself, and I took him and kept him,
and I have him now ... and oh, my dear, my dear, he does not know
it—knows <i>nothing</i>! He does not know who I am, nor who he was, nor
that Sally is the baby; but he loves her dearly, as he never could
have loved her if ... if...."</p>
<p>She could say no more. The torrent of tears that was the first
actual relief to the weight upon her heart of two years of secrecy
grew and grew till speech was overwhelmed. But she knew that her
story, however scantily told, had reached her listener's
<!-- Page 280 -->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</SPAN></span>
mind,
though she could not have said precisely at what moment he came to
know it. The tone of his exclamation, "My God!" perhaps had made her
take his knowledge for granted. Of one thing, however, she felt
certain—that details were needless, would add nothing to the main
fact, which she was quite convinced her old friend had grasped with
a mind still capable of holding it, although it might be in death.
Even so one tells a child the outcome only of what one tells in full
to older ears. Then quick on the heels of the relief of sharing her
burden with another followed the thought of how soon the sympathy
she had gained must be lost, buried—so runs the code of current
speech—in her old friend's grave. All her heart poured out in tears
on the hand that could still close fitfully upon her own as she
knelt by the bed on which he would so soon lie dying.</p>
<p>Presently his voice came again—a faint whisper she could just
catch: "Tell it me again, Rosey ... what you told me just now ...
just now." And she felt his cold hand close on hers as he spoke.
Then she repeated what she had said before, adding only: "But he may
never come to know his own story, and Sally must not know it." The
old whisper came back, and she caught the words: "Then it is true!
My God!"</p>
<p>She remained kneeling motionless beside him. His breath, weak and
intermittent, but seeming more free than when she left him four
hours since, was less audible than the heavy sleep of the overtaxed
nurse in the next room, heard through the unclosed door. The
familiar early noises of the street, the life outside that cares so
little for the death within, the daily bread and daily milk that
wake us too soon in the morning, the cynical interchanges of
cheerful early risers about the comfort of the weather—all grew and
gathered towards the coming day. But the old Colonel heard none of
them. What thought he still had could say to him that this was good
and that was good, hard though it might be to hold it in mind. But
one bright golden thread ran clear through all the tangled
skeins—he would leave Rosey happy at last, for all the bitterness
her cup of life had held before.</p>
<hr class="minor" />
<p>The nurse had slept profoundly, but she was one of those fortunate
people who can do so at will, and then wake up at an appointed
<!-- Page 281 -->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</SPAN></span>
time, as many great soldiers have been able to do. As the clock
struck eight she sat up in the chair she had been sleeping in and
listened a moment. No sound came from the next room. She rose and
pushed the door open cautiously and looked in. Mrs. Fenwick was
still kneeling by the bed, her face hidden, still holding the old
man's hand. The nurse thought surely the still white face she saw in
the intermittent gleams of a lamp-flame flickering out was the face
of a dead man. Need she rouse or disturb the watcher by his side?
Not yet, certainly. She pulled the door very gently back, not
closing it.</p>
<p>A sound came of footsteps on the stairs—footsteps without voices.
It was Fenwick and Sally, who had passed through the street door,
open for a negotiation for removal of the snow—for the last two
hours had made a white world outside. Sally was on a stairflight in
the rear. She had paused for a word with the boy Chancellorship, who
was a candidate for snow-removal. He seemed relieved by the snow. It
was a tidy lot better morning than last night, missis. He had
breakfasted—yes—off of corfy, and paid for it, and buttered 'arf
slices and no stintin', for twopence. Sally had a fellow-feeling for
this boy's optimism. But he had something on his mind, for when
Sally asked him if Major Roper had got home safe last night, his
cheerfulness clouded over, and he said first, "Couldn't say,
missis;" and then, "He's been got home, you may place your
dependence on that;" adding, inexplicably to Sally, "He won't care
about this weather; it won't be no odds!" She couldn't wait to find
out his meaning, but told him he might go on clearing away the snow,
and when Mrs. Kindred came he was to say Miss Rosalind Nightingale
told him he might. She said she would be answerable, and then ran to
catch up Fenwick.</p>
<p>The nurse came out to meet them on the landing, and in answer to
Fenwick's half-inquiry or look of inquiry—Sally did not gather
which—said: "Yes—at least, I think so—just now." Sally made up
her mind it was death. But it was not, quite; for as the nurse,
preceding them, pushed the door of the sickroom gently open, the
voice of the man she believed dead came out almost strong and clear
in the silence: "Evil has turned to good. God be praised!"</p>
<div>
<!-- Page 282 -->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</SPAN></span></div>
<p>But they were the last words Colonel Lund spoke. He died so quietly
that the exact moment of dissolution was not distinguishable.
Fenwick and Sally found Rosalind so overstrained with grief and
watching that they asked for no explanation of the words. Indeed,
they may not have ascribed any special meaning to them.</p>
<hr class="major" />
<div>
<!-- Page 283 -->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</SPAN></span></div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />