ACTIONS AND REACTIONS

By Rudyard Kipling


CONTENTS

  ACTIONS AND REACTIONS
  AN HABITATION ENFORCED
  THE RECALL
  GARM—A HOSTAGE
  THE POWER OF THE DOG
  THE MOTHER HIVE
  THE BEES AND THE FLIES
  WITH THE NIGHT MAIL
  THE FOUR ANGELS
  A DEAL IN COTTON
  THE NEW KNIGHTHOOD
  THE PUZZLER
  THE PUZZLER
  LITTLE FOXES
  GALLIO'S SONG
  THE HOUSE SURGEON
  THE RABBI'S SONG




ACTIONS AND REACTIONS




AN HABITATION ENFORCED

         My friend, if cause doth wrest thee,
         Ere folly hath much oppressed thee,
         Far from acquaintance kest thee
         Where country may digest thee...
         Thank God that so hath blessed thee,
         And sit down, Robin, and rest thee.
         --THOMAS TUSSER.

It came without warning, at the very hour his hand was outstretched to
crumple the Holz and Gunsberg Combine. The New York doctors called it
overwork, and he lay in a darkened room, one ankle crossed above
the other, tongue pressed into palate, wondering whether the next
brain-surge of prickly fires would drive his soul from all anchorages.
At last they gave judgment. With care he might in two years return to
the arena, but for the present he must go across the water and do no
work whatever. He accepted the terms. It was capitulation; but the
Combine that had shivered beneath his knife gave him all the honours
of war: Gunsberg himself, full of condolences, came to the steamer and
filled the Chapins' suite of cabins with overwhelming flower-works.

“Smilax,” said George Chapin when he saw them. “Fitz is right. I'm dead;
only I don't see why he left out the 'In Memoriam' on the ribbons!”

“Nonsense!” his wife answered, and poured him his tincture. “You'll be
back before you can think.”

He looked at himself in the mirror, surprised that his face had not been
branded by the hells of the past three months. The noise of the decks
worried him, and he lay down, his tongue only a little pressed against
his palate.

An hour later he said: “Sophie, I feel sorry about taking you away from
everything like this. I--I suppose we're the two loneliest people on
God's earth to-night.”

Said Sophie his wife, and kissed him: “Isn't it something to you that
we're going together?”

They drifted about Europe for months--sometimes alone, sometimes with
chance met gipsies of their own land. From the North Cape to the Blue
Grotto at Capri they wandered, because the next steamer headed that way,
or because some one had set them on the road. The doctors had warned
Sophie that Chapin was not to take interest even in other men's
interests; but a familiar sensation at the back of the neck after one
hour's keen talk with a Nauheimed railway magnate saved her any trouble.
He nearly wept.

“And I'm over thirty,” he cried. “With all I meant to do!”

“Let's call it a honeymoon,” said Sophie. “D' you know, in all the six
years we've been married, you've never told me what you meant to do with
your life?”

“With my life? What's the use? It's finished now.” Sophie looked up
quickly from the Bay of Naples. “As far as my business goes, I shall
have to live on my rents like that architect at San Moritz.”

“You'll get better if you don't worry; and even if it takes time, there
are worse things than--How much have you?”

“Between four and five million. But it isn't the money. You know it
isn't. It's the principle. How could you respect me? You never did, the
first year after we married, till I went to work like the others. Our
tradition and upbringing are against it. We can't accept those ideals.”

“Well, I suppose I married you for some sort of ideal,” she answered,
and they returned to their forty-third hotel.

In England they missed the alien tongues of Continental streets that
reminded them of their own polyglot cities. In England all men spoke one
tongue, speciously like American to the ear, but on cross-examination
unintelligible.

“Ah, but you have not seen England,” said a lady with iron-grey hair.
They had met her in Vienna, Bayreuth, and Florence, and were grateful
to find her again at Claridge's, for she commanded situations, and knew
where prescriptions are most carefully made up. “You ought to take an
interest in the home of our ancestors as I do.”

“I've tried for a week, Mrs. Shonts,” said Sophie, “but I never get any
further than tipping German waiters.”

“These men are not the true type,” Mrs. Shouts went on. “I know where
you should go.”

Chapin pricked up his ears, anxious to run anywhere from the streets
on which quick men, something of his kidney, did the business denied to
him.

“We hear and we obey, Mrs. Shonts,” said Sophie, feeling his unrest as
he drank the loathed British tea.

Mrs. Shonts smiled, and took them in hand. She wrote widely and
telegraphed far on their behalf till, armed with her letter of
introduction, she drove them into that wilderness which is reached from
an ash-barrel of a station called Charing Cross. They were to go to
Rockett's--the farm of one Cloke, in the southern counties--where, she
assured them, they would meet the genuine England of folklore and song.

Rocketts they found after some hours, four miles from a station, and,
so far as they could judge in the bumpy darkness, twice as many from a
road. Trees, kine, and the outlines of barns showed shadowy about them
when they alighted, and Mr. and Mrs. Cloke, at the open door of a deep
stone-floored kitchen, made them slowly welcome. They lay in an attic
beneath a wavy whitewashed ceiling, and, because it rained, a wood fire
was made in an iron basket on a brick hearth, and they fell asleep to
the chirping of mice and the whimper of flames.

When they woke it was a fair day, full of the noises, of birds, the
smell of box lavender, and fried bacon, mixed with an elemental smell
they had never met before.

“This,” said Sophie, nearly pushing out the thin casement in an attempt
to see round the corner, “is--what did the hack-cabman say to the
railway porter about my trunk--'quite on the top?'”

“No; 'a little bit of all right.' I feel farther away from anywhere than
I've ever felt in my life. We must find out where the telegraph office
is.”

“Who cares?” said Sophie, wandering about, hairbrush in hand, to admire
the illustrated weekly pictures pasted on door and cupboard.

But there was no rest for the alien soul till he had made sure of the
telegraph office. He asked the Clokes' daughter, laying breakfast, while
Sophie plunged her face in the lavender bush outside the low window.

“Go to the stile a-top o' the Barn field,” said Mary, “and look across
Pardons to the next spire. It's directly under. You can't miss it--not
if you keep to the footpath. My sister's the telegraphist there.
But you're in the three-mile radius, sir. The boy delivers telegrams
directly to this door from Pardons village.”

“One has to take a good deal on trust in this country,” he murmured.

Sophie looked at the close turf, scarred only with last night's wheels,
at two ruts which wound round a rickyard, and at the circle of still
orchard about the half-timbered house.

“What's the matter with it?” she said. “Telegrams delivered to the Vale
of Avalon, of course,” and she beckoned in an earnest-eyed hound of
engaging manners and no engagements, who answered, at times, to the name
of Rambler. He led them, after breakfast, to the rise behind the house
where the stile stood against the skyline, and, “I wonder what we shall
find now,” said Sophie, frankly prancing with joy on the grass.

It was a slope of gap-hedged fields possessed to their centres by clumps
of brambles. Gates were not, and the rabbit-mined, cattle-rubbed posts
leaned out and in. A narrow path doubled among the bushes, scores of
white tails twinkled before the racing hound, and a hawk rose, whistling
shrilly.

“No roads, no nothing!” said Sophie, her short skirt hooked by briers.
“I thought all England was a garden. There's your spire, George, across
the valley. How curious!”

They walked toward it through an all-abandoned land. Here they found
the ghost of a patch of lucerne that had refused to die: there a harsh
fallow surrendered to yard-high thistles; and here a breadth of rampant
kelk feigning to be lawful crop. In the ungrazed pastures swaths of dead
stuff caught their feet, and the ground beneath glistened with sweat. At
the bottom of the valley a little brook had undermined its footbridge,
and frothed in the wreckage. But there stood great woods on the slopes
beyond--old, tall, and brilliant, like unfaded tapestries against the
walls of a ruined house.

“All this within a hundred miles of London,” he said. “Looks as if it
had had nervous prostration, too.” The footpath turned the shoulder of
a slope, through a thicket of rank rhododendrons, and crossed what had
once been a carriage drive, which ended in the shadow of two gigantic
holm-oaks.

“A house!” said Sophie, in a whisper. “A Colonial house!”

Behind the blue-green of the twin trees rose a dark-bluish brick
Georgian pile, with a shell-shaped fan-light over its pillared door. The
hound had gone off on his own foolish quests. Except for some stir in
the branches and the flight of four startled magpies; there was neither
life nor sound about the square house, but it looked out of its long
windows most friendlily.

“Cha-armed to meet you, I'm sure,” said Sophie, and curtsied to the
ground. “George, this is history I can understand. We began here.” She
curtsied again.

The June sunshine twinkled on all the lights. It was as though an old
lady, wise in three generations' experience, but for the present sitting
out, bent to listen to her flushed and eager grandchild.

“I must look!” Sophie tiptoed to a window, and shaded her eyes with her
hand. “Oh, this room's half-full of cotton-bales--wool, I suppose! But I
can see a bit of the mantelpiece. George, do come! Isn't that some one?”

She fell back behind her husband. The front door opened slowly, to show
the hound, his nose white with milk, in charge of an ancient of days
clad in a blue linen ephod curiously gathered on breast and shoulders.

“Certainly,” said George, half aloud. “Father Time himself. This is
where he lives, Sophie.”

“We came,” said Sophie weakly. “Can we see the house? I'm afraid that's
our dog.”

“No, 'tis Rambler,” said the old man. “He's been at my swill-pail
again. Staying at Rocketts, be ye? Come in. Ah! you runagate!”

The hound broke from him, and he tottered after him down the drive. They
entered the hall--just such a high light hall as such a house
should own. A slim-balustered staircase, wide and shallow and once
creamy-white, climbed out of it under a long oval window. On either side
delicately moulded doors gave on to wool-lumbered rooms, whose sea-green
mantelpieces were adorned with nymphs, scrolls, and Cupids in low
relief.

“What's the firm that makes these things?” cried Sophie, enraptured.
“Oh, I forgot! These must be the originals. Adams, is it? I never
dreamed of anything like that steel-cut fender. Does he mean us to go
everywhere?”

“He's catching the dog,” said George, looking out. “We don't count.”

They explored the first or ground floor, delighted as children playing
burglars.

“This is like all England,” she said at last. “Wonderful, but no
explanation. You're expected to know it beforehand. Now, let's try
upstairs.”

The stairs never creaked beneath their feet. From the broad landing
they entered a long, green-panelled room lighted by three full-length
windows, which overlooked the forlorn wreck of a terraced garden, and
wooded slopes beyond.

“The drawing-room, of course.” Sophie swam up and down it. “That
mantelpiece--Orpheus and Eurydice--is the best of them all. Isn't it
marvellous? Why, the room seems furnished with nothing in it! How's
that, George?”

“It's the proportions. I've noticed it.”

“I saw a Heppelwhite couch once”--Sophie laid her finger to her flushed
cheek and considered. “With two of them--one on each side--you wouldn't
need anything else. Except--there must be one perfect mirror over that
mantelpiece.”

“Look at that view. It's a framed Constable,” her husband cried.

“No; it's a Morland--a parody of a Morland. But about that couch,
George. Don't you think Empire might be better than Heppelwhite? Dull
gold against that pale green? It's a pity they don't make spinets
nowadays.”

“I believe you can get them. Look at that oak wood behind the pines.”

“'While you sat and played toccatas stately, at the clavichord,'” Sophie
hummed, and, head on one side, nodded to where the perfect mirror
should hang.

Then they found bedrooms with dressing-rooms and powdering-closets, and
steps leading up and down--boxes of rooms, round, square, and octagonal,
with enriched ceilings and chased door-locks.

“Now about servants. Oh!” She had darted up the last stairs to the
chequered darkness of the top floor, where loose tiles lay among broken
laths, and the walls were scrawled with names, sentiments, and hop
records. “They've been keeping pigeons here,” she cried.

“And you could drive a buggy through the roof anywhere,” said George.

“That's what _I_ say,” the old man cried below them on the stairs. “Not a
dry place for my pigeons at all.”

“But why was it allowed to get like this?” said Sophie.

“Tis with housen as teeth,” he replied. “Let 'em go too far, and there's
nothing to be done. Time was they was minded to sell her, but none would
buy. She was too far away along from any place. Time was they'd ha'
lived here theyselves, but they took and died.”

“Here?” Sophie moved beneath the light of a hole in the roof.

“Nah--none dies here excep' falling off ricks and such. In London they
died.” He plucked a lock of wool from his blue smock. “They was no
staple--neither the Elphicks nor the Moones. Shart and brittle all
of 'em. Dead they be seventeen year, for I've been here caretakin'
twenty-five.”

“Who does all the wool belong to downstairs?” George asked.

“To the estate. I'll show you the back parts if ye like. You're from
America, ain't ye? I've had a son there once myself.” They followed him
down the main stairway. He paused at the turn and swept one hand toward
the wall. “Plenty room here for your coffin to come down. Seven foot
and three men at each end wouldn't brish the paint. If I die in my bed
they'll 'ave to up-end me like a milk-can. 'Tis all luck, dye see?”

He led them on and on, through a maze of back kitchens, dairies,
larders, and sculleries, that melted along covered ways into a
farm-house, visibly older than the main building, which again rambled
out among barns, byres, pig-pens, stalls and stables to the dead fields
behind.

“Somehow,” said Sophie, sitting exhausted on an ancient
well-curb--“somehow one wouldn't insult these lovely old things by
filling them with hay.”

George looked at long stone walls upholding reaches of silvery-oak
weather-boarding; buttresses of mixed flint and bricks; outside stairs,
stone upon arched stone; curves of thatch where grass sprouted; roundels
of house-leeked tiles, and a huge paved yard populated by two cows and
the repentant Rambler. He had not thought of himself or of the telegraph
office for two and a half hours.

“But why,” said Sophie, as they went back through the crater of stricken
fields,--“why is one expected to know everything in England? Why do
they never tell?”

“You mean about the Elphicks and the Moones?” he answered.

“Yes--and the lawyers and the estate. Who are they? I wonder whether
those painted floors in the green room were real oak. Don't you like us
exploring things together--better than Pompeii?”

George turned once more to look at the view. “Eight hundred acres go
with the house--the old man told me. Five farms altogether. Rocketts is
one of 'em.”

“I like Mrs. Cloke. But what is the old house called?”

George laughed. “That's one of the things you're expected to know. He
never told me.”

The Clokes were more communicative. That evening and thereafter for
a week they gave the Chapins the official history, as one gives it to
lodgers, of Friars Pardon the house and its five farms. But Sophie
asked so many questions, and George was so humanly interested, that,
as confidence in the strangers grew, they launched, with observed and
acquired detail, into the lives and deaths and doings of the Elphicks
and the Moones and their collaterals, the Haylings and the Torrells. It
was a tale told serially by Cloke in the barn, or his wife in the dairy,
the last chapters reserved for the kitchen o' nights by the big fire,
when the two had been half the day exploring about the house, where
old Iggulden, of the blue smock, cackled and chuckled to see them. The
motives that swayed the characters were beyond their comprehension; the
fates that shifted them were gods they had never met; the sidelights
Mrs. Cloke threw on act and incident were more amazing than anything in
the record. Therefore the Chapins listened delightedly, and blessed Mrs.
Shonts.

“But why--why--why--did So-and-so do so-and-so?” Sophie would demand
from her seat by the pothook; and Mrs. Cloke would answer, smoothing her
knees, “For the sake of the place.”

“I give it up,” said George one night in their own room. “People don't
seem to matter in this country compared to the places they live in. The
way she tells it, Friars Pardon was a sort of Moloch.”

“Poor old thing!” They had been walking round the farms as usual before
tea. “No wonder they loved it. Think of the sacrifices they made for it.
Jane Elphick married the younger Torrell to keep it in the family. The
octagonal room with the moulded ceiling next to the big bedroom was
hers. Now what did he tell you while he was feeding the pigs?” said
Sophie.

“About the Torrell cousins and the uncle who died in Java. They lived at
Burnt House--behind High Pardons, where that brook is all blocked up.”

“No; Burnt House is under High Pardons Wood, before you come to Gale
Anstey,” Sophie corrected.

“Well, old man Cloke said--”

Sophie threw open the door and called down into the kitchen, where the
Clokes were covering the fire: “Mrs. Cloke, isn't Burnt House under High
Pardons?”

“Yes, my dear, of course,” the soft voice answered absently. A cough.
“I beg your pardon, Madam. What was it you said?”

“Never mind. I prefer it the other way,” Sophie laughed, and George
re-told the missing chapter as she sat on the bed.

“Here to-day an' gone to-morrow,” said Cloke warningly. “They've
paid their first month, but we've only that Mrs. Shonts's letter for
guarantee.”

“None she sent never cheated us yet. It slipped out before I thought.
She's a most humane young lady. They'll be going away in a little. An'
you've talked a lot too, Alfred.”

“Yes, but the Elphicks are all dead. No one can bring my loose talking
home to me. But why do they stay on and stay on so?”

In due time George and Sophie asked each other that question, and put it
aside. They argued that the climate--a pearly blend, unlike the hot
and cold ferocities of their native land--suited them, as the thick
stillness of the nights certainly suited George. He was saved even the
sight of a metalled road, which, as presumably leading to business,
wakes desire in a man; and the telegraph office at the village of Friars
Pardon, where they sold picture post-cards and peg-tops, was two walking
miles across the fields and woods.

For all that touched his past among his fellows, or their remembrance
of him, he might have been in another planet; and Sophie, whose life had
been very largely spent among husbandless wives of lofty ideals, had
no wish to leave this present of God. The unhurried meals, the
foreknowledge of deliciously empty hours to follow, the breadths of soft
sky under which they walked together and reckoned time only by their
hunger or thirst; the good grass beneath their feet that cheated the
miles; their discoveries, always together, amid the farms--Griffons,
Rocketts, Burnt House, Gale Anstey, and the Home Farm, where Iggulden of
the blue smock-frock would waylay them, and they would ransack the old
house once more; the long wet afternoons when they tucked up their
feet on the bedroom's deep window-sill over against the apple-trees, and
talked together as never till then had they found time to talk--these
things contented her soul, and her body throve.

“Have you realized,” she asked one morning, “that we've been here
absolutely alone for the last thirty-four days?”

“Have you counted them?” he asked.

“Did you like them?” she replied.

“I must have. I didn't think about them. Yes, I have. Six months ago I
should have fretted myself sick. Remember at Cairo? I've only had two or
three bad times. Am I getting better, or is it senile decay?”

“Climate, all climate.” Sophie swung her new-bought English boots, as
she sat on the stile overlooking Friars Pardon, behind the Clokes's
barn.

“One must take hold of things though,” he said, “if it's only to keep
one's hand in.” His eyes did not flicker now as they swept the empty
fields. “Mustn't one?”

“Lay out a Morristown links over Gale Anstey. I dare say you could hire
it.”

“No, I'm not as English as that--nor as Morristown. Cloke says all the
farms here could be made to pay.”

“Well, I'm Anastasia in the 'Treasure of Franchard.' I'm content to be
alive and purr. There's no hurry.”

“No.” He smiled. “All the same, I'm going to see after my mail.”

“You promised you wouldn't have any.”

“There's some business coming through that's amusing me. Honest. It
doesn't get on my nerves at all.”

“Want a secretary?”

“No, thanks, old thing! Isn't that quite English?”

“Too English! Go away.” But none the less in broad daylight she returned
the kiss. “I'm off to Pardons. I haven't been to the house for nearly a
week.”

“How've you decided to furnish Jane Elphick's bedroom?” he laughed, for
it had come to be a permanent Castle in Spain between them.

“Black Chinese furniture and yellow silk brocade,” she answered, and
ran downhill. She scattered a few cows at a gap with a flourish of a
ground-ash that Iggulden had cut for her a week ago, and singing as she
passed under the holmoaks, sought the farm-house at the back of
Friars Pardon. The old man was not to be found, and she knocked at
his half-opened door, for she needed him to fill her idle forenoon. A
blue-eyed sheep-dog, a new friend, and Rambler's old enemy, crawled out
and besought her to enter.

Iggulden sat in his chair by the fire, a thistle-spud between his knees,
his head drooped. Though she had never seen death before, her heart,
that missed a beat, told her that he was dead. She did not speak or cry,
but stood outside the door, and the dog licked her hand. When he threw
up his nose, she heard herself saying: “Don't howl! Please don't begin
to howl, Scottie, or I shall run away!”

She held her ground while the shadows in the rickyard moved toward noon;
sat after a while on the steps by the door, her arms round the dog's
neck, waiting till some one should come. She watched the smokeless
chimneys of Friars Pardon slash its roofs with shadow, and the smoke of
Iggulden's last lighted fire gradually thin and cease. Against her will
she fell to wondering how many Moones, Elphicks, and Torrells had been
swung round the turn of the broad Mall stairs. Then she remembered the
old man's talk of being “up-ended like a milk-can,” and buried her face
on Scottie's neck. At last a horse's feet clinked upon flags, rustled
in the old grey straw of the rickyard, and she found herself facing
the vicar--a figure she had seen at church declaiming impossibilities
(Sophie was a Unitarian) in an unnatural voice.

“He's dead,” she said, without preface.

“Old Iggulden? I was coming for a talk with him.” The vicar passed in
uncovered. “Ah!” she heard him say. “Heart-failure! How long have you
been here?”

“Since a quarter to eleven.” She looked at her watch earnestly and saw
that her hand did not shake.

“I'll sit with him now till the doctor comes. D'you think you could
tell him, and--yes, Mrs. Betts in the cottage with the wistaria next the
blacksmith's? I'm afraid this has been rather a shock to you.”

Sophie nodded, and fled toward the village. Her body failed her for a
moment; she dropped beneath a hedge, and looked back at the great house.
In some fashion its silence and stolidity steadied her for her errand.

Mrs. Betts, small, black-eyed, and dark, was almost as unconcerned as
Friars Pardon.

“Yiss, yiss, of course. Dear me! Well, Iggulden he had had his day in my
father's time. Muriel, get me my little blue bag, please. Yiss, ma'am.
They come down like ellum-branches in still weather. No warnin' at all.
Muriel, my bicycle's be'ind the fowlhouse. I'll tell Dr. Dallas, ma'am.”

She trundled off on her wheel like a brown bee, while Sophie--heaven
above and earth beneath changed--walked stiffly home, to fall over
George at his letters, in a muddle of laughter and tears.

“It's all quite natural for them,” she gasped. “They come down like
ellum-branches in still weather. Yiss, ma'am.' No, there wasn't anything
in the least horrible, only--only--Oh, George, that poor shiny stick of
his between his poor, thin knees! I couldn't have borne it if Scottie
had howled. I didn't know the vicar was so--so sensitive. He said he was
afraid it was ra--rather a shock. Mrs. Betts told me to go home, and
I wanted to collapse on her floor. But I didn't disgrace myself. I--I
couldn't have left him--could I?”

“You're sure you've took no 'arm?” cried Mrs. Cloke, who had heard the
news by farm-telegraphy, which is older but swifter than Marconi's.

“No. I'm perfectly well,” Sophie protested.

“You lay down till tea-time.” Mrs. Cloke patted her shoulder. “THEY'll
be very pleased, though she 'as 'ad no proper understandin' for twenty
years.”

“They” came before twilight--a black-bearded man in moleskins, and a
little palsied old woman, who chirruped like a wren.

“I'm his son,” said the man to Sophie, among the lavender bushes. “We
'ad a difference--twenty year back, and didn't speak since. But I'm his
son all the 'same, and we thank you for the watching.”

“I'm only glad I happened to be there,” she answered, and from the
bottom of her heart she meant it.

“We heard he spoke a lot o' you--one time an' another since you came. We
thank you kindly,” the man added.

“Are you the son that was in America?” she asked.

“Yes, ma'am. On my uncle's farm, in Connecticut. He was what they call
rood-master there.”

“Whereabouts in Connecticut?” asked George over her shoulder.

“Veering Holler was the name. I was there six year with my uncle.”

“How small the world is!” Sophie cried. “Why, all my mother's people
come from Veering Hollow. There must be some there still--the Lashmars.
Did you ever hear of them?”

“I remember hearing that name, seems to me,” he answered, but his face
was blank as the back of a spade.

A little before dusk a woman in grey, striding like a foot-soldier, and
bearing on her arm a long pole, crashed through the orchard calling for
food. George, upon whom the unannounced English worked mysteriously,
fled to the parlour; but Mrs. Cloke came forward beaming. Sophie could
not escape.

“We've only just heard of it;” said the stranger, turning on her. “I've
been out with the otter-hounds all day. It was a splendidly sportin'
thing--”

“Did you--er--kill?” said Sophie. She knew from books she could not go
far wrong here.

“Yes, a dry bitch--seventeen pounds,” was the answer. “A splendidly
sportin' thing of you to do. Poor old Iggulden--”

“Oh--that!” said Sophie, enlightened.

“If there had been any people at Pardons it would never have happened.
He'd have been looked after. But what can you expect from a parcel of
London solicitors?”

Mrs. Cloke murmured something.

“No. I'm soaked from the knees down. If I hang about I shall get
chilled. A cup of tea, Mrs. Cloke, and I can eat one of your sandwiches
as I go.” She wiped her weather-worn face with a green and yellow silk
handkerchief.

“Yes, my lady!” Mrs. Cloke ran and returned swiftly.

“Our land marches with Pardons for a mile on the south,” she explained,
waving the full cup, “but one has quite enough to do with one's own
people without poachin'. Still, if I'd known, I'd have sent Dora, of
course. Have you seen her this afternoon, Mrs. Cloke? No? I wonder
whether that girl did sprain her ankle. Thank you.” It was a formidable
hunk of bread and bacon that Mrs. Cloke presented. “As I was sayin',
Pardons is a scandal! Lettin' people die like dogs. There ought to be
people there who do their duty. You've done yours, though there wasn't
the faintest call upon you. Good night. Tell Dora, if she comes, I've
gone on.”

She strode away, munching her crust, and Sophie reeled breathless into
the parlour, to shake the shaking George.

“Why did you keep catching my eye behind the blind? Why didn't you come
out and do your duty?”

“Because I should have burst. Did you see the mud on its cheek?” he
said.

“Once. I daren't look again. Who is she?”

“God--a local deity then. Anyway, she's another of the things you're
expected to know by instinct.”

Mrs. Cloke, shocked at their levity, told them that it was Lady
Conant, wife of Sir Walter Conant, Baronet, a large landholder in the
neighbourhood; and if not God; at least His visible Providence. George
made her talk of that family for an hour.

“Laughter,” said Sophie afterward in their own room, “is the mark of the
savage. Why couldn't you control your emotions? It's all real to her.”

“It's all real to me. That's my trouble,” he answered in an altered
tone. “Anyway, it's real enough to mark time with. Don't you think so?”

“What d'you mean?” she asked quickly, though she knew his voice.

“That I'm better. I'm well enough to kick.”

“What at?”

“This!” He waved his hand round the one room. “I must have something to
play with till I'm fit for work again.”

“Ah!” She sat on the bed and leaned forward, her hands clasped. “I
wonder if it's good for you.”

“We've been better here than anywhere,” he went on slowly. “One could
always sell it again.”

She nodded gravely, but her eyes sparkled.

“The only thing that worries me is what happened this morning. I want to
know how you feel about it. If it's on your nerves in the least we can
have the old farm at the back of the house pulled down, or perhaps it
has spoiled the notion for you?”

“Pull it down?” she cried. “You've no business faculty. Why, that's
where we could live while we're putting the big house in order. It's
almost under the same roof. No! What happened this morning seemed to be
more of a--of a leading than anything else. There ought to be people at
Pardons. Lady Conant's quite right.”

“I was thinking more of the woods and the roads. I could double the
value of the place in six months.”

“What do they want for it?” She shook her head, and her loosened hair
fell glowingly about her cheeks.

“Seventy-five thousand dollars. They'll take sixty-eight.”

“Less than half what we paid for our old yacht when we married. And we
didn't have a good time in her. You were--”

“Well, I discovered I was too much of an American to be content to be a
rich man's son. You aren't blaming me for that?”

“Oh, no. Only it was a very businesslike honeymoon. How far are you
along with the deal, George?”

“I can mail the deposit on the purchase money to-morrow morning, and we
can have the thing completed in a fortnight or three weeks--if you say
so.”

“Friars Pardon--Friars Pardon!” Sophie chanted rapturously, her dark
gray eyes big with delight. “All the farms? Gale Anstey, Burnt House,
Rocketts, the Home Farm, and Griffons? Sure you've got 'em all?”

“Sure.” He smiled.

“And the woods? High Pardons Wood, Lower Pardons, Suttons, Dutton's
Shaw, Reuben's Ghyll, Maxey's Ghyll, and both the Oak Hangers? Sure
you've got 'em all?”

“Every last stick. Why, you know them as well as I do.” He laughed.
“They say there's five thousand--a thousand pounds' worth of
lumber--timber they call it--in the Hangers alone.”

“Mrs. Cloke's oven must be mended first thing, and the kitchen roof. I
think I'll have all this whitewashed,” Sophie broke in, pointing to
the ceiling. “The whole place is a scandal. Lady Conant is quite right.
George, when did you begin to fall in love with the house? In the
greenroom—that first day? I did.”

“I'm not in love with it. One must do something to mark time till one's
fit for work.”

“Or when we stood under the oaks, and the door opened? Oh! Ought I to go
to poor Iggulden's funeral?” She sighed with utter happiness.

“Wouldn't they call it a liberty now?” said he.

“But I liked him.”

“But you didn't own him at the date of his death.”

“That wouldn't keep me away. Only, they made such a fuss about the
watching”--she caught her breath--“it might be ostentatious from that
point of view, too. Oh, George”--she reached for his hand--“we're two
little orphans moving in worlds not realized, and we shall make some bad
breaks. But we're going to have the time of our lives.”

“We'll run up to London to-morrow, and see if we can hurry those English
law solicitors. I want to get to work.”

They went. They suffered many things ere they returned across the fields
in a fly one Saturday night, nursing a two by two-and-a-half box of
deeds and maps--lawful owners of Friars Pardon and the five decayed
farms therewith.

“I do most sincerely 'ope and trust you'll be 'appy, Madam,” Mrs. Cloke
gasped, when she was told the news by the kitchen fire.

“Goodness! It isn't a marriage!” Sophie exclaimed, a little awed; for to
them the joke, which to an American means work, was only just beginning.

“If it's took in a proper spirit”--Mrs. Cloke's eye turned toward her
oven.

“Send and have that mended to-morrow,” Sophie whispered.

“We couldn't 'elp noticing,” said Cloke slowly, “from the times you
walked there, that you an' your lady was drawn to it, but--but I don't
know as we ever precisely thought--” His wife's glance checked him.

“That we were that sort of people,” said George. “We aren't sure of it
ourselves yet.”

“Perhaps,” said Cloke, rubbing his knees, “just for the sake of saying
something, perhaps you'll park it?”

“What's that?” said George.

“Turn it all into a fine park like Violet Hill”--he jerked a thumb to
westward--“that Mr. Sangres bought. It was four farms, and Mr. Sangres
made a fine park of them, with a herd of faller deer.”

“Then it wouldn't be Friars Pardon,” said Sophie. “Would it?”

“I don't know as I've ever heard Pardons was ever anything but wheat an'
wool. Only some gentlemen say that parks are less trouble than tenants.”
 He laughed nervously. “But the gentry, o' course, they keep on pretty
much as they was used to.”

“I see,” said Sophie. “How did Mr. Sangres make his money?”

“I never rightly heard. It was pepper an' spices, or it may ha' been
gloves. No. Gloves was Sir Reginald Liss at Marley End. Spices was Mr.
Sangres. He's a Brazilian gentleman--very sunburnt like.”

“Be sure o' one thing. You won't 'ave any trouble,” said Mrs. Cloke,
just before they went to bed.

Now the news of the purchase was told to Mr. and Mrs. Cloke alone at 8
P.M. of a Saturday. None left the farm till they set out for church next
morning. Yet when they reached the church and were about to slip aside
into their usual seats, a little beyond the font, where they could see
the red-furred tails of the bellropes waggle and twist at ringing time,
they were swept forward irresistibly, a Cloke on either flank (and yet
they had not walked with the Clokes), upon the ever-retiring bosom of a
black-gowned verger, who ushered them into a room of a pew at the head
of the left aisle, under the pulpit.

“This,” he sighed reproachfully, “is the Pardons' Pew,” and shut them
in.

They could see little more than the choir boys in the chancel, but to
the roots of the hair of their necks they felt the congregation behind
mercilessly devouring them by look.

“When the wicked man turneth away.” The strong, alien voice of the
priest vibrated under the hammer-beam roof, and a loneliness unfelt
before swamped their hearts, as they searched for places in the
unfamiliar Church of England service. The Lord's Prayer “Our Father,
which art”--set the seal on that desolation. Sophie found herself
thinking how in other lands their purchase would long ere this have been
discussed from every point of view in a dozen prints, forgetting that
George for months had not been allowed to glance at those black and
bellowing head-lines. Here was nothing but silence--not even hostility!
The game was up to them; the other players hid their cards and waited.
Suspense, she felt, was in the air, and when her sight cleared, saw,
indeed, a mural tablet of a footless bird brooding upon the carven
motto, “Wayte awhyle--wayte awhyle.”

At the Litany George had trouble with an unstable hassock, and drew the
slip of carpet under the pewseat. Sophie pushed her end back also, and
shut her eyes against a burning that felt like tears. When she opened
them she was looking at her mother's maiden name, fairly carved on a
blue flagstone on the pew floor:

           Ellen Lashmar. ob. 1796. ætat 27.

She nudged George and pointed. Sheltered, as they kneeled, they looked
for more knowledge, but the rest of the slab was blank.

“Ever hear of her?” he whispered.

“Never knew any of us came from here.”

“Coincidence?”

“Perhaps. But it makes me feel better,” and she smiled and winked away
a tear on her lashes, and took his hand while they prayed for “all women
labouring of child”--not “in the perils of childbirth”; and the sparrows
who had found their way through the guards behind the glass windows
chirped above the faded gilt and alabaster family tree of the Conants.

The baronet's pew was on the right of the aisle. After service its
inhabitants moved forth without haste, but so as to block effectively a
dusky person with a large family who champed in their rear.

“Spices, I think,” said Sophie, deeply delighted as the Sangres closed
up after the Conants. “Let 'em get away, George.”

But when they came out many folk whose eyes were one still lingered by
the lychgate.

“I want to see if any more Lashmars are buried here,” said Sophie.

“Not now. This seems to be show day. Come home quickly,” he replied.

A group of families, the Clokes a little apart, opened to let them
through. The men saluted with jerky nods, the women with remnants of a
curtsey. Only Iggulden's son, his mother on his arm, lifted his hat as
Sophie passed.

“Your people,” said the clear voice of Lady Conant in her ear.

“I suppose so,” said Sophie, blushing, for they were within two yards of
her; but it was not a question.

“Then that child looks as if it were coming down with mumps. You ought
to tell the mother she shouldn't have brought it to church.”

“I can't leave 'er behind, my lady,” the woman said. “She'd set the
'ouse afire in a minute, she's that forward with the matches. Ain't you,
Maudie dear?”

“Has Dr. Dallas seen her?”

“Not yet, my lady.”

“He must. You can't get away, of course. M-m! My idiotic maid is coming
in for her teeth to-morrow at twelve. She shall pick her up--at Gale
Anstey, isn't it?--at eleven.”

“Yes. Thank you very much, my lady.”

“I oughtn't to have done it,” said Lady Conant apologetically, “but
there has been no one at Pardons for so long that you'll forgive my
poaching. Now, can't you lunch with us? The vicar usually comes too.
I don't use the horses on a Sunday”--she glanced at the Brazilian's
silver-plated chariot. “It's only a mile across the fields.”

“You--you're very kind,” said Sophie, hating herself because her lip
trembled.

“My dear,” the compelling tone dropped to a soothing gurgle, “d'you
suppose I don't know how it feels to come to a strange county--country
I should say--away from one's own people? When I first left the
Shires--I'm Shropshire, you know--I cried for a day and a night. But
fretting doesn't make loneliness any better. Oh, here's Dora. She did
sprain her leg that day.”

“I'm as lame as a tree still,” said the tall maiden frankly. “You ought
to go out with the otter-hounds, Mrs. Chapin. I believe they're drawing
your water next week.”

Sir Walter had already led off George, and the vicar came up on the
other side of Sophie. There was no escaping the swift procession or the
leisurely lunch, where talk came and went in low-voiced eddies that
had the village for their centre. Sophie heard the vicar and Sir Walter
address her husband lightly as Chapin! (She also remembered many women
known in a previous life who habitually addressed their husbands as
Mr. Such-an-one.) After lunch Lady Conant talked to her explicitly of
maternity as that is achieved in cottages and farm-houses remote from
aid, and of the duty thereto of the mistress of Pardons.

A gate in a beech hedge, reached across triple lawns, let them out
before tea-time into the unkempt south side of their land.

“I want your hand, please,” said Sophie as soon as they were safe among
the beech boles and the lawless hollies. “D'you remember the old maid in
'Providence and the Guitar' who heard the Commissary swear, and hardly
reckoned herself a maiden lady afterward? Because I'm a relative of
hers. Lady Conant is--”

“Did you find out anything about the Lashmars?” he interrupted.

“I didn't ask. I'm going to write to Aunt Sydney about it first. Oh,
Lady Conant said something at lunch about their having bought some land
from some Lashmars a few years ago. I found it was at the beginning of
last century.”

“What did you say?”

“I said, 'Really, how interesting!' Like that. I'm not going to push
myself forward. I've been hearing about Mr. Sangres's efforts in that
direction. And you? I couldn't see you behind the flowers. Was it very
deep water, dear?”

George mopped a brow already browned by outdoor exposures.

“Oh no--dead easy,” he answered. “I've bought Friars Pardon to prevent
Sir Walter's birds straying.”

A cock pheasant scuttered through the dry leaves and exploded almost
under their feet. Sophie jumped.

“That's one of 'em,” said George calmly.

“Well, your nerves are better, at any rate,” said she. “Did you tell 'em
you'd bought the thing to play with?”

“No. That was where my nerve broke down. I only made one bad break--I
think. I said I couldn't see why hiring land to men to farm wasn't as
much a business proposition as anything else.”

“And what did they say?”

“They smiled. I shall know what that smile means some day. They don't
waste their smiles. D'you see that track by Gale Anstey?”

They looked down from the edge of the hanger over a cup-like hollow.
People by twos and threes in their Sunday best filed slowly along the
paths that connected farm to farm.

“I've never seen so many on our land before,” said Sophie. “Why is it?”

“To show us we mustn't shut up their rights of way.”

“Those cow-tracks we've been using cross lots?” said Sophie forcibly.

“Yes. Any one of 'em would cost us two thousand pounds each in legal
expenses to close.”

“But we don't want to,” she said.

“The whole community would fight if we did.”

“But it's our land. We can do what we like.”

“It's not our land. We've only paid for it. We belong to it, and it
belongs to the people--our people they call 'em. I've been to lunch with
the English too.”

They passed slowly from one bracken-dotted field to the next--flushed
with pride of ownership, plotting alterations and restorations at each
turn; halting in their tracks to argue, spreading apart to embrace two
views at once, or closing in to consider one. Couples moved out of their
way, but smiling covertly.

“We shall make some bad breaks,” he said at last.

“Together, though. You won't let anyone else in, will you?”

“Except the contractors. This syndicate handles this proposition by its
little lone.”

“But you might feel the want of some one,” she insisted.

“I shall--but it will be you. It's business, Sophie, but it's going to
be good fun.”

“Please God,” she answered flushing, and cried to herself as they went
back to tea. “It's worth it. Oh, it's worth it.”

The repairing and moving into Friars Pardon was business of the most
varied and searching, but all done English fashion, without friction.
Time and money alone were asked. The rest lay in the hands of beneficent
advisers from London, or spirits, male and female, called up by Mr. and
Mrs. Cloke from the wastes of the farms. In the centre stood George and
Sophie, a little aghast, their interests reaching out on every side.

“I ain't sayin' anything against Londoners,” said Cloke, self-appointed
clerk of the outer works, consulting engineer, head of the immigration
bureau, and superintendent of woods and forests; “but your own people
won't go about to make more than a fair profit out of you.”

“How is one to know?” said George.

“Five years from now, or so on, maybe, you'll be lookin' over your first
year's accounts, and, knowin' what you'll know then, you'll say: 'Well,
Billy Beartup'--or Old Cloke as it might be--'did me proper when I was
new.' No man likes to have that sort of thing laid up against him.”

“I think I see,” said George. “But five years is a long time to look
ahead.”

“I doubt if that oak Billy Beartup throwed in Reuben's Ghyll will be fit
for her drawin’-room floor in less than seven,” Cloke drawled.

“Yes, that's my work,” said Sophie. (Billy Beartup of Griffons,
a woodman by training and birth, a tenant farmer by misfortune of
marriage, had laid his broad axe at her feet a month before.) “Sorry if
I've committed you to another eternity.”

“And we shan't even know where we've gone wrong with your new carriage
drive before that time either,” said Cloke, ever anxious to keep the
balance true with an ounce or two in Sophie's favour. The past four
months had taught George better than to reply. The carriage road winding
up the hill was his present keen interest. They set off to look at it,
and the imported American scraper which had blighted the none too sunny
soul of “Skim” Winsh, the carter.

But young Iggulden was in charge now, and under his guidance, Buller and
Roberts, the great horses, moved mountains.

“You lif' her like that, an' you tip her like that,” he explained to the
gang. “My uncle he was roadmaster in Connecticut.”

“Are they roads yonder?” said Skim, sitting under the laurels.

“No better than accommodation roads. Dirt, they call 'em. They'd suit
you, Skim.”

“Why?” said the incautious Skim.

“Cause you'd take no hurt when you fall out of your cart drunk on a
Saturday,” was the answer.

“I didn't last time neither,” Skim roared.

After the loud laugh, old Whybarne of Gale Anstey piped feebly, “Well,
dirt or no dirt, there's no denyin' Chapin knows a good job when he
sees it. 'E don't build one day and dee-stroy the next, like that nigger
Sangres.”

“SHE's the one that knows her own mind,” said Pinky, brother to Skim
Winsh, and a Napoleon among carters who had helped to bring the grand
piano across the fields in the autumn rains.

“She had ought to,” said Iggulden. “Whoa, Buller! She's a Lashmar. They
never was double-thinking.”

“Oh, you found that? Has the answer come from your uncle?” said Skim,
doubtful whether so remote a land as America had posts.

The others looked at him scornfully. Skim was always a day behind the
fair. Iggulden rested from his labours. “She's a Lashmar right enough.
I started up to write to my uncle--at once--the month after she said her
folks came from Veering Holler.”

“Where there ain't any roads?” Skim interrupted, but none laughed.

“My uncle he married an American woman for his second, and she took
it up like a—like the coroner. She's a Lashmar out of the old Lashmar
place, 'fore they sold to Conants. She ain't no Toot Hill Lashmar, nor
any o' the Crayford lot. Her folk come out of the ground here, neither
chalk nor forest, but wildishers. They sailed over to America--I've got
it all writ down by my uncle's woman--in eighteen hundred an' nothing.
My uncle says they're all slow begetters like.”

“Would they be gentry yonder now?” Skim asked.

“Nah--there's no gentry in America, no matter how long you're there.
It's against their law. There's only rich and poor allowed. They've
been lawyers and such like over yonder for a hundred years but she's a
Lashmar for all that.”

“Lord! What's a hundred years?” said Whybarne, who had seen
seventy-eight of them.

“An' they write too, from yonder--my uncle's woman writes--that you can
still tell 'em by headmark. Their hair's foxy-red still--an' they throw
out when they walk. He's in-toed-treads like a gipsy; but you watch, an'
you'll see 'er throw, out--like a colt.”

“Your trace wants taking up.” Pinky's large ears had caught the sound
of voices, and as the two broke through the laurels the men were hard at
work, their eyes on Sophie's feet.

She had been less fortunate in her inquiries than Iggulden, for her Aunt
Sydney of Meriden (a badged and certificated Daughter of the Revolution
to boot) answered her inquiries with a two-paged discourse on
patriotism, the leaflets of a Village Improvement Society, of which she
was president, and a demand for an overdue subscription to a Factory
Girls' Reading Circle. Sophie burned it all in the Orpheus and Eurydice
grate, and kept her own counsel.

“What I want to know,” said George, when Spring was coming, and the
gardens needed thought, “is who will ever pay me for my labour? I've put
in at least half a million dollars' worth already.”

“Sure you're not taking too much out of yourself?” his wife asked.

“Oh, no; I haven't been conscious of myself all winter.” He looked at
his brown English gaiters and smiled. “It's all behind me now. I believe
I could sit down and think of all that--those months before we sailed.”

“Don't--ah, don't!” she cried.

“But I must go back one day. You don't want to keep me out of business
always--or do you?” He ended with a nervous laugh.

Sophie sighed as she drew her own ground-ash (of old Iggulden's cutting)
from the hall rack.

“Aren't you overdoing it too? You look a little tired,” he said.

“You make me tired. I'm going to Rocketts to see Mrs. Cloke about Mary.”
 (This was the sister of the telegraphist, promoted to be sewing-maid at
Pardons.) “Coming?”

“I'm due at Burnt House to see about the new well. By the way, there's a
sore throat at Gale Anstey--”

“That's my province. Don't interfere. The Whybarne children always have
sore throats. They do it for jujubes.”

“Keep away from Gale Anstey till I make sure, honey. Cloke ought to have
told me.”

“These people don't tell. Haven't you learnt that yet? But I'll obey, me
lord. See you later!”

She set off afoot, for within the three main roads that bounded the
blunt triangle of the estate (even by night one could scarcely hear the
carts on them), wheels were not used except for farm work. The footpaths
served all other purposes. And though at first they had planned
improvements, they had soon fallen in with the customs of their hidden
kingdom, and moved about the soft-footed ways by woodland, hedgerow, and
shaw as freely as the rabbits. Indeed, for the most part Sophie walked
bareheaded beneath her helmet of chestnut hair; but she had been plagued
of late by vague toothaches, which she explained to Mrs. Cloke, who
asked some questions. How it came about Sophie never knew, but after a
while behold Mrs. Cloke's arm was about her waist, and her head was on
that deep bosom behind the shut kitchen door.

“My dear! My dear!” the elder woman almost sobbed. “An' d'you mean
to tell me you never suspicioned? Why--why--where was you ever taught
anything at all? Of course it is. It's what we've been only waitin' for,
all of us. Time and again I've said to Lady--” she checked herself. “An'
now we shall be as we should be.”

“But--but--but--” Sophie whimpered.

“An' to see you buildin' your nest so busy--pianos and books--an' never
thinkin' of a nursery!”

“No more I did.” Sophie sat bolt upright, and began to laugh.

“Time enough yet.” The fingers tapped thoughtfully on the broad knee.
“But--they must be strange-minded folk over yonder with you! Have you
thought to send for your mother? She dead? My dear, my dear! Never
mind! She'll be happy where she knows. 'Tis God's work. An' we was only
waitin' for it, for you've never failed in your duty yet. It ain't
your way. What did you say about my Mary's doings?” Mrs. Cloke's face
hardened as she pressed her chin on Sophie's forehead. “If any of your
girls thinks to be'ave arbitrary now, I'll--But they won't, my dear.
I'll see they do their duty too. Be sure you'll 'ave no trouble.”

When Sophie walked back across the fields heaven and earth changed about
her as on the day of old Iggulden's death. For an instant she thought
of the wide turn of the staircase, and the new ivory-white paint that
no coffin corner could scar, but presently, the shadow passed in a pure
wonder and bewilderment that made her reel. She leaned against one of
their new gates and looked over their lands for some other stay.

“Well,” she said resignedly, half aloud, “we must try to make him feel
that he isn't a third in our party,” and turned the corner that looked
over Friars Pardon, giddy, sick, and faint.

Of a sudden the house they had bought for a whim stood up as she had
never seen it before, low-fronted, broad-winged, ample, prepared by
course of generations for all such things. As it had steadied her when
it lay desolate, so now that it had meaning from their few months of
life within, it soothed and promised good. She went alone and quickly
into the hall, and kissed either door-post, whispering: “Be good to me.
You know! You've never failed in your duty yet.”

When the matter was explained to George, he would have sailed at once to
their own land, but this Sophie forbade.

“I don't want science,” she said. “I just want to be loved, and there
isn't time for that at home. Besides,” she added, looking out of the
window, “it would be desertion.”

George was forced to soothe himself with linking Friars Pardon to the
telegraph system of Great Britain by telephone--three-quarters of a
mile of poles, put in by Whybarne and a few friends. One of these was
a foreigner from the next parish. Said he when the line was being run:
“There's an old ellum right in our road. Shall us throw her?”

“Toot Hill parish folk, neither grace nor good luck, God help 'em.” Old
Whybarne shouted the local proverb from three poles down the line. “We
ain't goin' to lay any axe-iron to coffin-wood here not till we know
where we are yet awhile. Swing round 'er, swing round!”

To this day, then, that sudden kink in the straight line across the
upper pasture remains a mystery to Sophie and George. Nor can they tell
why Skim Winsh, who came to his cottage under Dutton Shaw most musically
drunk at 10.45 P.M of every Saturday night, as his father had done
before him, sang no more at the bottom of the garden steps, where Sophie
always feared he would break his neck. The path was undoubtedly an
ancient right of way, and at 10.45 P.M. on Saturdays Skim remembered it
was his duty to posterity to keep it open--till Mrs. Cloke spoke to him
once. She spoke likewise to her daughter Mary, sewing maid at Pardons,
and to Mary's best new friend, the five-foot-seven imported London
house-maid, who taught Mary to trim hats, and found the country dullish.

But there was no noise--at no time was there any noise--and when Sophie
walked abroad she met no one in her path unless she had signified a wish
that way. Then they appeared to protest that all was well with them and
their children, their chickens, their roofs, their water-supply, and
their sons in the police or the railway service.

“But don't you find it dull, dear?” said George, loyally doing his best
not to worry as the months went by.

“I've been so busy putting my house in order I haven't had time to
think,” said she. “Do you?”

“No--no. If I could only be sure of you.”

She turned on the green drawing-room's couch (it was Empire, not
Heppelwhite after all), and laid aside a list of linen and blankets.

“It has changed everything, hasn't it?” she whispered.

“Oh, Lord, yes. But I still think if we went back to Baltimore--”

“And missed our first real summer together. No thank you, me lord.”

“But we're absolutely alone.”

“Isn't that what I'm doing my best to remedy? Don't you worry. I like
it--like it to the marrow of my little bones. You don't realize what her
house means to a woman. We thought we were living in it last year, but
we hadn't begun to. Don't you rejoice in your study, George?”

“I prefer being here with you.” He sat down on the floor by the couch
and took her hand.

“Seven,” she said, as the French clock struck. “Year before last you'd
just be coming back from business.”

He winced at the recollection, then laughed. “Business! I've been at
work ten solid hours to-day.”

“Where did you lunch? With the Conants?”

“No; at Dutton Shaw, sitting on a log, with my feet in a swamp. But
we've found out where the old spring is, and we're going to pipe it down
to Gale Anstey next year.”

“I'll come and see to-morrow. Oh, please open the door, dear. I want to
look down the passage. Isn't that corner by the stair-head lovely where
the sun strikes in?” She looked through half-closed eyes at the vista of
ivory-white and pale green all steeped in liquid gold.

“There's a step out of Jane Elphick's bedroom,” she went on--“and his
first step in the world ought to be up. I shouldn't wonder if those
people hadn't put it there on purpose. George, will it make any odds to
you if he's a girl?”

He answered, as he had many times before, that his interest was his
wife, not the child.

“Then you're the only person who thinks so.” She laughed. “Don't be
silly, dear. It's expected. I know. It's my duty. I shan't be able to
look our people in the face if I fail.”

“What concern is it of theirs, confound 'em!”

“You'll see. Luckily the tradition of the house is boys, Mrs. Cloke
says, so I'm provided for. Shall you ever begin to understand these
people? I shan't.”

“And we bought it for fun--for fun!” he groaned. “And here we are held
up for goodness knows how long!”

“Why? Were you thinking of selling it?” He did not answer. “Do you
remember the second Mrs. Chapin?” she demanded.

This was a bold, brazen little black-browed woman--a widow for
choice--who on Sophie's death was guilefully to marry George for his
wealth and ruin him in a year. George being busy, Sophie had invented
her some two years after her marriage, and conceived she was alone among
wives in so doing.

“You aren't going to bring her up again?” he asked anxiously.

“I only want to say that I should hate any one who bought Pardons ten
times worse than I used to hate the second Mrs. Chapin. Think what we've
put into it of our two selves.”

“At least a couple of million dollars. I know I could have made--” He
broke off.

“The beasts!” she went on. “They'd be sure to build a red-brick lodge
at the gates, and cut the lawn up for bedding out. You must leave
instructions in your will that he's never to do that, George, won't
you?”

He laughed and took her hand again but said nothing till it was time to
dress. Then he muttered: “What the devil use is a man's country to him
when he can't do business in it?”

Friars Pardon stood faithful to its tradition. At the appointed time was
born, not that third in their party to whom Sophie meant to be so kind,
but a godling; in beauty, it was manifest, excelling Eros, as in wisdom
Confucius; an enhancer of delights, a renewer of companionships and an
interpreter of Destiny. This last George did not realise till he met
Lady Conant striding through Dutton Shaw a few days after the event.

“My dear fellow,” she cried, and slapped him heartily on the back, “I
can't tell you how glad we all are. Oh, she'll be all right. (There's
never been any trouble over the birth of an heir at Pardons.) Now where
the dooce is it?” She felt largely in her leather-boundskirt and drew
out a small silver mug. “I sent a note to your wife about it, but my
silly ass of a groom forgot to take this. You can save me a tramp. Give
her my love.” She marched off amid her guard of grave Airedales.

The mug was worn and dented: above the twined initials, G.L., was the
crest of a footless bird and the motto: “Wayte awhyle--wayte awhyle.”

“That's the other end of the riddle,” Sophie whispered, when he saw her
that evening. “Read her note. The English write beautiful notes.”

The warmest of welcomes to your little man. I hope he will appreciate
his native land now he has come to it. Though you have said nothing we
cannot, of course, look on him as a little stranger, and so I am sending
him the old Lashmar christening mug. It has been with us since Gregory
Lashmar, your great-grandmother's brother--


George stared at his wife.

“Go on,” she twinkled, from the pillows.

--mother's brother, sold his place to Walter's family. We seem to have
acquired some of your household gods at that time, but nothing survives
except the mug and the old cradle, which I found in the potting-shed and
am having put in order for you. I hope little George--Lashmar, he will
be too, won't he?--will live to see his grandchildren cut their teeth on
his mug.

    Affectionately yours,
             ALICE CONANT.

P.S.--How quiet you've kept about it all!

“Well, I'm--”

“Don't swear,” said Sophie. “Bad for the infant mind.”

“But how in the world did she get at it? Have you ever said a word about
the Lashmars?”

“You know the only time--to young Iggulden at Rocketts--when Iggulden
died.”

“Your great-grandmother's brother! She's traced the whole
connection--more than your Aunt Sydney could do. What does she mean
about our keeping quiet?”

Sophie's eyes sparkled. “I've thought that out too. We've got back at
the English at last. Can't you see that she thought that we thought my
mother's being a Lashmar was one of those things we'd expect the English
to find out for themselves, and that's impressed her?” She turned
the mug in her white hands, and sighed happily. “'Wayte awhyle--wayte
awhyle.' That's not a bad motto, George. It's been worth it.”

“But still I don't quite see--”

“I shouldn't wonder if they don't think our coming here was part of a
deep-laid scheme to be near our ancestors. They'd understand that. And
look how they've accepted us, all of them.”

“Are we so undesirable in ourselves?” George grunted.

“Be just, me lord. That wretched Sangres man has twice our money. Can
you see Marm Conant slapping him between the shoulders? Not by a jugful!
The poor beast doesn't exist!”

“Do you think it's that then?” He looked toward the cot by the fire
where the godling snorted.

“The minute I get well I shall find out from Mrs. Cloke what every
Lashmar gives in doles (that's nicer than tips) every time a Lashmite is
born. I've done my duty thus far, but there's much expected of me.”

Entered here Mrs. Cloke, and hung worshipping over the cot. They showed
her the mug and her face shone. “Oh, now Lady Conant's sent it, it'll
be all proper, ma'am, won't it? 'George' of course he'd have to be, but
seein' what he is we was hopin'--all your people was hopin'--it 'ud be
'Lashmar' too, and that'ud just round it out. A very 'andsome mug quite
unique, I should imagine. 'Wayte awhyle--wayte awhyle.' That's true with
the Lashmars, I've heard. Very slow to fill their houses, they are. Most
like Master George won't open 'is nursery till he's thirty.”

“Poor lamb!” cried Sophie. “But how did you know my folk were Lashmars?”

Mrs. Cloke thought deeply. “I'm sure I can't quite say, ma'am, but I've
a belief likely that it was something you may have let drop to young
Iggulden when you was at Rocketts. That may have been what give us an
inkling. An' so it came out, one thing in the way o' talk leading to
another, and those American people at Veering Holler was very obligin'
with news, I'm told, ma'am.”

“Great Scott!” said George, under his breath. “And this is the simple
peasant!”

“Yiss,” Mrs. Cloke went on. “An' Cloke was only wonderin' this
afternoon--your pillow's slipped my dear, you mustn't lie that
a-way--just for the sake o' sayin' something, whether you wouldn't think
well now of getting the Lashmar farms back, sir. They don't rightly
round off Sir Walter's estate. They come caterin' across us more. Cloke,
'e 'ud be glad to show you over any day.”

“But Sir Walter doesn't want to sell, does he?”

“We can find out from his bailiff, sir, but”--with cold contempt--“I
think that trained nurse is just comin' up from her dinner, so 'm afraid
we'll 'ave to ask you, sir... Now, Master George--Ai-ie! Wake a litty
minute, lammie!”

A few months later the three of them were down at the brook in the Gale
Anstey woods to consider the rebuilding of a footbridge carried away by
spring floods. George Lashmar Chapin wanted all the bluebells on God's
earth that day to eat, and Sophie adored him in a voice like to the
cooing of a dove; so business was delayed.

“Here's the place,” said his father at last among the water
forget-me-nots. “But where the deuce are the larch-poles, Cloke? I told
you to have them down here ready.”

“We'll get 'em down _if_ you say so,” Cloke answered, with a thrust of
the underlip they both knew.

“But I did say so. What on earth have you brought that timber-tug here
for? We aren't building a railway bridge. Why, in America, half-a-dozen
two-by-four bits would be ample.”

“I don't know nothin' about that,” said Cloke.

“An' I've nothin' to say against larch--IF you want to make a temp'ry
job of it. I ain't 'ere to tell you what isn't so, sir; an' you can't
say I ever come creepin' up on you, or tryin' to lead you further in
than you set out--”

A year ago George would have danced with impatience. Now he scraped a
little mud off his old gaiters with his spud, and waited.

“All I say is that you can put up larch and make a temp'ry job of it;
and by the time the young master's married it'll have to be done again.
Now, I've brought down a couple of as sweet six-by-eight oak timbers
as we've ever drawed. You put 'em in an' it's off your mind for good an'
all. T'other way--I don't say it ain't right, I'm only just sayin' what
I think--but t'other way, he'll no sooner be married than we'll 'ave it
_all_ to do again. You've no call to regard my words, but you can't get
out of that.”

“No,” said George after a pause; “I've been realising that for some
time. Make it oak then; we can't get out of it.”




THE RECALL


I am the land of their fathers,
    In me the virtue stays;
I will bring back my children,
    After certain days.

Under their feet in the grasses
    My clinging magic runs.
They shall return as strangers,
    They shall remain as sons.

Over their heads in the branches
    Of their new-bought, ancient trees,
I weave an incantation,
    And draw them to my knees.

Scent of smoke in the evening,
    Smell of rain in the night,
The hours, the days and the seasons
    Order their souls aright;

Till I make plain the meaning
    Of all my thousand years
Till I fill their hearts with knowledge,
    While I fill their eyes with tears.




GARM--A HOSTAGE

One night, a very long time ago, I drove to an Indian military
cantonment called Mian Mir to see amateur theatricals. At the back of
the Infantry barracks a soldier, his cap over one eye, rushed in front
of the horses and shouted that he was a dangerous highway robber. As a
matter of fact, he was a friend of mine, so I told him to go home before
any one caught him; but he fell under the pole, and I heard voices of a
military guard in search of some one.

The driver and I coaxed him into the carriage, drove home swiftly,
undressed him and put him to bed, where he waked next morning with
a sore headache, very much ashamed. When his uniform was cleaned and
dried, and he had been shaved and washed and made neat, I drove him back
to barracks with his arm in a fine white sling, and reported that I
had accidentally run over him. I did not tell this story to my
friend's sergeant, who was a hostile and unbelieving person, but to his
lieutenant, who did not know us quite so well.

Three days later my friend came to call, and at his heels slobbered and
fawned one of the finest bull-terriers--of the old-fashioned breed, two
parts bull and one terrier--that I had ever set eyes on. He was pure
white, with a fawn-coloured saddle just behind his neck, and a fawn
diamond at the root of his thin whippy tail. I had admired him distantly
for more than a year; and Vixen, my own fox-terrier, knew him too, but
did not approve.

“'E's for you,” said my friend; but he did not look as though he liked
parting with him.

“Nonsense! That dog's worth more than most men, Stanley,” I said.

“'E's that and more. 'Tention!”

The dog rose on his hind legs, and stood upright for a full minute.

“Eyes right!”

He sat on his haunches and turned his head sharp to the right. At a sign
he rose and barked thrice. Then he shook hands with his right paw and
bounded lightly to my shoulder. Here he made himself into a necktie,
limp and lifeless, hanging down on either side of my neck. I was told to
pick him up and throw him in the air. He fell with a howl, and held up
one leg.

“Part o' the trick,” said his owner. “You're going to die now. Dig
yourself your little grave an' shut your little eye.”

Still limping, the dog hobbled to the garden-edge, dug a hole and lay
down in it. When told that he was cured, he jumped out, wagging his
tail, and whining for applause. He was put through half-a-dozen other
tricks, such as showing how he would hold a man safe (I was that man,
and he sat down before me, his teeth bared, ready to spring), and how
he would stop eating at the word of command. I had no more than finished
praising him when my friend made a gesture that stopped the dog as
though he had been shot, took a piece of blue-ruled canteen-paper from
his helmet, handed it to me and ran away, while the dog looked after him
and howled. I read:

SIR--I give you the dog because of what you got me out of. He is the
best I know, for I made him myself, and he is as good as a man. Please
do not give him too much to eat, and please do not give him back to me,
for I'm not going to take him, if you will keep him. So please do not
try to give him back any more. I have kept his name back, so you can
call him anything and he will answer, but please do not give him back.
He can kill a man as easy as anything, but please do not give him too
much meat. He knows more than a man.

Vixen sympathetically joined her shrill little yap to the bull-terrier's
despairing cry, and I was annoyed, for I knew that a man who cares for
dogs is one thing, but a man who loves one dog is quite another. Dogs
are at the best no more than verminous vagrants, self-scratchers, foul
feeders, and unclean by the law of Moses and Mohammed; but a dog with
whom one lives alone for at least six months in the year; a free thing,
tied to you so strictly by love that without you he will not stir or
exercise; a patient, temperate, humorous, wise soul, who knows your
moods before you know them yourself, is not a dog under any ruling.

I had Vixen, who was all my dog to me; and I felt what my friend must
have felt, at tearing out his heart in this style and leaving it in
my garden. However, the dog understood clearly enough that I was his
master, and did not follow the soldier. As soon as he drew breath I made
much of him, and Vixen, yelling with jealousy, flew at him. Had she been
of his own sex, he might have cheered himself with a fight, but he only
looked worriedly when she nipped his deep iron sides, laid his heavy
head on my knee, and howled anew. I meant to dine at the Club that
night; but as darkness drew in, and the dog snuffed through the empty
house like a child trying to recover from a fit of sobbing, I felt that
I could not leave him to suffer his first evening alone. So we fed at
home, Vixen on one side, and the stranger-dog on the other; she watching
his every mouthful, and saying explicitly what she thought of his table
manners, which were much better than hers.

It was Vixen's custom, till the weather grew hot, to sleep in my bed,
her head on the pillow like a Christian; and when morning came I would
always find that the little thing had braced her feet against the wall
and pushed me to the very edge of the cot. This night she hurried to bed
purposefully, every hair up, one eye on the stranger, who had dropped
on a mat in a helpless, hopeless sort of way, all four feet spread out,
sighing heavily. She settled her head on the pillow several times,
to show her little airs and graces, and struck up her usual whiney
sing-song before slumber. The stranger-dog softly edged toward me. I
put out my hand and he licked it. Instantly my wrist was between Vixen's
teeth, and her warning aaarh! said as plainly as speech, that if I took
any further notice of the stranger she would bite.

I caught her behind her fat neck with my left hand, shook her severely,
and said:

“Vixen, if you do that again you'll be put into the verandah. Now,
remember!”

She understood perfectly, but the minute I released her she mouthed my
right wrist once more, and waited with her ears back and all her body
flattened, ready to bite. The big dog's tail thumped the floor in a
humble and peace-making way.

I grabbed Vixen a second time, lifted her out of bed like a rabbit
(she hated that and yelled), and, as I had promised, set her out in the
verandah with the bats and the moonlight. At this she howled. Then
she used coarse language--not to me, but to the bull-terrier--till she
coughed with exhaustion. Then she ran round the house trying every door.
Then she went off to the stables and barked as though some one were
stealing the horses, which was an old trick of hers. Last she returned,
and her snuffing yelp said, “I'll be good! Let me in and I'll be good!”

She was admitted and flew to her pillow. When she was quieted I
whispered to the other dog, “You can lie on the foot of the bed.” The
bull jumped up at once, and though I felt Vixen quiver with rage, she
knew better than to protest. So we slept till the morning, and they had
early breakfast with me, bite for bite, till the horse came round and
we went for a ride. I don't think the bull had ever followed a horse
before. He was wild with excitement, and Vixen, as usual, squealed and
scuttered and scooted, and took charge of the procession.

There was one corner of a village near by, which we generally passed
with caution, because all the yellow pariah-dogs of the place gathered
about it.

They were half-wild, starving beasts, and though utter cowards, yet
where nine or ten of them get together they will mob and kill and eat an
English dog. I kept a whip with a long lash for them.

That morning they attacked Vixen, who, perhaps of design, had moved from
beyond my horse's shadow.

The bull was ploughing along in the dust, fifty yards behind, rolling in
his run, and smiling as bull-terriers will. I heard Vixen squeal; half a
dozen of the curs closed in on her; a white streak came up behind me;
a cloud of dust rose near Vixen, and, when it cleared, I saw one tall
pariah with his back broken, and the bull wrenching another to earth.
Vixen retreated to the protection of my whip, and the bull paddled back
smiling more than ever, covered with the blood of his enemies. That
decided me to call him “Garm of the Bloody Breast,” who was a great
person in his time, or “Garm” for short; so, leaning forward, I told him
what his temporary name would be. He looked up while I repeated it, and
then raced away. I shouted “Garm!” He stopped, raced back, and came up
to ask my will.

Then I saw that my soldier friend was right, and that that dog knew and
was worth more than a man. At the end of the ride I gave an order which
Vixen knew and hated: “Go away and get washed!” I said. Garm understood
some part of it, and Vixen interpreted the rest, and the two trotted off
together soberly. When I went to the back verandah Vixen had been washed
snowy-white, and was very proud of herself, but the dog-boy would not
touch Garm on any account unless I stood by. So I waited while he was
being scrubbed, and Garm, with the soap creaming on the top of his broad
head, looked at me to make sure that this was what I expected him to
endure. He knew perfectly that the dog-boy was only obeying orders.

“Another time,” I said to the dog-boy, “you will wash the great dog with
Vixen when I send them home.”

“Does he know?” said the dog-boy, who understood the ways of dogs.

“Garm,” I said, “another time you will be washed with Vixen.”

I knew that Garm understood. Indeed, next washing-day, when Vixen as
usual fled under my bed, Garm stared at the doubtful dog-boy in the
verandah, stalked to the place where he had been washed last time, and
stood rigid in the tub.

But the long days in my office tried him sorely. We three would drive
off in the morning at half-past eight and come home at six or later.
Vixen knowing the routine of it, went to sleep under my table; but
the confinement ate into Garm's soul. He generally sat on the verandah
looking out on the Mall; and well I knew what he expected.

Sometimes a company of soldiers would move along on their way to the
Fort, and Garm rolled forth to inspect them; or an officer in uniform
entered into the office, and it was pitiful to see poor Garm's welcome
to the cloth--not the man. He would leap at him, and sniff and bark
joyously, then run to the door and back again. One afternoon I heard
him bay with a full throat--a thing I had never heard before--and he
disappeared. When I drove into my garden at the end of the day a soldier
in white uniform scrambled over the wall at the far end, and the Garm
that met me was a joyous dog. This happened twice or thrice a week for a
month.

I pretended not to notice, but Garm knew and Vixen knew. He would glide
homewards from the office about four o'clock, as though he were only
going to look at the scenery, and this he did so quietly that but for
Vixen I should not have noticed him. The jealous little dog under
the table would give a sniff and a snort, just loud enough to call my
attention to the flight. Garm might go out forty times in the day and
Vixen would never stir, but when he slunk off to see his true master in
my garden she told me in her own tongue. That was the one sign she made
to prove that Garm did not altogether belong to the family. They were
the best of friends at all times, but, Vixen explained that I was never
to forget Garm did not love me as she loved me.

I never expected it. The dog was not my dog—could never be my dog--and I
knew he was as miserable as his master who tramped eight miles a day to
see him. So it seemed to me that the sooner the two were reunited the
better for all. One afternoon I sent Vixen home alone in the dog-cart
(Garm had gone before), and rode over to cantonments to find another
friend of mine, who was an Irish soldier and a great friend of the dog's
master.

I explained the whole case, and wound up with:

“And now Stanley's in my garden crying over his dog. Why doesn't he take
him back? They're both unhappy.”

“Unhappy! There's no sense in the little man any more. But 'tis his
fit.”

“What is his fit? He travels fifty miles a week to see the brute, and
he pretends not to notice me when he sees me on the road; and I'm as
unhappy as he is. Make him take the dog back.”

“It's his penance he's set himself. I told him by way of a joke, afther
you'd run over him so convenient that night, whin he was drunk--I said
if he was a Catholic he'd do penance. Off he went wid that fit in his
little head an' a dose of fever, an nothin' would suit but givin' you
the dog as a hostage.”

“Hostage for what? I don't want hostages from Stanley.”

“For his good behaviour. He's keepin' straight now, the way it's no
pleasure to associate wid him.”

“Has he taken the pledge?”

“If 'twas only that I need not care. Ye can take the pledge for three
months on an' off. He sez he'll never see the dog again, an' so mark
you, he'll keep straight for evermore. Ye know his fits? Well, this is
wan of them. How's the dog takin' it?”

“Like a man. He's the best dog in India. Can't you make Stanley take him
back?”

“I can do no more than I have done. But ye know his fits. He's just
doin' his penance. What will he do when he goes to the Hills? The
doctor's put him on the list.”

It is the custom in India to send a certain number of invalids from each
regiment up to stations in the Himalayas for the hot weather; and though
the men ought to enjoy the cool and the comfort, they miss the society
of the barracks down below, and do their best to come back or to avoid
going. I felt that this move would bring matters to a head, so I left
Terrence hopefully, though he called after me “He won't take the dog,
sorr. You can lay your month's pay on that. Ye know his fits.”

I never pretended to understand Private Ortheris; and so I did the next
best thing—I left him alone.

That summer the invalids of the regiment to which my friend belonged
were ordered off to the Hills early, because the doctors thought
marching in the cool of the day would do them good. Their route lay
south to a place called Umballa, a hundred and twenty miles or more.
Then they would turn east and march up into the hills to Kasauli or
Dugshai or Subathoo. I dined with the officers the night before they
left--they were marching at five in the morning. It was midnight when I
drove into my garden, and surprised a white figure flying over the wall.

“That man,” said my butler, “has been here since nine, making talk to
that dog. He is quite mad.”

“I did not tell him to go away because he has been here many times
before, and because the dog-boy told me that if I told him to go away,
that great dog would immediately slay me. He did not wish to speak to
the Protector of the Poor, and he did not ask for anything to eat or
drink.”

“Kadir Buksh,” said I, “that was well done, for the dog would surely
have killed thee. But I do not think the white soldier will come any
more.”

Garm slept ill that night and whimpered in his dreams. Once he sprang up
with a clear, ringing bark, and I heard him wag his tail till it waked
him and the bark died out in a howl. He had dreamed he was with his
master again, and I nearly cried. It was all Stanley's silly fault.

The first halt which the detachment of invalids made was some miles
from their barracks, on the Amritsar road, and ten miles distant from my
house. By a mere chance one of the officers drove back for another good
dinner at the Club (cooking on the line of march is always bad), and
there I met him. He was a particular friend of mine, and I knew that he
knew how to love a dog properly. His pet was a big fat retriever who was
going up to the Hills for his health, and, though it was still April,
the round, brown brute puffed and panted in the Club verandah as though
he would burst.

“It's amazing,” said the officer, “what excuses these invalids of mine
make to get back to barracks. There's a man in my company now asked me
for leave to go back to cantonments to pay a debt he'd forgotten. I
was so taken by the idea I let him go, and he jingled off in an ekka as
pleased as Punch. Ten miles to pay a debt! Wonder what it was really?”

“If you'll drive me home I think I can show you,” I said.

So he went over to my house in his dog-cart with the retriever; and on
the way I told him the story of Garm.

“I was wondering where that brute had gone to. He's the best dog in the
regiment,” said my friend. “I offered the little fellow twenty rupees
for him a month ago. But he's a hostage, you say, for Stanley's good
conduct. Stanley's one of the best men I have when he chooses.”

“That's the reason why,” I said. “A second-rate man wouldn't have taken
things to heart as he has done.”

We drove in quietly at the far end of the garden, and crept round the
house. There was a place close to the wall all grown about with tamarisk
trees, where I knew Garm kept his bones. Even Vixen was not allowed to
sit near it. In the full Indian moonlight I could see a white uniform
bending over the dog.

“Good-bye, old man,” we could not help hearing Stanley's voice. “For
'Eving's sake don't get bit and go mad by any measley pi-dog. But you can
look after yourself, old man. You don't get drunk an' run about 'ittin'
your friends. You takes your bones an' you eats your biscuit, an' you
kills your enemy like a gentleman. I'm goin' away--don't 'owl--I'm goin'
off to Kasauli, where I won't see you no more.”

I could hear him holding Garm's nose as the dog threw it up to the
stars.

“You'll stay here an' be'ave, an'--an' I'll go away an' try to be'ave,
an' I don't know 'ow to leave you. I don't know--”

“I think this is damn silly,” said the officer, patting his foolish
fubsy old retriever. He called to the private, who leaped to his feet,
marched forward, and saluted.

“You here?” said the officer, turning away his head.

“Yes, sir, but I'm just goin' back.”

“I shall be leaving here at eleven in my cart. You come with me. I can't
have sick men running about all over the place. Report yourself at
eleven, here.”

We did not say much when we went indoors, but the officer muttered and
pulled his retriever's ears.

He was a disgraceful, overfed doormat of a dog; and when he waddled off
to my cookhouse to be fed, I had a brilliant idea.

At eleven o'clock that officer's dog was nowhere to be found, and you
never heard such a fuss as his owner made. He called and shouted and
grew angry, and hunted through my garden for half an hour.

Then I said:

“He's sure to turn up in the morning. Send a man in by rail, and I'll
find the beast and return him.”

“Beast?” said the officer. “I value that dog considerably more than I
value any man I know. It's all very fine for you to talk--your dog's
here.”

So she was--under my feet--and, had she been missing, food and wages
would have stopped in my house till her return. But some people grow
fond of dogs not worth a cut of the whip. My friend had to drive away at
last with Stanley in the back seat; and then the dog-boy said to me:

“What kind of animal is Bullen Sahib's dog? Look at him!”

I went to the boy's hut, and the fat old reprobate was lying on a mat
carefully chained up. He must have heard his master calling for twenty
minutes, but had not even attempted to join him.

“He has no face,” said the dog-boy scornfully. “He is a punniar-kooter
(a spaniel). He never tried to get that cloth off his jaws when his
master called. Now Vixen-baba would have jumped through the window, and
that Great Dog would have slain me with his muzzled mouth. It is true
that there are many kinds of dogs.”

Next evening who should turn up but Stanley. The officer had sent
him back fourteen miles by rail with a note begging me to return the
retriever if I had found him, and, if I had not, to offer huge rewards.
The last train to camp left at half-past ten, and Stanley, stayed till
ten talking to Garm. I argued and entreated, and even threatened to
shoot the bull-terrier, but the little man was as firm as a rock, though
I gave him a good dinner and talked to him most severely. Garm knew as
well as I that this was the last time he could hope to see his man, and
followed Stanley like a shadow. The retriever said nothing, but licked
his lips after his meal and waddled off without so much as saying “Thank
you” to the disgusted dog-boy.

So that last meeting was over, and I felt as wretched as Garm, who
moaned in his sleep all night. When we went to the office he found a
place under the table close to Vixen, and dropped flat till it was
time to go home. There was no more running out into the verandahs, no
slinking away for stolen talks with Stanley. As the weather grew warmer
the dogs were forbidden to run beside the cart, but sat at my side on
the seat, Vixen with her head under the crook of my left elbow, and Garm
hugging the left handrail.

Here Vixen was ever in great form. She had to attend to all the moving
traffic, such as bullock-carts that blocked the way, and camels, and led
ponies; as well as to keep up her dignity when she passed low friends
running in the dust. She never yapped for yapping's sake, but her
shrill, high bark was known all along the Mall, and other men's terriers
ki-yied in reply, and bullock-drivers looked over their shoulders and
gave us the road with a grin.

But Garm cared for none of these things. His big eyes were on the
horizon and his terrible mouth was shut. There was another dog in the
office who belonged to my chief. We called him “Bob the Librarian,”
 because he always imagined vain rats behind the bookshelves, and in
hunting for them would drag out half the old newspaper-files. Bob was a
well-meaning idiot, but Garm did not encourage him. He would slide his
head round the door panting, “Rats! Come along Garm!” and Garm would
shift one forepaw over the other, and curl himself round, leaving Bob to
whine at a most uninterested back. The office was nearly as cheerful as
a tomb in those days.

Once, and only once, did I see Garm at all contented with his
surroundings. He had gone for an unauthorised walk with Vixen early one
Sunday morning, and a very young and foolish artilleryman (his battery
had just moved to that part of the world) tried to steal them both.
Vixen, of course, knew better than to take food from soldiers, and,
besides, she had just finished her breakfast. So she trotted back with a
large piece of the mutton that they issue to our troops, laid it down
on my verandah, and looked up to see what I thought. I asked her where
Garm was, and she ran in front of the horse to show me the way.

About a mile up the road we came across our artilleryman sitting very
stiffly on the edge of a culvert with a greasy handkerchief on his
knees. Garm was in front of him, looking rather pleased. When the man
moved leg or hand, Garm bared his teeth in silence. A broken string
hung from his collar, and the other half of it lay, all warm, in the
artilleryman's still hand. He explained to me, keeping his eyes straight
in front of him, that he had met this dog (he called him awful names)
walking alone, and was going to take him to the Fort to be killed for a
masterless pariah.

I said that Garm did not seem to me much of a pariah, but that he had
better take him to the Fort if he thought best. He said he did not care
to do so. I told him to go to the Fort alone. He said he did not want to
go at that hour, but would follow my advice as soon as I had called off
the dog. I instructed Garm to take him to the Fort, and Garm marched
him solemnly up to the gate, one mile and a half under a hot sun, and I
told the quarter-guard what had happened; but the young artilleryman was
more angry than was at all necessary when they began to laugh. Several
regiments, he was told, had tried to steal Garm in their time.

That month the hot weather shut down in earnest, and the dogs slept
in the bathroom on the cool wet bricks where the bath is placed. Every
morning, as soon as the man filled my bath the two jumped in, and every
morning the man filled the bath a second time. I said to him that he
might as well fill a small tub specially for the dogs. “Nay,” said he
smiling, “it is not their custom. They would not understand. Besides,
the big bath gives them more space.”

The punkah-coolies who pull the punkahs day and night came to know Garm
intimately. He noticed that when the swaying fan stopped I would call
out to the coolie and bid him pull with a long stroke. If the man still
slept I would wake him up. He discovered, too, that it was a good thing
to lie in the wave of air under the punkah. Maybe Stanley had taught him
all about this in barracks. At any rate, when the punkah stopped, Garm
would first growl and cock his eye at the rope, and if that did not
wake the man--it nearly always did--he would tiptoe forth and talk in
the sleeper's ear. Vixen was a clever little dog, but she could never
connect the punkah and the coolie; so Garm gave me grateful hours of
cool sleep. But he was utterly wretched--as miserable as a human being;
and in his misery he clung so closely to me that other men noticed it,
and were envious. If I moved from one room to another Garm followed;
if my pen stopped scratching, Garm's head was thrust into my hand; if
I turned, half awake, on the pillow, Garm was up and at my side, for he
knew that I was his only link with his master, and day and night, and
night and day, his eyes asked one question--“When is this going to end?”

Living with the dog as I did, I never noticed that he was more than
ordinarily upset by the hot weather, till one day at the Club a man
said: “That dog of yours will die in a week or two. He's a shadow.” Then
I dosed Garm with iron and quinine, which he hated; and I felt very
anxious. He lost his appetite, and Vixen was allowed to eat his dinner
under his eyes. Even that did not make him swallow, and we held a
consultation on him, of the best man-doctor in the place; a lady-doctor,
who cured the sick wives of kings; and the Deputy Inspector-General of
the veterinary service of all India. They pronounced upon his symptoms,
and I told them his story, and Garm lay on a sofa licking my hand.

“He's dying of a broken heart,” said the lady-doctor suddenly.

“'Pon my word,” said the Deputy Inspector General, “I believe Mrs.
Macrae is perfectly right as usual.”

The best man-doctor in the place wrote a prescription, and the
veterinary Deputy Inspector-General went over it afterwards to be sure
that the drugs were in the proper dog-proportions; and that was the
first time in his life that our doctor ever allowed his prescriptions
to be edited. It was a strong tonic, and it put the dear boy on his feet
for a week or two; then he lost flesh again. I asked a man I knew to
take him up to the Hills with him when he went, and the man came to the
door with his kit packed on the top of the carriage. Garm took in the
situation at one red glance. The hair rose along his back; he sat down
in front of me and delivered the most awful growl I have ever heard in
the jaws of a dog. I shouted to my friend to get away at once, and as
soon as the carriage was out of the garden Garm laid his head on my
knee and whined. So I knew his answer, and devoted myself to getting
Stanley's address in the Hills.

My turn to go to the cool came late in August. We were allowed thirty
days' holiday in a year, if no one fell sick, and we took it as we could
be spared. My chief and Bob the Librarian had their holiday first, and
when they were gone I made a calendar, as I always did, and hung it up
at the head of my cot, tearing off one day at a time till they returned.
Vixen had gone up to the Hills with me five times before; and she
appreciated the cold and the damp and the beautiful wood fires there as
much as I did.

“Garm,” I said, “we are going back to Stanley at Kasauli.
Kasauli--Stanley; Stanley--Kasauli.” And I repeated it twenty times.
It was not Kasauli really, but another place. Still I remembered what
Stanley had said in my garden on the last night, and I dared not change
the name. Then Garm began to tremble; then he barked; and then he leaped
up at me, frisking and wagging his tail.

“Not now,” I said, holding up my hand. “When I say 'Go,' we'll go,
Garm.” I pulled out the little blanket coat and spiked collar that Vixen
always wore up in the Hills to protect her against sudden chills and
thieving leopards, and I let the two smell them and talk it over. What
they said of course I do not know; but it made a new dog of Garm. His
eyes were bright; and he barked joyfully when I spoke to him. He ate his
food, and he killed his rats for the next three weeks, and when he began
to whine I had only to say “Stanley--Kasauli; Kasauli--Stanley,” to wake
him up. I wish I had thought of it before.

My chief came back, all brown with living in the open air, and very
angry at finding it so hot in the plains. That same afternoon we three
and Kadir Buksh began to pack for our month's holiday, Vixen rolling in
and out of the bullock-trunk twenty times a minute, and Garm grinning
all over and thumping on the floor with his tail. Vixen knew the routine
of travelling as well as she knew my office-work. She went to the
station, singing songs, on the front seat of the carriage, while Garm
sat with me. She hurried into the railway carriage, saw Kadir Buksh make
up my bed for the night, got her drink of water, and curled up with her
black-patch eye on the tumult of the platform. Garm followed her (the
crowd gave him a lane all to himself) and sat down on the pillows with
his eyes blazing, and his tail a haze behind him.

We came to Umballa in the hot misty dawn, four or five men, who had been
working hard for eleven months, shouting for our dâks--the two-horse
travelling carriages that were to take us up to Kalka at the foot of the
Hills. It was all new to Garm. He did not understand carriages where you
lay at full length on your bedding, but Vixen knew and hopped into her
place at once; Garm following. The Kalka Road, before the railway was
built, was about forty-seven miles long, and the horses were changed
every eight miles. Most of them jibbed, and kicked, and plunged, but
they had to go, and they went rather better than usual for Garm's deep
bay in their rear.

There was a river to be forded, and four bullocks pulled the carriage,
and Vixen stuck her head out of the sliding-door and nearly fell into
the water while she gave directions. Garm was silent and curious,
and rather needed reassuring about Stanley and Kasauli. So we rolled,
barking and yelping, into Kalka for lunch, and Garm ate enough for two.

After Kalka the road wound among the hills, and we took a curricle with
half-broken ponies, which were changed every six miles. No one dreamed
of a railroad to Simla in those days, for it was seven thousand feet up
in the air. The road was more than fifty miles long, and the regulation
pace was just as fast as the ponies could go. Here, again, Vixen led
Garm from one carriage to the other; jumped into the back seat, and
shouted. A cool breath from the snows met us about five miles out of
Kalka, and she whined for her coat, wisely fearing a chill on the
liver. I had had one made for Garm too, and, as we climbed to the fresh
breezes, I put it on, and Garm chewed it uncomprehendingly, but I think
he was grateful.

“Hi-yi-yi-yi!” sang Vixen as we shot round the curves; “Toot-toot-toot!”
 went the driver's bugle at the dangerous places, and “yow! yow!” bayed
Garm. Kadir Buksh sat on the front seat and smiled. Even he was glad to
get away from the heat of the Plains that stewed in the haze behind us.
Now and then we would meet a man we knew going down to his work again,
and he would say: “What's it like below?” and I would shout: “Hotter
than cinders. What's it like up above?” and he would shout back: “Just
perfect!” and away we would go.

Suddenly Kadir Buksh said, over his shoulder: “Here is Solon”; and Garm
snored where he lay with his head on my knee. Solon is an unpleasant
little cantonment, but it has the advantage of being cool and healthy.
It is all bare and windy, and one generally stops at a rest-house nearby
for something to eat. I got out and took both dogs with me, while Kadir
Buksh made tea. A soldier told us we should find Stanley “out there,”
 nodding his head towards a bare, bleak hill.

When we climbed to the top we spied that very Stanley, who had given me
all this trouble, sitting on a rock with his face in his hands, and his
overcoat hanging loose about him. I never saw anything so lonely and
dejected in my life as this one little man, crumpled up and thinking, on
the great gray hillside.

Here Garm left me.

He departed without a word, and, so far as I could see, without moving
his legs. He flew through the air bodily, and I heard the whack of him
as he flung himself at Stanley, knocking the little man clean over. They
rolled on the ground together, shouting, and yelping, and hugging. I
could not see which was dog and which was man, till Stanley got up and
whimpered.

He told me that he had been suffering from fever at intervals, and was
very weak. He looked all he said, but even while I watched, both man and
dog plumped out to their natural sizes, precisely as dried apples swell
in water. Garm was on his shoulder, and his breast and feet all at the
same time, so that Stanley spoke all through a cloud of Garm--gulping,
sobbing, slavering Garm. He did not say anything that I could
understand, except that he had fancied he was going to die, but that now
he was quite well, and that he was not going to give up Garm any more
to anybody under the rank of Beelzebub.

Then he said he felt hungry, and thirsty, and happy.

We went down to tea at the rest-house, where Stanley stuffed himself
with sardines and raspberry jam, and beer, and cold mutton and pickles,
when Garm wasn't climbing over him; and then Vixen and I went on.

Garm saw how it was at once. He said good-bye to me three times, giving
me both paws one after another, and leaping on to my shoulder. He
further escorted us, singing Hosannas at the top of his voice, a mile
down the road. Then he raced back to his own master.

Vixen never opened her mouth, but when the cold twilight came, and we
could see the lights of Simla across the hills, she snuffled with her
nose at the breast of my ulster. I unbuttoned it, and tucked her inside.
Then she gave a contented little sniff, and fell fast asleep, her head
on my breast, till we bundled out at Simla, two of the four happiest
people in all the world that night.




THE POWER OF THE DOG

       There is sorrow enough in the natural way
       From men and women to fill our day;
       But when we are certain of sorrow in store,
       Why do we always arrange for more?
       Brothers and sisters, I bid you beware
       Of giving your heart to a dog to tear.

       Buy a pup and your money will buy
       Love unflinching that cannot lie--
       Perfect passion and worship fed
       By a kick in the ribs or a pat on the head.
       Nevertheless it is hardly fair
       To risk your heart for a dog to tear.

       When the fourteen years which Nature permits
       Are closing in asthma, or tumour, or fits,
       And the vet's unspoken prescription runs
       To lethal chambers or loaded guns,
       Then you will find--it's your own affair
       But... you've given your heart to a dog to tear.

       When the body that lived at your single will
       When the whimper of welcome is stilled (how still!)
       When the spirit that answered your every mood
       Is gone--wherever it goes--for good,
       You will discover how much you care,
       And will give your heart to a dog to tear!

       We've sorrow enough in the natural way,
       When it comes to burying Christian clay.
       Our loves are not given, but only lent,
       At compound interest of cent per cent.
       Though it is not always the case, I believe,
       That the longer we've kept 'em, the more do we grieve:
       For, when debts are payable, right or wrong,
       A short-time loan is as bad as a long
       So why in Heaven (before we are there!)
       Should we give our hearts to a dog to tear?




THE MOTHER HIVE

If the stock had not been old and overcrowded, the Wax-moth would never
have entered; but where bees are too thick on the comb there must be
sickness or parasites. The heat of the hive had risen with the June
honey-flow, and though the farmers worked, until their wings ached, to
keep people cool, everybody suffered.

A young bee crawled up the greasy trampled alighting-board. “Excuse me,”
 she began, “but it's my first honey-flight. Could you kindly tell me if
this is my--”

“--own hive?” the Guard snapped. “Yes! Buzz in, and be foul-brooded to
you! Next!”

“Shame!” cried half a dozen old workers with worn wings and nerves, and
there was a scuffle and a hum.

The little grey Wax-moth, pressed close in a crack in the
alighting-board, had waited this chance all day. She scuttled in like a
ghost, and, knowing the senior bees would turn her out at once, dodged
into a brood-frame, where youngsters who had not yet seen the winds blow
or the flowers nod discussed life. Here she was safe, for young bees
will tolerate any sort of stranger. Behind her came the bee who had been
slanged by the Guard.

“What is the world like, Melissa?” said a companion. “Cruel! I brought
in a full load of first-class stuff, and the Guard told me to go and be
foul-brooded!” She sat down in the cool draught across the combs.

“If you'd only heard,” said the Wax-moth silkily, “the insolence of
the Guard's tone when she cursed our sister. It aroused the Entire
Community.” She laid an egg. She had stolen in for that purpose.

“There was a bit of a fuss on the Gate,” Melissa chuckled. “You were
there, Miss?” She did not know how to address the slim stranger.

“Don't call me 'Miss.' I'm a sister to all in affliction--just a
working-sister. My heart bled for you beneath your burden.” The Wax-moth
caressed Melissa with her soft feelers and laid another egg.

“You mustn't lay here,” cried Melissa. “You aren't a Queen.”

“My dear child, I give you my most solemn word of honour those aren't
eggs. Those are my principles, and I am ready to die for them.” She
raised her voice a little above the rustle and tramp round her. “If
you'd like to kill me, pray do.”

“Don't be unkind, Melissa,” said a young bee, impressed by the chaste
folds of the Wax-moth's wing, which hid her ceaseless egg-dropping.

“I haven't done anything,” Melissa answered. “She's doing it all.”

“Ah, don't let your conscience reproach you later, but when you've
killed me, write me, at least, as one that loved her fellow-worker.”

Laying at every sob, the Wax-moth backed into a crowd of young bees, and
left Melissa bewildered and annoyed. So she lifted up her little voice
in the darkness and cried, “Stores!” till a gang of cell-fillers hailed
her, and she left her load with them.

“I'm afraid I foul-brooded you just now,” said a voice over her
shoulder. “I'd been on the Gate for three hours, and one would
foul-brood the Queen herself after that. No offence meant.”

“None taken,” Melissa answered cheerily. “I shall be on Guard myself,
some day. What's next to do?”

“There's a rumour of Death's Head Moths about. Send a gang of youngsters
to the Gate, and tell them to narrow it in with a couple of stout
scrap-wax pillars. It'll make the Hive hot, but we can't have Death's
Headers in the middle of our honey-flow.”

“My Only Wings! I should think not!” Melissa had all a sound bee's
hereditary hatred against the big, squeaking, feathery Thief of the
Hives. “Tumble out!” she called across the youngsters' quarters. “All
you who aren't feeding babies, show a leg. Scrap-wax pillars for the
Ga-ate!” She chanted the order at length.

“That's nonsense,” a downy, day-old bee answered. “In the first place, I
never heard of a Death's Header coming into a hive. People don't do
such things. In the second, building pillars to keep 'em out is purely
a Cypriote trick, unworthy of British bees. In the third, if you trust
a Death's Head, he will trust you. Pillar-building shows lack of
confidence. Our dear sister in grey says so.”

“Yes. Pillars are un-English and provocative, and a waste of wax that
is needed for higher and more practical ends,” said the Wax-moth from an
empty store-cell.

“The safety of the Hive is the highest thing I've ever heard of. You
mustn't teach us to refuse work,” Melissa began.

“You misunderstand me, as usual, love. Work's the essence of life;
but to expend precious unreturning vitality and real labour against
imaginary danger, that is heartbreakingly absurd! If I can only teach
a--a little toleration--a little ordinary kindness here toward that
absurd old bogey you call the Death's Header, I shan't have lived in
vain.”

“She hasn't lived in vain, the darling!” cried twenty bees together.
“You should see her saintly life, Melissa! She just devotes herself to
spreading her principles, and--and--she looks lovely!”

An old, baldish bee came up the comb.

“Pillar-workers for the Gate! Get out and chew scraps. Buzz off!” she
said. The Wax-moth slipped aside.

The young bees trooped down the frame, whispering. “What's the matter
with 'em?” said the oldster. “Why do they call each other 'ducky' and
'darling'? Must be the weather.” She sniffed suspiciously. “Horrid
stuffy smell here. Like stale quilts. Not Wax-moth, I hope, Melissa?”

“Not to my knowledge,” said Melissa, who, of course, only knew the
Wax-moth as a lady with principles, and had never thought to report
her presence. She had always imagined Wax-moths to be like blood-red
dragon-flies.

“You had better fan out this corner for a little,” said the old bee and
passed on. Melissa dropped her head at once, took firm hold with her
fore-feet, and fanned obediently at the regulation stroke three hundred
beats to the second. Fanning tries a bee's temper, because she must
always keep in the same place where she never seems to be doing any
good, and, all the while, she is wearing out her only wings. When a bee
cannot fly, a bee must not live; and a bee knows it. The Wax-moth crept
forth, and caressed Melissa again.

“I see,” she murmured, “that at heart you are one of Us.”

“I work with the Hive,” Melissa answered briefly.

“It's the same thing. We and the Hive are one.”

“Then why are your feelers different from ours? Don't cuddle so.”

“Don't be provincial, Carissima. You can't have all the world
alike--yet.”

“But why do you lay eggs?” Melissa insisted. “You lay 'em like a
Queen--only you drop them in patches all over the place. I've watched
you.”

“Ah, Brighteyes, so you've pierced my little subterfuge? Yes, they are
eggs. By and by they'll spread our principles. Aren't you glad?”

“You gave me your most solemn word of honour that they were not eggs.”

“That was my little subterfuge, dearest--for the sake of the Cause.
Now I must reach the young.” The Wax-moth tripped towards the fourth
brood-frame where the young bees were busy feeding the babies.

It takes some time for a sound bee to realize a malignant and continuous
lie. “She's very sweet and feathery,” was all that Melissa thought, “but
her talk sounds like ivy honey tastes. I'd better get to my field-work
again.”

She found the Gate in a sulky uproar. The youngsters told off to the
pillars had refused to chew scrap-wax because it made their jaws ache,
and were clamouring for virgin stuff.

“Anything to finish the job!” said the badgered Guards. “Hang up, some
of you, and make wax for these slack-jawed sisters.”

Before a bee can make wax she must fill herself with honey. Then she
climbs to safe foothold and hangs, while other gorged bees hang on to
her in a cluster. There they wait in silence till the wax comes. The
scales are either taken out of the maker's pockets by the workers, or
tinkle down on the workers while they wait. The workers chew them (they
are useless unchewed) into the all-supporting, all-embracing Wax of the
Hive.

But now, no sooner was the wax-cluster in position than the workers
below broke out again.

“Come down!” they cried. “Come down and work! Come on, you Levantine
parasites! Don't think to enjoy yourselves up there while we're sweating
down here!”

The cluster shivered, as from hooked fore-foot to hooked hind-foot it
telegraphed uneasiness. At last a worker sprang up, grabbed the lowest
waxmaker, and swung, kicking above her companions.

“I can make wax too!” she bawled. “Give me a full gorge and I'll make
tons of it.”

“Make it, then,” said the bee she had grappled. The spoken word snapped
the current through the cluster. It shook and glistened like a cat's fur
in the dark. “Unhook!” it murmured. “No wax for any one to-day.”

“You lazy thieves! Hang up at once and produce our wax,” said the bees
below.

“Impossible! The sweat's gone. To make your wax we must have stillness,
warmth, and food. Unhook! Unhook!”

They broke up as they murmured, and disappeared among the other bees,
from whom, of course, they were undistinguishable.

“Seems as if we'd have to chew scrap-wax for these pillars, after all,”
 said a worker.

“Not by a whole comb,” cried the young bee who had broken the cluster.
“Listen here! I've studied the question more than twenty minutes. It's
as simple as falling off a daisy. You've heard of Cheshire, Root and
Langstroth?”

They had not, but they shouted “Good old Langstroth!” just the same.

“Those three know all that there is to be known about making hives. One
or t'other of 'em must have made ours, and if they've made it, they're
bound to look after it. Ours is a 'Guaranteed Patent Hive.' You can see
it on the label behind.”

“Good old guarantee! Hurrah for the label behind!” roared the bees.

“Well, such being the case, I say that when we find they've betrayed us,
we can exact from them a terrible vengeance.”

“Good old vengeance! Good old Root! 'Nuff said! Chuck it!” The crowd
cheered and broke away as Melissa dived through.

“D'you know where Langstroth, Root and Cheshire live if you happen to
want 'em?” she asked of the proud panting orator.

“Gum me if I know they ever lived at all! But aren't they beautiful
names to buzz about? Did you see how it worked up the sisterhood?”

“Yes; but it didn't defend the Gate,” she replied.

“Ah, perhaps that's true, but think how delicate my position is, sister.
I've a magnificent appetite, and I don't like working. It's bad for the
mind. My instinct tells me that I can act as a restraining influence on
others. They would have been worse, but for me.”

But Melissa had already risen clear, and was heading for a breadth of
virgin white clover, which to an overtired bee is as soothing as plain
knitting to a woman.

“I think I'll take this load to the nurseries,” she said, when she had
finished. “It was always quiet there in my day,” and she topped off with
two little pats of pollen for the babies.

She was met on the fourth brood-comb by a rush of excited sisters all
buzzing together.

“One at a time! Let me put down my load. Now, what is it, Sacharissa?”
 she said.

“Grey Sister--that fluffy one, I mean--she came and said we ought to be
out in the sunshine gathering honey, because life was short. She said
any old bee could attend to our babies, and some day old bees would.
That isn't true, Melissa, is it? No old bees can take us away from our
babies, can they?”

“Of course not. You feed the babies while your heads are soft. When your
heads harden, you go on to field-work. Any one knows that.”

“We told her so! We told her so; but she only waved her feelers, and
said we could all lay eggs like Queens if we chose. And I'm afraid
lots of the weaker sisters believe her, and are trying to do it. So
unsettling!”

Sacharissa sped to a sealed worker-cell whose lid pulsated, as the bee
within began to cut its way out.

“Come along, precious!” she murmured, and thinned the frail top from the
other side. A pale, damp, creased thing hoisted itself feebly on to the
comb. Sacharissa's note changed at once. “No time to waste! Go up the
frame and preen yourself!” she said. “Report for nursing-duty in my ward
to-morrow evening at six. Stop a minute. What's the matter with your
third right leg?”

The young bee held it out in silence--unmistakably a drone leg incapable
of packing pollen.

“Thank you. You needn't report till the day after to-morrow.” Sacharissa
turned to her companion. “That's the fifth oddity hatched in my ward
since noon. I don't like it.”

“There's always a certain number of 'em,” said Melissa. “You can't stop
a few working sisters from laying, now and then, when they overfeed
themselves. They only raise dwarf drones.”

“But we're hatching out drones with workers' stomachs; workers with
drones' stomachs; and albinoes and mixed-leggers who can't pack
pollen--like that poor little beast yonder. I don't mind dwarf drones
any more than you do (they all die in July), but this steady hatch of
oddities frightens me, Melissa!”

“How narrow of you! They are all so delightfully clever and unusual and
interesting,” piped the Wax-moth from a crack above them. “Come here,
you dear, downy duck, and tell us all about your feelings.”

“I wish she'd go!” Sacharissa lowered her voice. “She meets
these--er--oddities as they dry out, and cuddles 'em in corners.”

“I suppose the truth is that we're over-stocked and too well fed to
swarm,” said Melissa.

“That is the truth,” said the Queen's voice behind them. They had
not heard the heavy royal footfall which sets empty cells vibrating.
Sacharissa offered her food at once. She ate and dragged her weary body
forward. “Can you suggest a remedy?” she said.

“New principles!” cried the Wax-moth from her crevice. “We'll apply them
quietly later.”

“Suppose we sent out a swarm?” Melissa suggested. “It's a little late,
but it might ease us off.”

“It would save us, but--I know the Hive! You shall see for yourself.”
 The old Queen cried the Swarming Cry, which to a bee of good blood
should be what the trumpet was to Job's war-horse. In spite of her
immense age (three, years), it rang between the cañon-like frames as a
pibroch rings in a mountain pass; the fanners changed their note, and
repeated it up in every gallery; and the broad-winged drones, burly and
eager, ended it on one nerve-thrilling outbreak of bugles: “La Reine le
veult! Swarm! Swar-rm! Swar-r-rm!”

But the roar which should follow the Call was wanting. They heard a
broken grumble like the murmur of a falling tide.

“Swarm? What for? Catch me leaving a good bar-frame Hive, with fixed
foundations, for a rotten, old oak out in the open where it may rain any
minute! We're all right! It's a 'Patent Guaranteed Hive.' Why do they
want to turn us out? Swarming be gummed! Swarming was invented to cheat
a worker out of her proper comforts. Come on off to bed!”

The noise died out as the bees settled in empty cells for the night.

“You hear?” said the Queen. “I know the Hive!”

“Quite between ourselves, I taught them that,” cried the Wax-moth.
“Wait till my principles develop, and you'll see the light from a new
quarter.”

“You speak truth for once,” the Queen said suddenly, for she recognized
the Wax-moth. “That Light will break into the top of the Hive. A Hot
Smoke will follow it, and your children will not be able to hide in any
crevice.”

“Is it possible?” Melissa whispered. “I--we have sometimes heard a legend
like it.”

“It is no legend,” the old Queen answered. “I had it from my mother, and
she had it from hers. After the Wax-moth has grown strong, a Shadow will
fall across the gate; a Voice will speak from behind a Veil; there will
be Light, and Hot Smoke, and earthquakes, and those who live will see
everything that they have done, all together in one place, burned up in
one great fire.” The old Queen was trying to tell what she had been told
of the Bee Master's dealings with an infected hive in the apiary, two or
three seasons ago; and, of course, from her point of view the affair was
as important as the Day of Judgment.

“And then?” asked horrified Sacharissa.

“Then, I have heard that a little light will burn in a great darkness,
and perhaps the world will begin again. Myself, I think not.”

“Tut! Tut!” the Wax-moth cried. “You good, fat people always prophesy
ruin if things don't go exactly your way. But I grant you there will be
changes.”

There were. When her eggs hatched, the wax was riddled with little
tunnels, coated with the dirty clothes of the caterpillars. Flannelly
lines ran through the honey-stores, the pollen-larders, the foundations,
and, worst of all, through the babies in their cradles, till the Sweeper
Guards spent half their time tossing out useless little corpses. The
lines ended in a maze of sticky webbing on the face of the comb. The
caterpillars could not stop spinning as they walked, and as they walked
everywhere, they smarmed and garmed everything. Even where it did not
hamper the bees' feet, the stale, sour smell of the stuff put them off
their work; though some of the bees who had taken to egg laying said it
encouraged them to be mothers and maintain a vital interest in life.

When the caterpillars became moths, they made friends with the
ever-increasing Oddities--albinoes, mixed-leggers, single-eyed
composites, faceless drones, halfqueens and laying sisters; and
the ever-dwindling band of the old stock worked themselves bald and
fray-winged to feed their queer charges. Most of the Oddities would not,
and many, on account of their malformations, could not, go through
a day's field-work; but the Wax-moths, who were always busy on the
brood-comb, found pleasant home occupations for them. One albino, for
instance, divided the number of pounds of honey in stock by the number
of bees in the Hive, and proved that if every bee only gathered honey
for seven and three quarter minutes a day, she would have the rest of
the time to herself, and could accompany the drones on their mating
flights. The drones were not at all pleased.

Another, an eyeless drone with no feelers, said that all brood-cells
should be perfect circles, so as not to interfere with the grub or the
workers. He proved that the old six-sided cell was solely due to the
workers building against each other on opposite sides of the wall, and
that if there were no interference, there would be no angles. Some bees
tried the new plan for a while, and found it cost eight times more
wax than the old six-sided specification; and, as they never allowed a
cluster to hang up and make wax in peace, real wax was scarce. However,
they eked out their task with varnish stolen from new coffins at
funerals, and it made them rather sick. Then they took to cadging round
sugar-factories and breweries, because it was easiest to get their
material from those places, and the mixture of glucose and beer
naturally fermented in store and blew the store-cells out of shape,
besides smelling abominably. Some of the sound bees warned them that
ill-gotten gains never prosper, but the Oddities at once surrounded them
and balled them to death. That was a punishment they were almost as
fond of as they were of eating, and they expected the sound bees to
feed them. Curiously enough the age-old instinct of loyalty and devotion
towards the Hive made the sound bees do this, though their reason told
them they ought to slip away and unite with some other healthy stock in
the apiary.

“What, about seven and three-quarter minutes' work now?” said Melissa
one day as she came in. “I've been at it for five hours, and I've only
half a load.”

“Oh, the Hive subsists on the Hival Honey which the Hive produces,” said
a blind Oddity squatting in a store-cell.

“But honey is gathered from flowers outside two miles away sometimes,”
 cried Melissa.

“Pardon me,” said the blind thing, sucking hard. “But this is the Hive,
is it not?”

“It was. Worse luck, it is.”

“And the Hival Honey is here, is it not?” It opened a fresh store-cell
to prove it.

“Ye-es, but it won't be long at this rate,” said Melissa.

“The rates have nothing to do with it. This Hive produces the Hival
Honey. You people never seem to grasp the economic simplicity that
underlies all life.”

“Oh, me!” said poor Melissa, “haven't you ever been beyond the Gate?”

“Certainly not. A fool's eyes are in the ends of the earth. Mine are in
my head.” It gorged till it bloated.

Melissa took refuge in her poorly paid field-work and told Sacharissa
the story.

“Hut!” said that wise bee, fretting with an old maid of a thistle. “Tell
us something new. The Hive's full of such as him--it, I mean.”

“What's the end to be? All the honey going out and none coming in.
Things can't last this way!” said Melissa.

“Who cares?” said Sacharissa. “I know now how drones feel the day before
they're killed. A short life and a merry one for me.”

“If it only were merry! But think of those awful, solemn, lop-sided
Oddities waiting for us at home crawling and clambering and
preaching--and dirtying things in the dark.”

“I don't mind that so much as their silly songs, after we've fed 'em,
all about 'work among the merry, merry blossoms,'” said Sacharissa from
the deeps of a stale Canterbury bell.

“I do. How's our Queen?” said Melissa.

“Cheerfully hopeless, as usual. But she lays an egg now and then.”

“Does she so?” Melissa backed out of the next bell with a jerk. “Suppose
now, we sound workers tried to raise a Princess in some clean corner?”

“You'd be put to it to find one. The Hive's all Wax-moth and muckings.
But--well?”

“A Princess might help us in the time of the Voice behind the Veil that
the Queen talks of. And anything is better than working for Oddities
that chirrup about work that they can't do, and waste what we bring
home.”

“Who cares?” said Sacharissa. “I'm with you, for the fun of it. The
Oddities would ball us to death, if they knew. Come home, and we'll
begin.”


There is no room to tell how the experienced Melissa found a far-off
frame so messed and mishandled by abandoned cell-building experiments
that, for very shame, the bees never went there. How in that ruin she
blocked out a Royal Cell of sound wax, but disguised by rubbish till it
looked like a kopje among deserted kopjes. How she prevailed upon the
hopeless Queen to make one last effort and lay a worthy egg. How the
Queen obeyed and died. How her spent carcass was flung out on the
rubbish heap, and how a multitude of laying sisters went about dropping
drone-eggs where they listed, and said there was no more need of Queens.
How, covered by this confusion, Sacharissa educated certain young bees
to educate certain new-born bees in the almost lost art of making Royal
Jelly. How the nectar for it was won out of hours in the teeth of chill
winds. How the hidden egg hatched true--no drone, but Blood Royal. How
it was capped, and how desperately they worked to feed and double-feed
the now swarming Oddities, lest any break in the food-supplies should
set them to instituting inquiries, which, with songs about work, was
their favourite amusement. How in an auspicious hour, on a moonless
night, the Princess came forth a Princess indeed, and how Melissa
smuggled her into a dark empty honey-magazine, to bide her time; and
how the drones, knowing she was there, went about singing the deep
disreputable love-songs of the old days--to the scandal of the laying
sisters, who do not think well of drones. These things are, written
in the Book of Queens, which is laid up in the hollow of the Great Ash
Ygdrasil.

After a few days the weather changed again and became glorious. Even the
Oddities would now join the crowd that hung out on the alighting-board,
and would sing of work among the merry, merry blossoms till an untrained
ear might have received it for the hum of a working hive. Yet, in truth,
their store-honey had been eaten long ago. They lived from day to day
on the efforts of the few sound bees, while the Wax-moth fretted and
consumed again their already ruined wax. But the sound bees never
mentioned these matters. They knew, if they did, the Oddities would hold
a meeting and ball them to death.

“Now you see what we have done,” said the Wax-moths. “We have created
New Material, a New Convention, a New Type, as we said we would.”

“And new possibilities for us,” said the laying sisters gratefully. “You
have given us a new life's work, vital and paramount.”

“More than that,” chanted the Oddities in the sunshine; “you have
created a new heaven and a new earth. Heaven, cloudless and accessible”
 (it was a perfect August evening) “and Earth teeming with the merry,
merry blossoms, waiting only our honest toil to turn them all to good.
The--er--Aster, and the Crocus, and the--er--Ladies' Smock in her
season, the Chrysanthemum after her kind, and the Guelder Rose bringing
forth abundantly withal.”

“Oh, Holy Hymettus!” said Melissa, awestruck. “I knew they didn't know
how honey was made, but they've forgotten the Order of the Flowers! What
will become of them?”

A Shadow fell across the alighting-board as the Bee Master and his son
came by. The Oddities crawled in and a Voice behind a Veil said: “I've
neglected the old Hive too long. Give me the smoker.”

Melissa heard and darted through the gate. “Come, oh come!” she cried.
“It is the destruction the Old Queen foretold. Princess, come!”

“Really, you are too archaic for words,” said an Oddity in an alley-way.
“A cloud, I admit, may have crossed the sun; but why hysterics? Above
all, why Princesses so late in the day? Are you aware it's the Hival
Tea-time? Let's sing grace.”

Melissa clawed past him with all six legs. Sacharissa had run to what
was left of the fertile brood-comb. “Down and out!” she called across
the brown breadth of it. “Nurses, guards, fanners, sweepers--out!”

“Never mind the babies. They're better dead.--Out, before the Light and
the Hot Smoke!”

The Princess's first clear fearless call (Melissa had found her) rose
and drummed through all the frames. “La Reine le veult! Swarm! Swar-rm!
Swar-r-rm!”

The Hive shook beneath the shattering thunder of a stuck-down quilt
being torn back.

“Don't be alarmed, dears,” said the Wax-moths. “That's our work. Look
up, and you'll see the dawn of the New Day.”

Light broke in the top of the hive as the Queen had, prophesied--naked
light on the boiling, bewildered bees.

Sacharissa rounded up her rearguard, which dropped headlong off the
frame, and joined the Princess's detachment thrusting toward the Gate.
Now panic was in full blast, and each sound bee found herself embraced
by at least three Oddities. The first instinct of a frightened bee is
to break into the stores and gorge herself with honey; but there were no
stores left, so the Oddities fought the sound bees.

“You must feed us, or we shall die!” they cried, holding and clutching
and slipping, while the silent scared earwigs and little spiders twisted
between their legs. “Think of the Hive, traitors! The Holy Hive!”

“You should have thought before!” cried the sound bees. “Stay and see
the dawn of your New Day.”

They reached the Gate at last over the soft bodies of many to whom they
had ministered.

“On! Out! Up!” roared Melissa in the Princess's ear. “For the Hive's
sake! To the Old Oak!”

The Princess left the alighting-board, circled once, flung herself at
the lowest branch of the Old Oak, and her little loyal swarm--you could
have covered it with a pint mug--followed, hooked, and hung.

“Hold close!” Melissa gasped. “The old legends have come true! Look!”

The Hive was half hidden by smoke, and Figures moved through the smoke.
They heard a frame crack stickily, saw it heaved high and twirled round
between enormous hands--a blotched, bulged, and perished horror of grey
wax, corrupt brood, and small drone-cells, all covered with crawling
Oddities, strange to the sun.

“Why, this isn't a hive! This is a museum of curiosities,” said the
Voice behind the Veil. It was only the Bee Master talking to his son.

“Can you blame 'em, father?” said a second voice. “It's rotten with
Wax-moth. See here!”

Another frame came up. A finger poked through it, and it broke away in
rustling flakes of ashy rottenness.

“Number Four Frame! That was your mother's pet comb once,” whispered
Melissa to the Princess. “Many's the good egg I've watched her lay
there.”

“Aren't you confusing post hoc with propter hoc?” said the Bee Master.
“Wax-moth only succeed when weak bees let them in.” A third frame
crackled and rose into the light. “All this is full of laying workers'
brood. That never happens till the stock's weakened. Phew!”

He beat it on his knee like a tambourine, and it also crumbled to
pieces.

The little swarm shivered as they watched the dwarf drone-grubs squirm
feebly on the grass. Many sound bees had nursed on that frame, well
knowing their work was useless; but the actual sight of even useless
work destroyed disheartens a good worker.

“No, they have some recuperative power left,” said the second voice.
“Here's a Queen cell!”

“But it's tucked away among---- What on earth has come to the little
wretches? They seem to have lost the instinct of cell-building.” The
father held up the frame where the bees had experimented in circular
cell-work. It looked like the pitted head of a decaying toadstool.

“Not altogether,” the son corrected. “There's one line, at least, of
perfectly good cells.”

“My work,” said Sacharissa to herself. “I'm glad Man does me justice
before--”

That frame, too, was smashed out and thrown atop of the others and the
foul earwiggy quilts.

As frame after frame followed it, the swarm beheld the upheaval,
exposure, and destruction of all that had been well or ill done in every
cranny of their Hive for generations past. There was black comb so old
that they had forgotten where it hung; orange, buff, and ochre-varnished
store-comb, built as bees were used to build before the days of
artificial foundations; and there was a little, white, frail new work.
There were sheets on sheets of level, even brood-comb that had held in
its time unnumbered thousands of unnamed workers; patches of obsolete
drone-comb, broad and high-shouldered, showing to what marks the male
grub was expected to grow; and two-inch deep honey-magazines, empty, but
still magnificent, the whole gummed and glued into twisted scrap-work,
awry on the wires; half-cells, beginnings abandoned, or grandiose,
weak-walled, composite cells pieced out with rubbish and capped with
dirt.

Good or bad, every inch of it was so riddled by the tunnels of the
Wax-moth that it broke in clouds of dust as it was flung on the heap.

“Oh, see!” cried Sacharissa. “The Great Burning that Our Queen foretold.
Who can bear to look?”

A flame crawled up the pile of rubbish, and they smelt singeing wax.

The Figures stooped, lifted the Hive and shook it upside down over the
pyre. A cascade of Oddities, chips of broken comb, scale, fluff, and
grubs slid out, crackled, sizzled, popped a little, and then the flames
roared up and consumed all that fuel.

“We must disinfect,” said a Voice. “Get me a sulphur-candle, please.”

The shell of the Hive was returned to its place, a light was set in
its sticky emptiness, tier by tier the Figures built it up, closed the
entrance, and went away. The swarm watched the light leaking through
the cracks all the long night. At dawn one Wax-moth came by, fluttering
impudently.

“There has been a miscalculation about the New Day, my dears,” she
began; “one can't expect people to be perfect all at once. That was our
mistake.”

“No, the mistake was entirely ours,” said the Princess.

“Pardon me,” said the Wax-moth. “When you think of the enormous
upheaval--call it good or bad--which our influence brought about, you
will admit that we, and we alone--”

“You?” said the Princess. “Our stock was not strong. So you came--as any
other disease might have come. Hang close, all my people.”

When the sun rose, Veiled Figures came down, and saw their swarm at the
bough's end waiting patiently within sight of the old Hive--a handful,
but prepared to go on.




THE BEES AND THE FLIES

             A farmer of the Augustan age
             Perused in Virgil's golden page,
             The story of the secret won
             From Proteus by Cyrene's son
             How the dank sea-god sowed the swain
             Means to restore his hives again
             More briefly, how a slaughtered bull
             Breeds honey by the bellyful.

             The egregious rustic put to death
             A bull by stopping of its breath:
             Disposed the carcass in a shed
             With fragrant herbs and branches spread.
             And, having thus performed the charm,
             Sat down to wait the promised swarm.

             Nor waited long... The God of Day
             Impartial, quickening with his ray
             Evil and good alike, beheld
             The carcass--and the carcass swelled!
             Big with new birth the belly heaves
             Beneath its screen of scented leaves;
             Past any doubt, the bull conceives!

             The farmer bids men bring more hives
             To house the profit that arrives;
             Prepares on pan, and key and kettle,
             Sweet music that shall make 'em settle;
             But when to crown the work he goes,
             Gods! What a stink salutes his nose!
             Where are the honest toilers? Where
             The gravid mistress of their care?
             A busy scene, indeed, he sees,
             But not a sign or sound of bees.
             Worms of the riper grave unhid
             By any kindly coffin lid,
             Obscene and shameless to the light,
             Seethe in insatiate appetite,
             Through putrid offal; while above
             The hissing blow-fly seeks his love,
             Whose offspring, supping where they supt,
             Consume corruption twice corrupt.




WITH THE NIGHT MAIL

A STORY OF 2000 A. D.

(_Together with extracts from the magazine in which it appeared_)

A nine o'clock of a gusty winter night I stood on the lower stages of
one of the G.P.O. outward mail towers. My purpose was a run to Quebec
in “Postal Packet 162 or such other as may be appointed”; and the
Postmaster-General himself countersigned the order. This talisman opened
all doors, even those in the despatching-caisson at the foot of the
tower, where they were delivering the sorted Continental mail. The bags
lay packed close as herrings in the long grey underbodies which our
G.P.O. still calls “coaches.” Five such coaches were filled as I
watched, and were shot up the guides to be locked on to their waiting
packets three hundred feet nearer the stars.

From the despatching-caisson I was conducted by a courteous and
wonderfully learned official Mr. L.L. Geary, Second Despatcher of
the Western Route--to the Captains' Room (this wakes an echo of old
romance), where the mail captains come on for their turn of duty. He
introduces me to the captain of “162”--Captain Purnall, and his relief,
Captain Hodgson. The one is small and dark; the other large and red;
but each has the brooding sheathed glance characteristic of eagles and
aeronauts. You can see it in the pictures of our racing professionals,
from L.V. Rautsch to little Ada Warrleigh--that fathomless abstraction
of eyes habitually turned through naked space.

On the notice-board in the Captains' Room, the pulsing arrows of some
twenty indicators register, degree by geographical degree, the progress
of as many homeward-bound packets. The word “Cape” rises across the face
of a dial; a gong strikes: the South African mid-weekly mail is in at
the Highgate Receiving Towers. That is all. It reminds one comically of
the traitorous little bell which in pigeon-fanciers', lofts notifies the
return of a homer.

“Time for us to be on the move,” says Captain Purnall, and we are shot
up by the passenger-lift to the top of the despatch-towers. “Our coach
will lock on when it is filled and the clerks are aboard.”

“No. 162” waits for us in Slip E of the topmost stage. The great curve
of her back shines frostily under the lights, and some minute alteration
of trim makes her rock a little in her holding-down slips.

Captain Purnall frowns and dives inside. Hissing softly, “162” comes to
rest as level as a rule. From her North Atlantic Winter nose-cap (worn
bright as diamond with boring through uncounted leagues of hail, snow,
and ice) to the inset of her three built out propeller-shafts is some
two hundred and forty feet. Her extreme diameter, carried well forward,
is thirty-seven. Contrast this with the nine hundred by ninety-five of
any crack liner, and you will realize the power that must drive a hull
through all weathers at more than the emergency speed of the Cyclonic!

The eye detects no joint in her skin plating save the sweeping
hair-crack of the bow-rudder--Magniac's rudder that assured us the
dominion of the unstable air and left its inventor penniless and
half-blind. It is calculated to Castelli's “gullwing” curve. Raise a few
feet of that all but invisible plate three-eighths of an inch and she
will yaw five miles to port or starboard ere she is under control again.
Give her full helm and she returns on her track like a whip-lash. Cant
the whole forward--a touch on the wheel will suffice--and she sweeps
at your good direction up or down. Open the complete circle and she
presents to the air a mushroom-head that will bring her up all standing
within a half mile.

“Yes,” says Captain Hodgson, answering my thought, “Castelli thought
he'd discovered the secret of controlling aeroplanes when he'd only
found out how to steer dirigible balloons. Magniac invented his rudder
to help war-boats ram each other; and war went out of fashion and
Magniac he went out of his mind because he said he couldn't serve his
country any more. I wonder if any of us ever know what we're really
doing.”

“If you want to see the coach locked you'd better go aboard. It's due
now,” says Mr. Geary. I enter through the door amidships. There is
nothing here for display. The inner skin of the gas-tanks comes down to
within a foot or two of my head and turns over just short of the turn of
the bilges. Liners and yachts disguise their tanks with decoration,
but the G.P.O. serves them raw under a lick of grey official paint. The
inner skin shuts off fifty feet of the bow and as much of the stern,
but the bow-bulkhead is recessed for the lift-shunting apparatus as
the stern is pierced for the shaft-tunnels. The engine-room lies almost
amidships. Forward of it, extending to the turn of the bow tanks, is an
aperture--a bottomless hatch at present--into which our coach will
be locked. One looks down over the coamings three hundred feet to
the despatching-caisson whence voices boom upward. The light below is
obscured to a sound of thunder, as our coach rises on its guides. It
enlarges rapidly from a postage-stamp to a playing-card; to a punt and
last a pontoon. The two clerks, its crew, do not even look up as it
comes into place. The Quebec letters fly under their fingers and leap
into the docketed racks, while both captains and Mr. Geary satisfy them
selves that the coach is locked home. A clerk passes the way-bill over
the hatch coaming. Captain Purnall thumb-marks and passes it to Mr.
Geary. Receipt has been given and taken. “Pleasant run,” says Mr. Geary,
and disappears through the door which a foot high pneumatic compressor
locks after him.

“A-ah!” sighs the compressor released. Our holding-down clips part with
a tang. We are clear.

Captain Hodgson opens the great colloid underbody porthole through which
I watch over-lighted London slide eastward as the gale gets hold of
us. The first of the low winter clouds cuts off the well-known view and
darkens Middlesex. On the south edge of it I can see a postal packet's
light ploughing through the white fleece. For an instant she gleams like
a star ere she drops toward the Highgate Receiving Towers. “The Bombay
Mail,” says Captain Hodgson, and looks at his watch. “She's forty
minutes late.”

“What's our level?” I ask.

“Four thousand. Aren't you coming up on the bridge?”

The bridge (let us ever praise the G.P.O. as a repository of ancientest
tradition!) is represented by a view of Captain Hodgson's legs where he
stands on the Control Platform that runs thwart-ships overhead. The bow
colloid is unshuttered and Captain Purnall, one hand on the wheel,
is feeling for a fair slant. The dial shows 4300 feet. “It's steep
to-night,” he mutters, as tier on tier of cloud drops under. “We
generally pick up an easterly draught below three thousand at this time
o' the year. I hate slathering through fluff.”

“So does Van Cutsem. Look at him huntin' for a slant!” says Captain
Hodgson. A foglight breaks cloud a hundred fathoms below. The Antwerp
Night Mail makes her signal and rises between two racing clouds far to
port, her flanks blood-red in the glare of Sheerness Double Light.
The gale will have us over the North Sea in half-an-hour, but Captain
Purnall lets her go composedly--nosing to every point of the compass as
she rises.

“Five thousand-six, six thousand eight hundred”--the dip-dial reads ere
we find the easterly drift, heralded by a flurry of snow at the thousand
fathom level. Captain Purnall rings up the engines and keys down the
governor on the switch before him. There is no sense in urging machinery
when Eolus himself gives you good knots for nothing. We are away in
earnest now--our nose notched home on our chosen star. At this level the
lower clouds are laid out, all neatly combed by the dry fingers of the
East. Below that again is the strong westerly blow through which we
rose. Overhead, a film of southerly drifting mist draws a theatrical
gauze across the firmament. The moonlight turns the lower strata to
silver without a stain except where our shadow underruns us. Bristol and
Cardiff Double Lights (those statelily inclined beams over Severnmouth)
are dead ahead of us; for we keep the Southern Winter Route. Coventry
Central, the pivot of the English system, stabs upward once in ten
seconds its spear of diamond light to the north; and a point or two off
our starboard bow The Leek, the great cloud-breaker of Saint David's
Head, swings its unmistakable green beam twenty-five degrees each way.
There must be half a mile of fluff over it in this weather, but it does
not affect The Leek.

“Our planet's over-lighted if anything,” says Captain Purnall at the
wheel, as Cardiff-Bristol slides under. “I remember the old days of
common white verticals that 'ud show two or three hundred feet up in a
mist, if you knew where to look for 'em. In really fluffy weather they
might as well have been under your hat. One could get lost coming home
then, an' have some fun. Now, it's like driving down Piccadilly.”

He points to the pillars of light where the cloud-breakers bore through
the cloud-floor. We see nothing of England's outlines: only a white
pavement pierced in all directions by these manholes of variously
coloured fire--Holy Island's white and red--St. Bee's interrupted white,
and so on as far as the eye can reach. Blessed be Sargent, Ahrens,
and the Dubois brothers, who invented the cloud-breakers of the world
whereby we travel in security!

“Are you going to lift for The Shamrock?” asks Captain Hodgson. Cork
Light (green, fixed) enlarges as we rush to it. Captain Purnall
nods. There is heavy traffic hereabouts--the cloud-bank beneath us is
streaked with running fissures of flame where the Atlantic boats are
hurrying Londonward just clear of the fluff. Mail-packets are supposed,
under the Conference rules, to have the five-thousand-foot lanes to
themselves, but the foreigner in a hurry is apt to take liberties with
English air. “No. 162” lifts to a long-drawn wail of the breeze in the
fore-flange of the rudder and we make Valencia (white, green, white) at
a safe 7000 feet, dipping our beam to an incoming Washington packet.

There is no cloud on the Atlantic, and faint streaks of cream round
Dingle Bay show where the driven seas hammer the coast. A big S.A.T.A.
liner (Société Anonyme des Transports Aëriens) is diving and lifting
half a mile below us in search of some break in the solid west wind.
Lower still lies a disabled Dane she is telling the liner all about it
in International. Our General Communication dial has caught her talk and
begins to eavesdrop. Captain Hodgson makes a motion to shut it off but
checks himself. “Perhaps you'd like to listen,” he says.

“Argol of St. Thomas,” the Dane whimpers. “Report owners three starboard
shaft collar-bearings fused. Can make Flores as we are, but impossible
further. Shall we buy spares at Fayal?”

The liner acknowledges and recommends inverting the bearings. The Argol
answers that she has already done so without effect, and begins to
relieve her mind about cheap German enamels for collar-bearings. The
Frenchman assents cordially, cries “Courage, mon ami,” and switches off.

Then lights sink under the curve of the ocean.

“That's one of Lundt & Bleamers' boats,” says Captain Hodgson. “Serves
'em right for putting German compos in their thrust-blocks. She won't
be in Fayal to-night! By the way, wouldn't you like to look round the
engine-room?”

I have been waiting eagerly for this invitation and I follow Captain
Hodgson from the control-platform, stooping low to avoid the bulge
of the tanks. We know that Fleury's gas can lift anything, as the
world-famous trials of '89 showed, but its almost indefinite powers
of expansion necessitate vast tank room. Even in this thin air the
lift-shunts are busy taking out one-third of its normal lift, and still
“162” must be checked by an occasional downdraw of the rudder or our
flight would become a climb to the stars. Captain Purnall prefers an
overlifted to an underlifted ship; but no two captains trim ship alike.
“When I take the bridge,” says Captain Hodgson, “you'll see me shunt
forty per cent of the lift out of the gas and run her on the upper
rudder. With a swoop upward instead of a swoop downward, as you say.
Either way will do. It's only habit. Watch our dip-dial! Tim fetches her
down once every thirty knots as regularly as breathing.”

So is it shown on the dip-dial. For five or six minutes the arrow creeps
from 6700 to 7300. There is the faint “szgee” of the rudder, and back
slides the arrow to 6000 on a falling slant of ten or fifteen knots.

“In heavy weather you jockey her with the screws as well,” says Captain
Hodgson, and, unclipping the jointed bar which divides the engine-room
from the bare deck, he leads me on to the floor. Here we find Fleury's
Paradox of the Bulk-headed Vacuum--which we accept now without
thought--literally in full blast. The three engines are H.T.&T.
assisted-vacuo Fleury turbines running from 3000 to the Limit--that is
to say, up to the point when the blades make the air “bell”--cut out a
vacuum for themselves precisely as over-driven marine propellers used
to do. “162's” Limit is low on account of the small size of her nine
screws, which, though handier than the old colloid Thelussons, “bell”
 sooner. The midships engine, generally used as a reinforce, is not
running; so the port and starboard turbine vacuum-chambers draw direct
into the return-mains.

The turbines whistle reflectively. From the low-arched expansion-tanks
on either side the valves descend pillarwise to the turbine-chests,
and thence the obedient gas whirls through the spirals of blades with a
force that would whip the teeth out of a power saw. Behind, is its own
pressure held in leash of spurred on by the lift-shunts; before it,
the vacuum where Fleury's Ray dances in violet-green bands and whirled
turbillons of flame. The jointed U-tubes of the vacuum-chamber are
pressure-tempered colloid (no glass would endure the strain for an
instant) and a junior engineer with tinted spectacles watches the Ray
intently. It is the very heart of the machine--a mystery to this day.
Even Fleury who begat it and, unlike Magniac, died a multi-millionaire,
could not explain how the restless little imp shuddering in the U-tube
can, in the fractional fraction of a second, strike the furious blast
of gas into a chill greyish-green liquid that drains (you can hear it
trickle) from the far end of the vacuum through the eduction-pipes and
the mains back to the bilges. Here it returns to its gaseous, one had
almost written sagacious, state and climbs to work afresh. Bilge-tank,
upper tank, dorsal-tank, expansion-chamber, vacuum, main-return (as a
liquid), and bilge-tank once more is the ordained cycle. Fleury's
Ray sees to that; and the engineer with the tinted spectacles sees to
Fleury's Ray. If a speck of oil, if even the natural grease of the human
finger touch the hooded terminals, Fleury's Ray will wink and disappear
and must be laboriously built up again. This means half a day's work for
all hands and an expense of, one hundred and seventy-odd pounds to the
G.P.O. for radium-salts and such trifles.

“Now look at our thrust-collars. You won't find much German compo there.
Full-jewelled, you see,” says Captain Hodgson as the engineer shunts
open the top of a cap. Our shaft-bearings are C.M.C. (Commercial
Minerals Company) stones, ground with as much care as the lens of a
telescope. They cost £37 apiece. So far we have not arrived at their
term of life. These bearings came from “No. 97,” which took them over
from the old Dominion of Light which had them out of the wreck of the
Persew aeroplane in the years when men still flew wooden kites over oil
engines!

They are a shining reproof to all low-grade German “ruby” enamels,
so-called “boort” facings, and the dangerous and unsatisfactory alumina
compounds which please dividend-hunting owners and turn skippers crazy.
The rudder-gear and the gas lift-shunt, seated side by side under the
engine-room dials, are the only machines in visible motion. The former
sighs from time to time as the oil plunger rises and falls half an inch.
The latter, cased and guarded like the U-tube aft, exhibits another
Fleury Ray, but inverted and more green than violet. Its function is
to shunt the lift out of the gas, and this it will do without watching.
That is all! A tiny pump-rod wheezing and whining to itself beside a
sputtering green lamp. A hundred and fifty feet aft down the flat-topped
tunnel of the tanks a violet light, restless and irresolute. Between the
two, three white-painted turbine-trunks, like eel-baskets laid on their
side, accentuate the empty perspectives. You can hear the trickle of the
liquefied gas flowing from the vacuum into the bilge-tanks and the soft
gluck-glock of gaslocks closing as Captain Purnall brings “162” down by
the head. The hum of the turbines and the boom of the air on our skin is
no more than a cotton-wool wrapping to the universal stillness. And we
are running an eighteen-second mile.

I peer from the fore end of the engine-room over the hatch-coamings
into the coach. The mail-clerks are sorting the Winnipeg, Calgary, and
Medicine Hat bags; but there is a pack of cards ready on the table.

Suddenly a bell thrills; the engineers run to the turbine-valves and
stand by; but the spectacled slave of the Ray in the U-tube never
lifts his head. He must watch where he is. We are hard-braked and going
astern; there is language from the Control Platform.

“Tim's sparking badly about something,” says the unruffled Captain
Hodgson. “Let's look.”

Captain Purnall is not the suave man we left half an hour since, but
the embodied authority of the G.P.O. Ahead of us floats an ancient,
aluminum-patched, twin-screw tramp of the dingiest, with no more right
to the 5000-foot lane than has a horse-cart to a modern road. She
carries an obsolete “barbette” conning tower--a six-foot affair with
railed platform forward--and our warning beam plays on the top of it
as a policeman's lantern flashes on the area sneak. Like a sneak-thief,
too, emerges a shock-headed navigator in his shirt-sleeves. Captain
Purnall wrenches open the colloid to talk with him man to man. There are
times when Science does not satisfy.

“What under the stars are you doing here, you sky-scraping
chimney-sweep?” he shouts as we two drift side by side. “Do you know
this is a Mail-lane? You call yourself a sailor, sir? You ain't fit to
peddle toy balloons to an Esquimaux. Your name and number! Report and
get down, and be--!”

“I've been blown up once,” the shock-headed man cries, hoarsely, as a
dog barking. “I don't care two flips of a contact for anything you can
do, Postey.”

“Don't you, sir? But I'll make you care. I'll have you towed stern first
to Disko and broke up. You can't recover insurance if you're broke for
obstruction. Do you understand that?”

Then the stranger bellows: “Look at my propellers! There's been a
wulli-wa down below that has knocked us into umbrella-frames! We've
been blown up about forty thousand feet! We're all one conjuror's watch
inside! My mate's arm's broke; my engineer's head's cut open; my Ray
went out when the engines smashed; and... and... for pity's sake give
me my height, Captain! We doubt we're dropping.”

“Six thousand eight hundred. Can you hold it?” Captain Purnall overlooks
all insults, and leans half out of the colloid, staring and snuffing.
The stranger leaks pungently.

“We ought to blow into St. John's with luck. We're trying to plug the
fore-tank now, but she's simply whistling it away,” her captain wails.

“She's sinking like a log,” says Captain Purnall in an undertone. “Call
up the Banks Mark Boat, George.” Our dip-dial shows that we, keeping
abreast the tramp, have dropped five hundred feet the last few minutes.

Captain Purnall presses a switch and our signal beam begins to swing
through the night, twizzling spokes of light across infinity.

“That'll fetch something,” he says, while Captain Hodgson watches the
General Communicator. He has called up the North Banks Mark Boat, a few
hundred miles west, and is reporting the case.

“I'll stand by you,” Captain Purnall roars to the lone figure on the
conning-tower.

“Is it as bad as that?” comes the answer. “She isn't insured. She's
mine.”

“Might have guessed as much,” mutters Hodgson. “Owner's risk is the
worst risk of all!”

“Can't I fetch St. John's--not even with this breeze?” the voice
quavers.

“Stand by to abandon ship. Haven't you any lift in you, fore or aft?”

“Nothing but the midship tanks, and they're none too tight. You see, my
Ray gave out and--” he coughs in the reek of the escaping gas.

“You poor devil!” This does not reach our friend. “What does the Mark
Boat say, George?”

“Wants to know if there's any danger to traffic. Says she's in a bit of
weather herself, and can't quit station. I've turned in a General Call,
so even if they don't see our beam some one's bound to help--or else we
must. Shall I clear our slings? Hold on! Here we are! A Planet liner,
too! She'll be up in a tick!”

“Tell her to have her slings ready,” cries his brother captain. “There
won't be much time to spare... Tie up your mate,” he roars to the
tramp.

“My mate's all right. It's my engineer. He's gone crazy.”

“Shunt the lift out of him with a spanner. Hurry!”

“But I can make St. John's if you'll stand by.”

“You'll make the deep, wet Atlantic in twenty minutes. You're less than
fifty-eight hundred now. Get your papers.”

A Planet liner, east bound, heaves up in a superb spiral and takes
the air of us humming. Her underbody colloid is open land her
transporter-slings hang down like tentacles. We shut off our beam as she
adjusts herself--steering to a hair--over the tramp's conning-tower.
The mate comes up, his arm strapped to his side, and stumbles into the
cradle. A man with a ghastly scarlet head follows, shouting that he must
go back and build up his Ray. The mate assures him that he will find
a nice new Ray all ready in the liner's engine-room. The bandaged head
goes up wagging excitedly. A youth and a woman follow. The liner cheers
hollowly above us, and we see the passengers' faces at the saloon
colloid.

“That's a pretty girl. What's the fool waiting for now?” says Captain
Purnall.

The skipper comes up, still appealing to us to stand by and see him
fetch St. John's. He dives below and returns--at which we little human
beings in the void cheer louder than ever--with the ship's kitten.
Up fly the liner's hissing slings; her underbody crashes home and she
hurtles away again. The dial shows less than 3000 feet. The Mark Boat
signals we must attend to the derelict, now whistling her death-song, as
she falls beneath us in long sick zigzags.

“Keep our beam on her and send out a General Warning,” says Captain
Purnall, following her down. There is no need. Not a liner in air but
knows the meaning of that vertical beam and gives us and our quarry a
wide berth.

“But she'll drown in the water, won't she?” I ask. “Not always,” is
his answer. “I've known a derelict up-end and sift her engines out of
herself and flicker round the Lower Lanes for three weeks on her forward
tanks only. We'll run no risks. Pith her, George, and look sharp.
There's weather ahead.”

Captain Hodgson opens the underbody colloid, swings the heavy
pithing-iron out of its rack which in liners is generally cased as a
smoking-room settee, and at two hundred feet releases the catch. We
hear the whir of the crescent-shaped arms opening as they descend. The
derelict's forehead is punched in, starred across, and rent diagonally.
She falls stern first, our beam upon her; slides like a lost soul down
that pitiless ladder of light, and the Atlantic takes her.

“A filthy business,” says Hodgson. “I wonder what it must have been like
in the old days?”

The thought had crossed my mind, too. What if that wavering carcass had
been filled with the men of the old days, each one of them taught (that
is the horror of it!) that, after death he would very possibly go for
ever to unspeakable torment?

And scarcely a generation ago, we (one knows now that we are only our
fathers re-enlarged upon the earth), we, I say, ripped and rammed and
pithed to admiration.

Here Tim, from the Control Platform, shouts that we are to get into our
inflators and to bring him his at once.

We hurry into the heavy rubber suits--the engineers are already
dressed--and inflate at the air-pump taps. G.P.O. inflators are thrice
as thick as a racing man's “flickers,” and chafe abominably under the
armpits. George takes the wheel until Tim has blown himself up to the
extreme of rotundity. If you kicked him off the c. p. to the deck he
would bounce back. But it is “162” that will do the kicking.

“The Mark Boat's mad--stark ravin' crazy,” he snorts, returning to
command. “She says there's a bad blow-out ahead and wants me to pull
over to Greenland. I'll see her pithed first! We wasted half an hour
fussing over that dead duck down under, and now I'm expected to go
rubbin' my back all round the Pole. What does she think a Postal
packet's made of? Gummed silk? Tell her we're coming on straight,
George.”

George buckles him into the Frame and switches on the Direct Control.
Now under Tim's left toe lies the port-engine Accelerator; under his
left heel the Reverse, and so with the other foot. The lift-shunt stops
stand out on the rim of the steering-wheel where the fingers of his left
hand can play on them. At his right hand is the midships engine lever
ready to be thrown into gear at a moment's notice. He leans forward
in his belt, eyes glued to the colloid, and one ear cocked toward the
General Communicator. Henceforth he is the strength and direction of
“162,” through whatever may befall.

The Banks Mark Boat is reeling out pages of A. B..C. Directions to
the traffic at large. We are to secure all “loose objects”; hood up
our Fleury Rays; and “on no account to attempt to clear snow from our
conning-towers till the weather abates.” Under-powered craft, we are
told, can ascend to the limit of their lift, mail-packets to look out
for them accordingly; the lower lanes westward are pitting very badly,
“with frequent blow-outs, vortices, laterals, etc.”

Still the clear dark holds up unblemished. The only warning is the
electric skin-tension (I feel as though I were a lace-maker's pillow)
and an irritability which the gibbering of the General Communicator
increases almost to hysteria.

We have made eight thousand feet since we pithed the tramp and our
turbines are giving us an honest two hundred and ten knots.

Very far to the west an elongated blur of red, low down, shows us the
North Banks Mark Boat. There are specks of fire round her rising and
falling--bewildered planets about an unstable sun--helpless shipping
hanging on to her light for company's sake. No wonder she could not quit
station.

She warns us to look out for the back-wash of the bad vortex in which
(her beam shows it) she is even now reeling.

The pits of gloom about us begin to fill with very faintly luminous
films--wreathing and uneasy shapes. One forms itself into a globe of
pale flame that waits shivering with eagerness till we sweep by. It
leaps monstrously across the blackness, alights on the precise tip of
our nose, pirouettes there an instant, and swings off. Our roaring bow
sinks as though that light were lead--sinks and recovers to lurch and
stumble again beneath the next blow-out. Tim's fingers on the lift-shunt
strike chords of numbers--1:4:7:--2:4:6:--7:5:3, and so on; for he is
running by his tanks only, lifting or lowering her against the uneasy
air. All three engines are at work, for the sooner we have skated over
this thin ice the better. Higher we dare not go. The whole upper vault
is charged with pale krypton vapours, which our skin friction may excite
to unholy manifestations. Between the upper and lower levels--5000 and
7000, hints the Mark Boat--we may perhaps bolt through if... Our bow
clothes itself in blue flame and falls like a sword. No human skill can
keep pace with the changing tensions. A vortex has us by the beak and
we dive down a two-thousand foot slant at an angle (the dip-dial and my
bouncing body record it) of thirty-five. Our turbines scream shrilly;
the propellers cannot bite on the thin air; Tim shunts the lift out of
five tanks at once and by sheer weight drives her bullet wise through
the maelstrom till she cushions with jar on an up-gust, three thousand
feet below.

“Now we've done it,” says George in my ear: “Our skin-friction, that
last slide, has played Old Harry with the tensions! Look out for
laterals, Tim; she'll want some holding.”

“I've got her,” is the answer. “Come up, old woman.”

She comes up nobly, but the laterals buffet her left and right like the
pinions of angry angels. She is jolted off her course four ways at once,
and cuffed into place again, only to be swung aside and dropped into
a new chaos. We are never without a corposant grinning on our bows or
rolling head over heels from nose to midships, and to the crackle of
electricity around and within us is added once or twice the rattle of
hail--hail that will never fall on any sea. Slow we must or we may break
our back, pitch-poling.

“Air's a perfectly elastic fluid,” roars George above the tumult. “About
as elastic as a head sea off the Fastnet, ain't it?”

He is less than just to the good element. If one intrudes on the Heavens
when they are balancing their volt-accounts; if one disturbs the
High Gods' market-rates by hurling steel hulls at ninety knots across
tremblingly adjusted electric tensions, one must not complain of any
rudeness in the reception. Tim met it with an unmoved countenance, one
corner of his under lip caught up on a tooth, his eyes fleeting into
the blackness twenty miles ahead, and the fierce sparks flying from his
knuckles at every turn of the hand. Now and again he shook his head
to clear the sweat trickling from his eyebrows, and it was then that
George, watching his chance, would slide down the life-rail and swab his
face quickly with a big red handkerchief. I never imagined that a human
being could so continuously labour and so collectedly think as did Tim
through that Hell's half-hour when the flurry was at its worst. We were
dragged hither and yon by warm or frozen suctions, belched up on the
tops of wulii-was, spun down by vortices and clubbed aside by laterals
under a dizzying rush of stars in the company of a drunken moon.

I heard the rushing click of the midship-engine-lever sliding in and
out, the low growl of the lift-shunts, and, louder than the yelling
winds without, the scream of the bow-rudder gouging into any lull that
promised hold for an instant. At last we began to claw up on a cant,
bow-rudder and port-propeller together; only the nicest balancing of
tanks saved us from spinning like the rifle-bullet of the old days.

“We've got to hitch to windward of that Mark Boat somehow,” George
cried.

“There's no windward,” I protested feebly, where I swung shackled to a
stanchion. “How can there be?”

He laughed--as we pitched into a thousand foot blow-out--that red man
laughed beneath his inflated hood!

“Look!” he said. “We must clear those refugees with a high lift.”

The Mark Boat was below and a little to the sou'west of us, fluctuating
in the centre of her distraught galaxy. The air was thick with moving
lights at every level. I take it most of them were trying to lie head to
wind, but, not being hydras, they failed. An under-tanked Moghrabi boat
had risen to the limit of her lift, and, finding no improvement, had
dropped a couple of thousand. There she met a superb wulli-wa, and was
blown up spinning like a dead leaf. Instead of shutting off she went
astern and, naturally, rebounded as from a wall almost into the Mark
Boat, whose language (our G. C. took it in) was humanly simple.

“If they'd only ride it out quietly it 'ud be better,” said George in
a calm, while we climbed like a bat above them all. “But some
skippers--will navigate without enough lift. What does that Tad-boat
think she is doing, Tim?”

“Playin' kiss in the ring,” was Tim's unmoved reply. A Trans-Asiatic
Direct liner had found a smooth and butted into it full power. But there
was a vortex at the tail of that smooth, so the T. A. D. was flipped out
like a pea from off a finger-nail, braking madly as she fled down and
all but over-ending.

“Now I hope she's satisfied,” said Tim. “I'm glad I'm not a
Mark Boat... Do I want help?” The General Communicator dial had caught
his ear. “George, you may tell that gentleman with my love--love,
remember, George--that I do not want help. Who is the officious
sardine-tin?”

“A Rimouski drogher on the look-out for a tow.”

“Very kind of the Rimouski drogher. This postal packet isn't being towed
at present.”

“Those droghers will go anywhere on a chance of salvage,” George
explained. “We call' em kittiwakes.”

A long-beaked, bright steel ninety-footer floated at ease for one
instant within hail of us, her slings coiled ready for rescues, and
a single hand in her open tower. He was smoking. Surrendered to the
insurrection of the airs through which we tore our way, he lay in
absolute peace. I saw the smoke of his pipe ascend untroubled ere his
boat dropped, it seemed, like a stone in a well.

We had just cleared the Mark Boat and her disorderly neighbours when the
storm ended as suddenly as it had begun. A shooting-star to northward
filled the sky with the green blink of a meteorite dissipating itself in
our atmosphere.

Said George: “That may iron out all the tensions.” Even as he spoke, the
conflicting winds came to rest; the levels filled; the laterals died out
in long, easy swells; the air-ways were smoothed before us. In less
than three minutes the covey round the Mark Boat had shipped their
power-lights and whirred away upon their businesses.

“What's happened?” I gasped. The nerve-store within and the volt-tingle
without had passed: my inflators weighed like lead.

“God, He knows!” said Captain George soberly “That old shooting-star's
skin-friction has discharged the different levels. I've seen it happen
before. Phew: What a relief!”

We dropped from ten to six thousand and got rid of our clammy suits.
Tim shut off and stepped out of the Frame. The Mark Boat was coming up
behind us. He opened the colloid in that heavenly stillness and mopped
his face.

“Hello, Williams!” he cried. “A degree or two out o' station, ain't
you?”

“May be,” was the answer from the Mark Boat. “I've had some company this
evening.”

“So I noticed. Wasn't that quite a little draught?”

“I warned you. Why didn't you pull out north? The east-bound packets
have.”

“Me? Not till I'm running a Polar consumptives' sanatorium boat. I was
squinting through a colloid before you were out of your cradle, my son.”

“I'd be the last man to deny it,” the captain of the Mark Boat replies
softly. “The way you handled her just now--I'm a pretty fair judge of
traffic in a volt-hurry--it was a thousand revolutions beyond anything
even I've ever seen.”

Tim's back supples visibly to this oiling. Captain George on the c.
p. winks and points to the portrait of a singularly attractive maiden
pinned up on Tim's telescope bracket above the steering-wheel.

I see. Wholly and entirely do I see!

There is some talk overhead of “coming round to tea on Friday,” a brief
report of the derelict's fate, and Tim volunteers as he descends: “For
an A. B. C. man young Williams is less of a high-tension fool than some.
Were you thinking of taking her on, George? Then I'll just have a look
round that port-thrust seems to me it's a trifle warm--and we'll jog
along.”

The Mark Boat hums off joyously and hangs herself up in her appointed
eyrie. Here she will stay a shutterless observatory; a life-boat
station; a salvage tug; a court of ultimate appeal-cum-meteorological
bureau for three hundred miles in all directions, till Wednesday next
when her relief slides across the stars to take her buffeted place. Her
black hull, double conning-tower, and ever-ready slings represent
all that remains to the planet of that odd old word authority. She is
responsible only to the Aerial Board of Control the A. B. C. of which
Tim speaks so flippantly. But that semi-elected, semi-nominated body
of a few score of persons of both sexes, controls this planet.
“Transportation is Civilisation,” our motto runs. Theoretically, we do
what we please so long as we do not interfere with the traffic AND
ALL IT IMPLIES. Practically, the A. B. C. confirms or annuls all
international arrangements and, to judge from its last report, finds our
tolerant, humorous, lazy little planet only too ready to shift the whole
burden of public administration on its shoulders.

I discuss this with Tim, sipping mate on the c. p. while George fans
her along over the white blur of the Banks in beautiful upward curves
of fifty miles each. The dip-dial translates them on the tape in flowing
freehand.

Tim gathers up a skein of it and surveys the last few feet, which record
“162's” path through the volt-flurry.

“I haven't had a fever-chart like this to show up in five years,” he
says ruefully.

A postal packet's dip-dial records every yard of every run. The tapes
then go to the A. B. C., which collates and makes composite photographs
of them for the instruction of captains. Tim studies his irrevocable
past, shaking his head.

“Hello! Here's a fifteen-hundred-foot drop at fifty-five degrees! We
must have been standing on our heads then, George.”

“You don't say so,” George answers. “I fancied I noticed it at the
time.”

George may not have Captain Purnall's catlike swiftness, but he is all
an artist to the tips of the broad fingers that play on the shunt-stops.
The delicious flight-curves come away on the tape with never a waver.
The Mark Boat's vertical spindle of light lies down to eastward, setting
in the face of the following stars. Westward, where no planet should
rise, the triple verticals of Trinity Bay (we keep still to the Southern
route) make a low-lifting haze. We seem the only thing at rest under all
the heavens; floating at ease till the earth's revolution shall turn up
our landing-towers.

And minute by minute our silent clock gives us a sixteen-second mile.

“Some fine night,” says Tim, “we'll be even with that clock's Master.”

“He's coming now,” says George, over his shoulder. “I'm chasing the
night west.”

The stars ahead dim no more than if a film of mist had been drawn under
unobserved, but the deep airboom on our skin changes to a joyful shout.

“The dawn-gust,” says Tim. “It'll go on to meet the Sun. Look!
Look! There's the dark being crammed back over our bows! Come to the
after-colloid. I'll show you something.”

The engine-room is hot and stuffy; the clerks in the coach are asleep,
and the Slave of the Ray is ready to follow them. Tim slides open the
aft colloid and reveals the curve of the world--the ocean's deepest
purple--edged with fuming and intolerable gold.

Then the Sun rises and through the colloid strikes out our lamps. Tim
scowls in his face.

“Squirrels in a cage,” he mutters. “That's all we are. Squirrels in
a cage! He's going twice as fast as us. Just you wait a few years, my
shining friend, and we'll take steps that will amaze you. We'll Joshua
you!”

Yes, that is our dream: to turn all earth into the Vale of Ajalon at our
pleasure. So far, we can drag out the dawn to twice its normal length
in these latitudes. But some day--even on the Equator--we shall hold the
Sun level in his full stride.

Now we look down on a sea thronged with heavy traffic. A big submersible
breaks water suddenly. Another and another follows with a swash and
a suck and a savage bubbling of relieved pressures. The deep-sea
freighters are rising to lung up after the long night, and the leisurely
ocean is all patterned with peacock's eyes of foam.

“We'll lung up, too,” says Tim, and when we return to the c. p. George
shuts off, the colloids are opened, and the fresh air sweeps her out.
There is no hurry. The old contracts (they will be revised at the end of
the year) allow twelve hours for a run which any packet can put behind
her in ten. So we breakfast in the arms of an easterly slant which
pushes us along at a languid twenty.

To enjoy life, and tobacco, begin both on a sunny morning half a mile or
so above the dappled Atlantic cloud-belts and after a volt-flurry which
has cleared and tempered your nerves. While we discussed the thickening
traffic with the superiority that comes of having a high level reserved
to ourselves, we heard (and I for the first time) the morning hymn on a
Hospital boat.

She was cloaked by a skein of ravelled fluff beneath us and we caught
the chant before she rose into the sunlight. “Oh, ye Winds of God,” sang
the unseen voices: “bless ye the Lord! Praise Him and magnify Him for
ever!”

We slid off our caps and joined in. When our shadow fell across her
great open platforms they looked up and stretched out their hands
neighbourly while they sang. We could see the doctors and the nurses
and the white-button-like faces of the cot-patients. She passed slowly
beneath us, heading northward, her hull, wet with the dews of the
night, all ablaze in the sunshine. So took she the shadow of a cloud
and vanished, her song continuing. “Oh, ye holy and humble men of heart,
bless ye the Lord! Praise Him and magnify Him for ever.”

“She's a public lunger or she wouldn't have been singing the Benedicite;
and she's a Greenlander or she wouldn't have snow-blinds over her
colloids,” said George at last. “She'll be bound for Frederikshavn or
one of the Glacier sanatoriums for a month. If she was an accident ward
she'd be hung up at the eight-thousand-foot level. Yes--consumptives.”

“Funny how the new things are the old thing I've read in books,” Tim
answered, “that savages used to haul their sick and wounded up to
the tops of hills because microbes were fewer there. We hoist 'em in
sterilized air for a while. Same idea. How much do the doctors say we've
added to the average life of man?”

“Thirty years,” says George with a twinkle in his eye. “Are we going to
spend 'em all up here, Tim?”

“Flap ahead, then. Flap ahead. Who's hindering?” the senior captain
laughed, as we went in.

We held a good lift to clear the coastwise and Continental shipping;
and we had need of it. Though our route is in no sense a populated one,
there is a steady trickle of traffic this way along. We met Hudson Bay
furriers out of the Great Preserve, hurrying to make their departure
from Bonavista with sable and black fox for the insatiable markets. We
overcossed Keewatin liners, small and cramped; but their captains, who
see no land between Trepassy and Lanco, know what gold they bring back
from West Erica. Trans-Asiatic Directs we met, soberly ringing the
world round the Fiftieth Meridian at an honest seventy knots; and
white-painted Ackroyd & Hunt fruiters out of the south fled beneath us,
their ventilated hulls whistling like Chinese kites. Their market is
in the North among the northern sanatoria where you can smell their
grape-fruit and bananas across the cold snows. Argentine beef boats we
sighted too, of enormous capacity and unlovely outline. They, too, feed
the northern health stations in icebound ports where submersibles dare
not rise.

Yellow-bellied ore-flats and Ungava petrol-tanks punted down leisurely
out of the north, like strings of unfrightened wild duck. It does not
pay to “fly” minerals and oil a mile farther than is necessary; but the
risks of transhipping to submersibles in the ice pack off Nain or Hebron
are so great that these heavy freighters fly down to Halifax direct, and
scent the air as they go. They are the biggest tramps aloft except the
Athabasca grain-tubs. But these last, now that the wheat is moved, are
busy, over the world's shoulder, timber-lifting in Siberia.

We held to the St. Lawrence (it is astonishing how the old water-ways
still pull us children of the air), and followed his broad line of black
between its drifting iceblocks, all down the Park that the wisdom of our
fathers--but every one knows the Quebec run.

We dropped to the Heights Receiving Towers twenty minutes ahead of time,
and there hung at ease till the Yokohama Intermediate Packet could pull
out and give us our proper slip. It was curious to watch the action of
the holding-down clips all along the frosty river front as the boats
cleared or came to rest. A big Hamburger was leaving Pont Levis and her
crew, unshipping the platform railings, began to sing “Elsinore”--the
oldest of our chanteys. You know it of course:

     Mother Rugen's tea-house on the Baltic
      Forty couple waltzing on the floor!
     And you can watch my Ray,
     For I must go away
      And dance with Ella Sweyn at Elsinore!

Then, while they sweated home the covering-plates:

     Nor-Nor-Nor-Nor
     West from Sourabaya to the Baltic--
      Ninety knot an hour to the Skaw!
     Mother Rugen's tea-house on the Baltic
      And a dance with Ella Sweyn at Elsinore!

The clips parted with a gesture of indignant dismissal, as though
Quebec, glittering under her snows, were casting out these light and
unworthy lovers. Our signal came from the Heights. Tim turned and
floated up, but surely then it was with passionate appeal that the great
tower arms flung open--or did I think so because on the upper staging a
little hooded figure also opened her arms wide toward her father?

   *     *    *     *    *     *    *     *

In ten seconds the coach with its clerks clashed down to the
receiving-caisson; the hostlers displaced the engineers at the idle
turbines, and Tim, prouder of this than all, introduced me to the
maiden of the photograph on the shelf. “And by the way,” said he to her,
stepping forth in sunshine under the hat of civil life, “I saw young
Williams in the Mark Boat. I've asked him to tea on Friday.”



          AERIAL BOARD OF CONTROL

                Lights

No changes in English Inland lights for week ending Dec. 18th.

CAPE VERDE--Week ending Dec. 18. Verde inclined guide-light changes from
1st proximo to triple flash--green white green--in place of occulting
red as heretofore. The warning light for Harmattan winds will be
continuous vertical glare (white) on all oases of trans-Saharan N. E. by
E. Main Routes.

INVERCARGIL (N. Z.)--From 1st prox.: extreme southerly light (double
red) will exhibit white beam inclined 45 degrees on approach of
Southerly Buster. Traffic flies high off this coast between April and
October.

TABLE BAY--Devil's Peak Glare removed to Simonsberg. Traffic making
Table Mountain coastwise keep all lights from Three Anchor Bay at least
two thousand feet under, and do not round to till East of E. shoulder
Devil's Peak.

SANDHEADS LIGHT--Green triple vertical marks new private landing-stage
for Bay and Burma traffic only.

SNAEFELL JOKUL--White occulting light withdrawn for winter.

PATAGONIA--No summer light south Cape Pilar. This includes Staten Island
and Port Stanley.

C. NAVARIN--Quadruple fog flash (white), one minute intervals (new).

EAST CAPE--Fog--flash--single white with single bomb, 30 sec. intervals
(new).

MALAYAN ARCHIPELAGO--Lights unreliable owing eruptions. Lay from Cape
Somerset to Singapore direct, keeping highest levels.


For the Board:

 CATTERTHUN }
 ST. JUST   }    Lights.
 VAN HEDDER }



Casualties

Week ending Dec. 18th.

SABLE ISLAND--Green single barbette-tower freighter, number
indistinguishable, up-ended, and fore-tank pierced after collision,
passed 300-ft. level Q P. as Dec. 15th. Watched to water and pithed by
Mark Boat.

N. F. BANKS--Postal Packet 162 reports Halma freighter (Fowey--St.
John's) abandoned, leaking after weather, 46° 151 N. 50° 15' W. Crew
rescued by Planet liner Asteroid. Watched to water and pithed by Postal
Packet, Dec. 14th.

KERGUELEN, MARK BOAT reports last call from Cymena freighter (Gayer
Tong Huk & Co.) taking water and sinking in snow-storm South McDonald
Islands. No wreckage recovered. Messages and wills of crew at all A. B.
C. offices.

FEZZAN--T. A. D. freighter Ulema taken ground during Harmattan on Akakus
Range. Under plates strained. Crew at Ghat where repairing Dec. 13th.

BISCAY, MARK BOAT reports Caducci (Valandingham Line) slightly spiked in
western gorge Point de Benasdue. Passengers transferred Andorra (Fulton
Line). Barcelona Mark Boat salving cargo Dec. 12th.

ASCENSION, MARK BOAT--Wreck of unknown racing-plane, Parden rudder,
wire-stiffened xylonite vans, and Harliss engine-seating, sighted and
salved 7° 20' S. 18° 41' W. Dec. 15th. Photos at all A. B. C. offices.


Missing

No answer to General Call having been received during the last week from
following overdues, they are posted as missing:

 Atlantis, W.17630. Canton--Valparaiso
 Audhumla W. 889. Stockholm--Odessa
 Berenice, W. 2206... Riga--Vladivostock
 Draco, E. 446...Coventry--Puntes Arenas
 Tontine, E. 3068. C. Wrath--Ungava
 Wu-Sung, E. 41776.. Hankow--Lobito Bay

General Call (all Mark Boats) out for:

 Jane Eyre, W. 6990. Port Rupert--City of Mexico
 Santander, W. 6514.. Gobi-Desert--Manila
 V. Edmundsun, E. 9690.. Kandahar--Fiume

         Broke for Obstruction, and Quitting Levels

VALKYRIE (racing plane), A. J. Hartley owner, New York     (twice warned).
 GEISHA (racing plane), S. van Cott owner, Philadelphia
     (twice warned).
 MARVEL of PERU (racing plane), J. X. Peixoto owner, Rio de
Janeiro (twice warned). For the Board:

 LAZAREFF }
 McKEOUGH }  Traffic
 GOLDBRATT }




                NOTES

               High-Level Sleet


The Northern weather so far shows no sign of improvement. From all
quarters come complaints of the unusual prevalence of sleet at the
higher levels. Racing planes and digs alike have suffered severely--the
former from unequal deposits of half-frozen slush on their vans (and
only those who have “held up” a badly balanced plane in a cross-wind
know what that means), and the latter from loaded bows and snow-cased
bodies. As a consequence, the Northern and North-western upper levels
have been practically abandoned, and the high fliers have returned to
the ignoble security of the Three, Five, and Six hundred foot levels.
But there remain a few undaunted sun-hunters who, in spite of frozen
stays and ice-jammed connecting-rods, still haunt the blue empyrean.


                Bat-Boat Racing

The scandals of the past few years have at last moved the yachting world
to concerted action in regard to “bat” boat racing. We have been treated
to the spectacle of what are practically keeled racing-planes driven a
clear five foot or more above the water, and only eased down to touch
their so-called “native element” as they near the line. Judges and
starters have been conveniently blind to this absurdity, but the public
demonstration off St. Catherine's Light at the Autumn Regattas has borne
ample, if tardy, fruit. In the future the “bat” is to be a boat, and
the long-unheeded demand of the true sportsman for “no daylight under
mid-keel in smooth water” is in a fair way to be conceded. The new rule
severely restricts plane area and lift alike. The gas compartments are
permitted both fore and aft, as in the old type, but the water-ballast
central tank is rendered obligatory. These things work, if not
for perfection, at least for the evolution of a sane and wholesome
waterborne cruiser. The type of rudder is unaffected by the new rules,
so we may expect to see the Long-Davidson make (the patent on which has
just expired) come largely into use henceforward, though the strain
on the sternpost in turning at speeds over forty miles an hour is
admittedly very severe. But bat-boat racing has a great future before
it.


                Crete and the A. B. C.

The story of the recent Cretan crisis, as told in the A. B. C. Monthly
Report, is not without humour. Till the 25th October Crete, as all our
planet knows, was the sole surviving European repository of “autonomous
institutions,” “local self-government,” and the rest of the archaic
lumber devised in the past for the confusion of human affairs. She
has lived practically on the tourist traffic attracted by her annual
pageants of Parliaments, Boards, Municipal Councils, etc., etc. Last
summer the islanders grew wearied, as their premier explained, of
“playing at being savages for pennies,” and proceeded to pull down all
the landing-towers on the island and shut off general communication till
such time as the A. B. C. should annex them. For side-splitting comedy
we would refer our readers to the correspondence between the Board of
Control and the Cretan premier during the “war.” However, all's well
that ends well. The A. B. C. have taken over the administration of Crete
on normal lines; and tourists must go elsewhere to witness the “debates,”
 “resolutions,” and “popular movements” of the old days. The only people
to suffer will be the Board of Control, which is grievously overworked
already. It is easy enough to condemn the Cretans for their
laziness; but when one recalls the large, prosperous, and presumably
public-spirited communities which during the last few years have
deliberately thrown themselves into the hands of the A. B. C., one,
cannot be too hard upon St. Paul's old friends.



                CORRESPONDENCE

                Skylarking on the Equator

To the Editor: Only last week, while crossing the Equator (W. 26-15),
I became aware of a furious and irregular cannonading some fifteen or
twenty knots S. 4 E. Descending to the 500 ft. level, I found a party
of Transylvanian tourists engaged in exploding scores of the largest
pattern atmospheric bombs (A. B. C. standard) and, in the intervals of
their pleasing labours, firing bow and stern smoke-ring swivels. This
orgy--I can give it no other name--went on for at least two hours,
and naturally produced violent electric derangements. My compasses, of
course, were thrown out, my bow was struck twice, and I received two
brisk shocks from the lower platform-rail. On remonstrating, I was told
that these “professors” were engaged in scientific experiments. The
extent of their “scientific” knowledge, may be judged by the fact that
they expected to produce (I give their own words) “a little blue sky”
 if “they went on long enough.” This in the heart of the Doldrums at 450
feet! I have no objection to any amount of blue sky in its proper place
(it can be found at the 4000 level for practically twelve months out of
the year), but I submit, with all deference to the educational needs of
Transylvania, that “skylarking” in the centre of a main-travelled road
where, at the best of times, electricity literally drips off one's
stanchions and screw blades, is unnecessary. When my friends had
finished, the road was seared, and blown, and pitted with unequal
pressure layers, spirals, vortices, and readjustments for at least
an hour. I pitched badly twice in an upward rush--solely due to these
diabolical throw-downs--that came near to wrecking my propeller.
Equatorial work at low levels is trying enough in all conscience without
the added terrors of scientific hooliganism in the Doldrums.

                                                Rhyl.
                                                J. VINCENT MATHEN.

[We entirely sympathize with Professor Mathen's views, but till
the Board sees fit to further regulate the Southern areas in which
scientific experiments may be conducted, we shall always be exposed to
the risk which our correspondent describes. Unfortunately, a chimera
bombinating in a vacuum is, nowadays, only too capable of producing
secondary causes.--Editor.]


                Answers to Correspondents

VIGILANS--The Laws of Auroral Derangements are still imperfectly
understood. Any overheated motor may of course “seize” without warning;
but so many complaints have reached us of accidents similar to yours
while shooting the Aurora that we are inclined to believe with Lavalle
that the upper strata of the Aurora Borealis are practically one big
electric “leak,” and that the paralysis of your engines was due to
complete magnetization of all metallic parts. Low-flying planes often
“glue up” when near the Magnetic Pole, and there is no reason in science
why the same disability should not be experienced at higher levels when
the Auroras are “delivering” strongly.

INDIGNANT--On your own showing, you were not under control. That
you could not hoist the necessary N. U. C. lights on approaching a
traffic-lane because your electrics had short-circuited is a misfortune
which might befall any one. The A. B. C., being responsible for the
planet's traffic, cannot, however, make allowance for this kind of
misfortune. A reference to the Code will show that you were fined on the
lower scale.

PLANISTON--(1) The Five Thousand Kilometre (overland) was won last year
by L. V. Rautsch; R. M. Rautsch, his brother, in the same week pulling
off the Ten Thousand (oversea). R. M.'s average worked out at a
fraction over 500 kilometres per hour, thus constituting a record.
(2) Theoretically, there is no limit to the lift of a dirigible. For
commercial and practical purposes 15,000 tons is accepted as the most
manageable.

PATERFAMILIAS--None whatever. He is liable for direct damage both to
your chimneys and any collateral damage caused by fall of bricks into
garden, etc., etc. Bodily inconvenience and mental anguish may
be included, but the average courts are not, as a rule, swayed by
sentiment. If you can prove that his grapnel removed any portion of
your roof, you had better rest your case on decoverture of domicile (see
Parkins v. Duboulay). We sympathize with your position, but the night
of the 14th was stormy and confused, and--you may have to anchor on a
stranger's chimney yourself some night. Verbum sap!

ALDEBARAN--(1) war, as a paying concern, ceased in 1987. (2) The
Convention of London expressly reserves to every nation the right of
waging war so long as it does not interfere with the traffic and all
that implies. (3) The A. B. C. was constituted in 1949.

L. M. P.--(1) Keep her full head-on at half power, taking advantage of
the lulls to speed up and creep into it. She will strain much less this
way than in quartering across a gale. (2) Nothing is to be gained by
reversing into a following gale, and there is always risk of a turnover.
(3) The formulae for stun'sle brakes are uniformly unreliable, and will
continue to be so as long as air is compressible.

PEGAMOID--(1) Personally we prefer glass or flux compounds to any other
material for winter work nose-caps as being absolutely non-hygroscopic.
(2) We cannot recommend any particular make.

PULMONAR--(1) For the symptoms you describe, try the Gobi Desert
Sanatoria. The low levels of most of the Saharan Sanatoria are against
them except at the outset of the disease. (2) We do not recommend
boarding-houses or hotels in this column.

BEGINNER--On still days the air above a large inhabited city being
slightly warmer--i.e., thinner--than the atmosphere of the surrounding
country, a plane drops a little on entering the rarefied area, precisely
as a ship sinks a little in fresh water. Hence the phenomena of “jolt”
 and your “inexplicable collisions” with factory chimneys. In air, as on
earth, it is safest to fly high.

EMERGENCY--There is only one rule of the road in air, earth, and water.
Do you want the firmament to yourself?

PICCIOLA--Both Poles have been overdone in Art and Literature. Leave
them to Science for the next twenty years. You did not send a stamp with
your verses.

NORTH NIGERIA--The Mark Boat was within her right in warning you off the
Reserve. The shadow of a low-flying dirigible scares the game. You can
buy all the photos you need at Sokoto.

NEW ERA--It is not etiquette to overcross an A. B. C. official's boat
without asking permission. He is one of the body responsible for the
planet's traffic, and for that reason must not be interfered with. You,
presumably, are out on your own business or pleasure, and must leave him
alone. For humanity's sake don't try to be “democratic.”

EXCORIATED--All inflators chafe sooner or later. You must go on till
your skin hardens by practice. Meantime vaseline.




                REVIEW


           The Life of Xavier Lavalle
     (Reviewed by Rene Talland. École Aëronautique, Paris)

Ten years ago Lavalle, “that imperturbable dreamer of the heavens,”
 as Lazareff hailed him, gathered together the fruits of a lifetime's
labour, and gave it, with well-justified contempt, to a world bound
hand and foot to Barald's Theory of Vertices and “compensating electric
nodes.” “They shall see,” he wrote--in that immortal postscript to The
Heart of the Cyclone--“the Laws whose existence they derided written in
fire beneath them.”

“But even here,” he continues, “there is no finality. Better a thousand
times my conclusions should be discredited than that my dead name should
lie across the threshold of the temple of Science--a bar to further
inquiry.”

So died Lavalle--a prince of the Powers of the Air, and even at his
funeral Cellier jested at “him who had gone to discover the secrets of
the Aurora Borealis.”

If I choose thus to be banal, it is only to remind you that Céllier's
theories are today as exploded as the ludicrous deductions of the
Spanish school. In the place of their fugitive and warring dreams we
have, definitely, Lavalle's Law of the Cyclone which he surprised in
darkness and cold at the foot of the overarching throne of the Aurora
Borealis. It is there that I, intent on my own investigations, have
passed and re-passed a hundred times the worn leonine face, white as the
snow beneath him, furrowed with wrinkles like the seams and gashes upon
the North Cape; the nervous hand, integrally a part of the mechanism of
his flighter; and above all, the wonderful lambent eyes turned to the
zenith.

“Master,” I would cry as I moved respectfully beneath him, “what is it
you seek today?” and always the answer, clear and without doubt, from
above: “The old secret, my son!”

The immense egotism of youth forced me on my own path, but (cry of the
human always!) had I known--if I had known--I would many times have
bartered my poor laurels for the privilege, such as Tinsley and Herrera
possess, of having aided him in his monumental researches.

It is to the filial piety of Victor Lavalle that we owe the two volumes
consecrated to the ground-life of his father, so full of the holy
intimacies of the domestic hearth. Once returned from the abysms of the
utter North to that little house upon the outskirts of Meudon, it was
not the philosopher, the daring observer, the man of iron energy that
imposed himself on his family, but a fat and even plaintive jester, a
farceur incarnate and kindly, the co-equal of his children, and, it must
be written, not seldom the comic despair of Madame Lavalle, who, as she
writes five years after the marriage, to her venerable mother, found “in
this unequalled intellect whose name I bear the abandon of a large and
very untidy boy.” Here is her letter:

“Xavier returned from I do not know where at midnight, absorbed in
calculations on the eternal question of his Aurora--la belle Aurore,
whom I begin to hate. Instead of anchoring,--I had set out the
guide-light above our roof, so he had but to descend and fasten the
plane--he wandered, profoundly distracted, above the town with his
anchor down! Figure to yourself, dear mother, it is the roof of the
mayor's house that the grapnel first engages! That I do not regret, for
the mayor's wife and I are not sympathetic; but when Xavier uproots my
pet araucaria and bears it across the garden into the conservatory I
protest at the top of my voice. Little Victor in his night-clothes runs
to the window, enormously amused at the parabolic flight without reason,
for it is too dark to see the grapnel, of my prized tree. The Mayor
of Meudon, thunders at our door in the name of the Law, demanding,
I suppose, my husband's head. Here is the conversation through the
megaphone--Xavier is two hundred feet above us:

“'Mons. Lavalle, descend and make reparation for outrage of domicile.
Descend, Mons. Lavalle!'

“No one answers.

“'Xavier Lavalle, in the name of the Law, descend and submit to process
for outrage of domicile.'

“Xavier, roused from his calculations, comprehending only the last
words: 'Outrage of domicile? My dear mayor, who is the man that has
corrupted thy Julie?'

“The mayor, furious, 'Xavier Lavalle--'

“Xavier, interrupting: 'I have not that felicity. I am only a dealer in
cyclones!'

“My faith, he raised one then! All Meudon attended in the streets, and
my Xavier, after a long time comprehending what he had done, excused
himself in a thousand apologies. At last the reconciliation was effected
in our house over a supper at two in the morning--Julie in a wonderful
costume of compromises, and I have her and the mayor pacified in bed in
the blue room.”

And on the next day, while the mayor rebuilds his roof, her Xavier
departs anew for the Aurora Borealis, there to commence his life's work.
M. Victor Lavalle tells us of that historic collision (en plane) on the
flank of Hecla between Herrera, then a pillar of the Spanish school,
and the man destined to confute his theories and lead him intellectually
captive. Even through the years, the immense laugh of Lavalle as he
sustains the Spaniard's wrecked plane, and cries: “Courage! I shall not
fall till I have found Truth, and I hold you fast!” rings like the
call of trumpets. This is that Lavalle whom the world, immersed in
speculations of immediate gain, did not know nor suspect--the Lavalle
whom they adjudged to the last a pedant and a theorist.

The human, as apart from the scientific, side (developed in his own
volumes) of his epoch-making discoveries is marked with a simplicity,
clarity, and good sense beyond praise. I would specially refer such as
doubt the sustaining influence of ancestral faith upon character and
will to the eleventh and nineteenth chapters, in which are contained
the opening and consummation of the Tellurionical Records extending over
nine years. Of their tremendous significance be sure that the modest
house at Meudon knew as little as that the Records would one day be the
planet's standard in all official meteorology. It was enough for
them that their Xavier--this son, this father, this husband--ascended
periodically to commune with powers, it might be angelic, beyond their
comprehension, and that they united daily in prayers for his safety.

“Pray for me,” he says upon the eve of each of his excursions, and
returning, with an equal simplicity, he renders thanks “after supper in
the little room where he kept his barometers.”

To the last Lavalle was a Catholic of the old school, accepting--he who
had looked into the very heart of the lightnings--the dogmas of papal
infallibility, of absolution, of confession--of relics great and small.
Marvellous--enviable contradiction!

The completion of the Tellurionical Records closed what Lavalle himself
was pleased to call the theoretical side of his labours--labours from
which the youngest and least impressionable planeur might well have
shrunk. He had traced through cold and heat, across the deeps of the
oceans, with instruments of his own invention, over the inhospitable
heart of the polar ice and the sterile visage of the deserts, league by
league, patiently, unweariedly, remorselessly, from their ever-shifting
cradle under the magnetic pole to their exalted death-bed in the utmost
ether of the upper atmosphere each one of the Isoconical
Tellurions--Lavalle's Curves, as we call them today. He had
disentangled the nodes of their intersections, assigning to each its
regulated period of flux and reflux. Thus equipped, he summons Herrera
and Tinsley, his pupils, to the final demonstration as calmly as though
he were ordering his flighter for some mid-day journey to Marseilles.

“I have proved my thesis,” he writes. “It remains now only that you
should witness the proof. We go to Manila to-morrow. A cyclone will form
off the Pescadores S. 17 E. in four days, and will reach its maximum
intensity twenty-seven hours after inception. It is there I will show
you the Truth.”

A letter heretofore unpublished from Herrera to Madame Lavalle tells us
how the Master's prophecy was verified.

I will not destroy its simplicity or its significance by any attempt to
quote. Note well, though, that Herrera's preoccupation throughout that
day and night of superhuman strain is always for the Master's bodily
health and comfort.

“At such a time,” he writes, “I forced the Master to take the broth”; or
“I made him put on the fur coat as you told me.” Nor is Tinsley (see
pp. 184, 85) less concerned. He prepares the nourishment. He cooks
eternally, imperturbably, suspended in the chaos of which the Master
interprets the meaning. Tinsley, bowed down with the laurels of both
hemispheres, raises himself to yet nobler heights in his capacity of a
devoted chef. It is almost unbelievable! And yet men write of the Master
as cold, aloof, self-contained. Such characters do not elicit the joyous
and unswerving devotion which Lavalle commanded throughout life. Truly,
we have changed very little in the course of the ages! The secrets of
earth and sky and the links that bind them, we felicitate ourselves
we are on the road to discover; but our neighbours' heart and mind we
misread, we misjudge, we condemn now as ever. Let all, then, who love a
man read these most human, tender, and wise volumes.


                 *************

  Transcriber's note: These “advertisements” appeared in the format
  that would have been used in a newspaper or magazine ad
  section--that is in two columns for the smaller ads, and in
  quarter, half, full and double page layouts for the others. Also
  L is used as the symbol for pounds.

                 *************


  ------------------------------------------------

                  MISCELLANEOUS
                   [ WANTS ]

  REQUIRED IMMEDIATELY, FOR East Africa, a thoroughly competent
  Plane and Dirigible Driver, acquainted with Petrol Radium and
  Helium motors and generators. Low-level work only, but must
  understand heavy-weight digs.
        MOSSAMEDES TRANSPORT ASSOC.
               84 Palestine Buildings, E. C.

  ------------------------------------------------

  MAN WANTED-DIG DRIVER for Southern Alps with Saharan summer
  trips. High levels, high speed, high wages:
                 Apply M. SIDNEY
           Hotel San Stefano. Monte Carlo.

  ------------------------------------------------

  FAMILY DIRIGIBLE. A COMPETENT, steady man wanted for slow speed,
  low level Tangye dirigible. No night work, no sea trips. Must be
  member of the Church of England, and make himself useful in the
  garden.
                  M. R.
           The Rectory, Gray's Barton, Wilts.

  ------------------------------------------------

  COMMERCIAL DIG, CENTRAL and Southern Europe. A smart, active man
  for a L. M. T. Dig. Night work only. Headquarters London and
  Cairo. A linguist preferred.
                  BAGMAN
      Charing Cross Hotel, W. C. (urgent.)

  ------------------------------------------------

  FOR SALE--A BARGAIN--Single Plane, narrow-gauge vans, Pinke
  motor. Restayed this autumn. Hansen air-kit, 58 in. chest, 153
  collar. Can be seen by appointment.
               N. 2650 This office.

  ------------------------------------------------

               The BEE-LINE BOOKSHOP

  BELT'S WAY-BOOKS, giving town lights for all towns over 4,000
  pop. as laid down by A. B. O.
  THE WORLD. Complete 2 vols. Thin Oxford, limp back. 12L 6d.
  BELT'S COASTAL ITINERARY. Short Lights of the World. 7s. 6d.
  THE TRANSATLANTIC AND MEDITERRANEAN TRAFFIC LINES.
          (By authority of the A.B.C.) Paper,
         1s. 6d.; cloth. 2s. 6d. Ready, Jan. 16.
  ARCTIC AEROPLANING. Siemens and Gait. Cloth, bds. Ss. 6d.
  LAVALLE'S HEART OF THE CYCLONE, with supplementary charts. 4s.
  6d.
  RIMINGTON'S PITFALLS IN THE AIR, and Table of Comparative
  Densities  3s. 6d.
  ANGELO'S DESERT IN A DIRIGIBLE. New edition, revised. 5s. 9d.
  VAUGHAN'S PLANE RACING IN CALM AND STORM. 2s. 6d.
  VAUGHAN'S HINTS TO THE AIRMATEUR 1s.
  HOFMAN'S LAWS OF LIFT AND VELOCITY. With diagrams, 3s. 6d.
  DE VITRE'S THEORY OF SHIFTING BALLAST IN DIRIGIBLES. 2s. 6d.
  SANGERS WEATHERS OF THE WORLD. 4s.
  SANGER'S TEMPERATURES AT HIGH ALTITUDES. 4s.
  HAWKIN'S FOG AND HOW To AVOID IT. 3s.
  VAN ZUYLAN'S SECONDARY EFFECTS OF THUNDERSTORMS. 4s. 6d.
  DAHLGREN'S AIR CURRENTS AND EPIDEMIC DISEASES. 5s. 6d.
  REDMAYNE'S DISEASE AND THE BAROMETER. 7s. 6d.
  WALTON'S HEALTH RESORTS OF THE GOBI AND SHAMO. 3s. 6d.
  WALTON'S THE POLE AND PULMONARY COMPLAINTS. 7s. ad.
  MUTLOWS HIGH LEVEL BACTERIOLOGY. 7s. 6d.
  HALLIWELL'S ILLUMINATED STAR MAP, with clockwork attachment,
   giving apparent motion of heavens, boxed, complete with
   clamps for binnacle, 36 inch size, only L2. 2. 0.
   Invaluable for night work.) With A.B.C. certificate. L3. 10s.
  0d. Zalinski's Standard Works:
   PASSES OF THE HIMALAYAS, 5s.
   PASSES OF THE SIERRAS, 5s.
   PASSES OF THE ROOKIES. 5s.
   PASSES OF THE URALS, 5s.
    The four boxed, limp cloth, with charts, 15s.
  GRAY'S AIR CURRENTS at MOUNTAIN GORGES, 7s. 6d.

          A. C. BELT & SON, READING
  ------------------------------------------------
              SAFETY WEAR FOR AERONAUTS
  ------------------------------------------------
  Fickers!             Flickers!            Flickers!

               HIGH LEVEL FLICKERS

           “He that is down need fear no fall,”
           Fear not! You will fall lightly as down!

  Hansen's air-kits are down in all respects. Tremendous reductions
  in prices previous to winter stocking. Pure para kit with
  cellulose seat and shoulder-pads, weighted to balance. Unequalled
  for all drop-work.

       Our trebly resilient heavy kit is the ne plus ultra of
                comfort and safety.

  Gas-buoyed, waterproof, hail-proof, nonconducting Flickers with
  pipe and nozzle fitting all types of generator. Graduated tap on
  left hip.

           Hansen's Flickers Lead the Aerial Flight
                 197 Oxford Street

     The new weighted Flicker with tweed or cheviot surface
   cannot be distinguished from the ordinary suit till inflated.

  Fickers!             Flickers!            Flickers!
  ------------------------------------------------

               APPLIANCES FOR AIR PLANES

  ------------------------------------------------
          What
                   “SKID”
            was to our forefathers on the ground,
                   “PITCH”
                is to their sons in the air.

  The popularity of the large, unwieldy, slow, expensive Dirigible
  over the light swift, Plane is mainly due to the former's
  immunity from pitch.

  Collison's forward-socketed Air Van renders it impossible for any
  plane to pitch. The C.F.S. is automatic, simple as a shutter,
  certain\ as a power hammer, safe as oxygen. Fitted to any make of
  plane.

                   COLLISON
                  186 Brompton Road
                 Workshops, Chiswick

                  LUNDIE do MATTERS
             Sole Agts for East'n Hemisphere

  ------------------------------------------------

                STARTERS AND GUIDES

  Hotel, club, and private house plane-starters, slips and guides
  affixed by skilled workmen in accordance with local building
  laws.

  Rackstraww's forty-foot collapsible steel starters with automatic
  release at end of travel--prices per foot run, clamps and
  crampons included. The safest on the market.


                Weaver & Denison
                  Middleboro

  ------------------------------------------------

              AIR PLANES AND DIRIGIBLE GOODS

  ------------------------------------------------

                   REMEMBER

                Planes are swift--so is Death
                Planes are cheap--so is Life

  Why does the plane builder insist on the safety of his machines?
        Methinks the gentleman protests too much.

  The Standard Dig Construction Company do not build kites.

        They build, equip and guarantee dirigibles.


               Standard Dig construction Co.
               Millwall and Buenos Ayres

  ------------------------------------------------
  HOVERS

                   POWELL'S
                  Wind Hovers

  for 'planes lying-to in heavy weather, save the motor and strain
  on the forebody. Will not send to leeward. “Albatross”
   wind-hovers, rigid-ribbed; according to h.p. and weight.

               We fit and test free to
             40 east of Greenwich Village

                  L. & W. POWELL
               196 Victoria Street, W.

  ------------------------------------------------

                   REMEMBER

          We shall always be pleased to see you.

  We build and test and guarantee our dirigibles or all purposes.
  They go up when you please and they do not come down till you
  please.

  You can please yourself, but--you might as well choose a
  dirigible.

           STANDARD DIRIGIBLE CONSTRUCTION CO.
              Millwall and Buenos Ayres

  ------------------------------------------------

                 GAYER AND HUNT
               Birmingham   and   Birmingham
                   Eng.          Ala.

                 Towers. Landing Stages,
                   Slips and Lifts
                   public and private

     Contractors to the A. B. C., South-Western European Postal
               Construction Dept. Sole patentees and owners of the
  Collison anti-quake diagonal tower-tie. Only gold medal Kyoto
  Exhibition of Aerial Appliances, 1997.

  ------------------------------------------------

                 AIR PLANES AND DIRIGIBLES

  ------------------------------------------------

                   C. M. C.
               Our Synthetical Mineral
                 BEARINGS

  are chemically and crystal logically identical with the minerals
  whose names they bear. Any size, any surface. Diamond,
  Rock-Crystal, Agate and Ruby Bearings-cups, caps and collars for
  the higher speeds. For tractor bearings and spindles-Imperative.
  For rear propellers-Indispensable. For all working
  parts-Advisable.

                Commercial Minerals Co.
                   107 Minories

  ------------------------------------------------

                   RESURGAM!

       If you have not Clothed YOURSELF in a

                NORMANDIE RESURGAM

  YOU WILL PROBABLY NOT BE INTERESTED IN OUR NEXT WEEK'S LIST OF
  AIR-KIT.

                 RESURGAM AIR-KIT EMPORIUM

                  HYMANS & GRAHAM
               1198 Lower Broadway, New York

  ------------------------------------------------

                     REMEMBER!

  ------------------------------------------------

  * It is now nearly, a generation since the Plane was to
  supersede the Dirigible for all purposes. * TO-DAY none of the
  Planet's freight is carried en plane. * Less than two per rent of
  the Planet's passengers are carried en plane.

  We design, equip guarantee Dirigibles for all purposes.

  Standard Dig Construction Company MILLWALL and BUENOS AYRES
  ------------------------------------------------

                   BAT-BOATS
  ------------------------------------------------


       FLINT & MANTEL
            SOUTHAMPTON
                FOR SALE

  at the end of Season the following Bat-Boats:

  GRISELDA, 65 knt., 42 ft., 430(nom.) Maginnis Motor,
    under-rake rudder.
  MABELLE, 50 knt., 40 ft., 310 Hargreaves Motor,
    Douglas' lock-steering gear.
  IVEMONA, 50 knt., 35 ft., 300 Hargreaves (Radium accelerator),
    Miller keel and rudder.

  The above are well known on the South Coast as sound, wholesome
  knockabout boats, with ample cruising accommodation. Griselda
  carries spare set of Hofman racing vans and can be lied three
  foot clear in smooth water with ballast-tank swung aft. The
  others do not lift, clear of water, and are recommended for
  beginners.

  Also, by private treaty, racing B.B. Tarpon (76 winning flags)
  120 knt., 60 ft.; Long-Davidson double under-rake rudder, new
  this season and unstrained. 850 nom. Maginnis motor, Radium
  relays and Pond generator. Bronze breakwater forward, and treble
  reinforced forefoot and entry. Talfourd rockered keel: Triple set
  of Hofman vans, giving maximum lifting surface of 5327 sq. ft.

  Tarpon-has been lifted and held seven feet for two miles between
  touch and touch.

  Our Autumn List of racing and family Bats ready on the 9th
  January.

  ------------------------------------------------

               AIR PLANES AND STARTERS

  ------------------------------------------------

                  HINKS MODERATOR

              Monorail overhead starter
             for family and private planes
            up to twenty-five foot over all

  Absolutely Safe

      Hinks & Co.. Birmingham
  ------------------------------------------------
                 J. D. ARDAGH

  I AM NOT CONCERNED WITH YOUR PLANE I AFTER IT LEAVES MY GUIDES,
  BUT TILL THEN I HOLD MYSELF PERSONALLY RESPONSIBLE FOR YOUR LIFE,
  SAFETY, AND COMFORT. MY HYDRAULIC BUFFER-STOP CANNOT RELEASE
  TILL THE MOTORS ARE WORKING UP TO BEARING SPEED, THUS SECURING
  A SAFE AND GRACEFUL FLIGHT WITHOUT PITCHING.

         Remember our motto, “Upward and Outward,”
     and do not trust yourself to so-called “rigid” guide-bars

             J. D. ARDAGH, BELFAST AND TURIN

  ------------------------------------------------

                 ACCESSORIES AND SPARES

  ------------------------------------------------

                 CHRISTIAN WRIGHT & OLDIS
                    ESTABLISHED 1924

                 ACCESSORIES and SPARES

       Hooded Binnacles with dip-dials automatically recording
             change of level (illuminated face).

  All heights from 50 to 15,000 feet            L2 10 0
  With Aerial Board of Control certificate      L3 11 0
  Foot and Hand Foghoms; Sirens toned to any club note; with
  air-chest belt-driven horn motor              L6 8 0
  Wireless installations syntonised to A.B.C. requirements, in neat
  mahogany case, hundred mile range             L3 3 0

  Grapnels, mushroom--anchors, pithing-irons, winches, hawsers,
  snaps, shackles and mooring ropes, for lawn, city, and public
  installations.

  Detachable under-cars, aluminum or stamped steel.

  Keeled under-cars for planes: single-action detaching-gear,
  turning car into boat with one motion of the wrist. Invaluable
  for sea trips.

  Head, side, and riding lights (by size) Nos.00 to 20 A.B.C.
  Standard. Rockets and fog-bombs in colours and tones of the
  principal clubs (boxed).
      A selection of twenty                   L2 17 6
      International night-signals (boxed)     L1 11 6

  Spare generators guaranteed to lifting power marked on cover
  (prices according to power).

  Wind-noses for dirigibles--Pegamoid, cane-stiffened, lacquered
  cane or aluminum and flux for winter work.

  Smoke-ring cannon for hail storms, swivel mounted, bow or stern.

  Propeller blades: metal, tungsten backed; paper-mache wire
  stiffened; ribbed Xylonite (Nickson's patent); all razor-edged
  (price by pitch and diameter).

  Compressed steel bow-screws for winter work.

  Fused Ruby or Commercial Mineral Co. bearings and collars.
  Agate-mounted thrust-blocks up to 4 inch.

  Magniac's bow-rudders--(Lavales patent grooving).

  Wove steel beltings for outboard motors (nonmagnetic).

  Radium batteries, all powers to 150 h.p. (in pairs).

  Helium batteries, all powers to 300 h.p. (tandem).

  Stun'sle brakes worked from upper or lower platform.

  Direct plunge-brakes worked from lower platform only, loaded silk
  or fibre, wind-tight.

  CATALOGUES FREE THROUGHOUT THE PLANET

  ------------------------------------------------




THE FOUR ANGELS

    As ADAM lay a-dreaming beneath the Apple Tree,
    The Angel of the Earth came down, and offered Earth in fee.
          But Adam did not need it,
          Nor the plough he would not speed it,
    Singing:--“Earth and Water, Air and Fire,
           What more can mortal man desire?”
              (The Apple Tree's in bud.)

    As Adam lay a-dreaming beneath the Apple Tree,
    The Angel of the Waters offered all the Seas in fee.
         But Adam would not take 'em,
         Nor the ships he wouldn't make 'em,
    Singing:--“Water, Earth and Air and Fire,
           What more can mortal man desire?”
              (The Apple Tree's in leaf.)

    As Adam lay a-dreaming beneath the Apple Tree,
    The Angel of the Air he offered all the Air in fee.
          But Adam did not crave it,
          Nor the flight he wouldn't brave it,
    Singing:--“Air and Water, Earth and Fire,
           What more can mortal man desire?”
              (The Apple Tree's in bloom.)

    As Adam lay a-dreaming beneath the Apple Tree,
    The Angel of the Fire rose up and not a word said he.
          But he wished a fire and made it,
          And in Adam's heart he laid it,
    Singing.--“Fire, fire, burning Fire,
           Stand up and reach your heart's desire!”
              (The Apple Blossom's set.)

    As Adam was a-working outside of Eden-Wall,
    He used the Earth, he used the Seas, he used the Air and all;
           And out of black disaster
           He arose to be the master
    Of Earth and Water, Air and Fire,
           But never reached his heart's desire!
             (The Apple Tree's cut down!)




A DEAL IN COTTON

Long and long ago, when Devadatta was King of Benares, I wrote some
tales concerning Strickland of the Punjab Police (who married Miss
Youghal), and Adam, his son. Strickland has finished his Indian Service,
and lives now at a place in England called Weston-super-Mare, where his
wife plays the organ in one of the churches. Semi-occasionally he comes
up to London, and occasionally his wife makes him visit his friends.
Otherwise he plays golf and follows the harriers for his figure's sake.

If you remember that Infant who told a tale to Eustace Cleever the
novelist, you will remember that he became a baronet with a vast estate.
He has, owing to cookery, a little lost his figure, but he never loses
his friends. I have found a wing of his house turned into a hospital
for sick men, and there I once spent a week in the company of two dismal
nurses and a specialist in “Sprue.” Another time the place was full of
schoolboys--sons of Anglo-Indians whom the Infant had collected for the
holidays, and they nearly broke his keeper's heart.

But my last visit was better. The Infant called me up by wire, and I
fell into the arms of a friend of mine, Colonel A.L. Corkran, so that
the years departed from us, and we praised Allah, who had not yet
terminated the Delights, nor separated the Companions.

Said Corkran, when he had explained how it felt to command a
native Infantry regiment on the border: “The Stricks are coming for
to-night-with their boy.”

“I remember him. The little fellow I wrote a story about,” I said. “Is
he in the Service?”

“No. Strick got him into the Centro-Euro-Africa Protectorate. He's
Assistant-Commissioner at Dupé--wherever that is. Somaliland, ain't it,
Stalky?” asked the Infant.

Stalky puffed out his nostrils scornfully. “You're only three thousand
miles out. Look at the atlas.”

“Anyhow, he's as rotten full of fever as the rest of you,” said the
Infant, at length on the big divan. “And he's bringing a native servant
with him. Stalky be an athlete, and tell Ipps to put him in the stable
room.”

“Why? Is he a Yao--like the fellow Wade brought here--when your
housekeeper had fits?” Stalky often visits the Infant, and has seen some
odd things.

“No. He's one of old Strickland's Punjabi policemen--and quite
European--I believe.”

“Hooray! Haven't talked Punjabi for three months--and a Punjabi from
Central Africa ought to be amusin'.”

We heard the chuff of the motor in the porch, and the first to enter was
Agnes Strickland, whom the Infant makes no secret of adoring.

He is devoted, in a fat man's placid way, to at least eight designing
women; but she nursed him once through a bad bout of Peshawur fever, and
when she is in the house, it is more than all hers.

“You didn't send rugs enough,” she began. “Adam might have taken a
chill.”

“It's quite warm in the tonneau. Why did you let him ride in front?”

“Because he wanted to,” she replied, with the mother's smile, and we
were introduced to the shadow of a young man leaning heavily on the
shoulder of a bearded Punjabi Mohammedan.

“That is all that came home of him,” said his father to me. “There
was nothing in it of the child with whom I had journeyed to Dalhousie
centuries since.”

“And what is this uniform?” Stalky asked of Imam Din, the servant, who
came to attention on the marble floor.

“The uniform of the Protectorate troops, Sahib. Though I am the Little
Sahib's body-servant, it is not seemly for us white men to be attended
by folk dressed altogether as servants.”

“And--and you white men wait at table on horseback?” Stalky pointed to
the man's spurs.

“These I added for the sake of honour when I came to England,” said Imam
Din Adam smiled the ghost of a little smile that I began to remember,
and we put him on the big couch for refreshments. Stalky asked him how
much leave he had, and he said “Six months.”

“But he'll take another six on medical certificate,” said Agnes
anxiously. Adam knit his brows.

“You don't want to--eh? I know. Wonder what my second in command is
doing.” Stalky tugged his moustache, and fell to thinking of his Sikhs.

“Ah!” said the Infant. “I've only a few thousand pheasants to look
after. Come along and dress for dinner. We're just ourselves. What
flower is your honour's ladyship commanding for the table?”

“Just ourselves?” she said, looking at the crotons in the great hall.
“Then let's have marigolds--the little cemetery ones.”

So it was ordered.

Now, marigolds to us mean hot weather, discomfort, parting, and death.
That smell in our nostrils, and Adam's servant in waiting, we naturally
fell back more and more on the old slang, recalling at each glass those
who had gone before. We did not sit at the big table, but in the bay
window overlooking the park, where they were carting the last of the
hay. When twilight fell we would not have candles, but waited for the
moon, and continued our talk in the dusk that makes one remember.

Young Adam was not interested in our past except where it had touched
his future. I think his mother held his hand beneath the table. Imam
Din--shoeless, out of respect to the floors--brought him his medicine,
poured it drop by drop, and asked for orders.

“Wait to take him to his cot when he grows weary,” said his mother, and
Imam Din retired into the shadow by the ancestral portraits.

“Now what d'you expect to get out of your country?” the Infant asked,
when--our India laid aside we talked Adam's Africa. It roused him at
once.

“Rubber--nuts--gums--and so on,” he said. “But our real future is
cotton. I grew fifty acres of it last year in my District.”

“My District!” said his father. “Hear him, Mummy!”

“I did though! I wish I could show you the sample. Some Manchester chaps
said it was as good as any Sea Island cotton on the market.”

“But what made you a cotton-planter, my son?” she asked.

“My Chief said every man ought to have a shouk (a hobby) of sorts, and
he took the trouble to ride a day out of his way to show me a belt of
black soil that was just the thing for cotton.”

“Ah! What was your Chief like?” Stalky asked, in his silkiest tones.

“The best man alive--absolutely. He lets you blow your own nose
yourself. The people call him”--Adam jerked out some heathen
phrase--“that means the Man with the Stone Eyes, you know.”

“I'm glad of that. Because I've heard--from other quarters”--Stalky's
sentence burned like a slow match, but the explosion was not long
delayed. “Other quarters!” Adam threw out a thin hand. “Every dog has
his fleas. If you listen to them, of course!” The shake of his head was
as I remembered it among his father's policemen twenty years before, and
his mother's eyes shining through the dusk called on me to adore it. I
kicked Stalky on the shin. One must not mock a young man's first love or
loyalty.

A lump of raw cotton appeared on the table.

“I thought there might be a need. Therefore I packed it between our
shirts,” said the voice of Imam Din.

“Does he know as much English as that?” cried the Infant, who had
forgotten his East.

We all admired the cotton for Adam's sake, and, indeed, it was very long
and glossy.

“It's--it's only an experiment,” he said. “We're such awful paupers we
can't even pay for a mailcart in my District. We use a biscuit-box
on two bicycle wheels. I only got the money for that”--he patted the
stuff--“by a pure fluke.”

“How much did it cost?” asked Strickland.

“With seed and machinery--about two hundred pounds. I had the labour
done by cannibals.”

“That sounds promising.” Stalky reached for a fresh cigarette.

“No, thank you,” said Agnes. “I've been at Weston-super-Mare a little
too long for cannibals. I'll go to the music-room and try over next
Sunday's hymns.”

She lifted the boy's hand lightly to her lips, and tripped across the
acres of glimmering floor to the music-room that had been the Infant's
ancestors' banqueting hall. Her grey and silver dress disappeared under
the musicians' gallery; two electrics broke out, and she stood backed
against the lines of gilded pipes.

“There's an abominable self-playing attachment here!” she called.

“Me!” the Infant answered, his napkin on his shoulder. “That's how I
play Parsifal.”

“I prefer the direct expression. Take it away, Ipps.”

We heard old Ipps skating obediently all over the floor.

“Now for the direct expression,” said Stalky, and moved on the Burgundy
recommended by the faculty to enrich fever-thinned blood.

“It's nothing much. Only the belt of cotton-soil my chief showed me
ran right into the Sheshaheli country. We haven't been able to prove
cannibalism against that tribe in the courts; but when a Sheshaheli
offers you four pounds of woman's breast, tattoo marks and all, skewered
up in a plantain leaf before breakfast, you--”

“Naturally burn the villages before lunch,” said Stalky.

Adam shook his head. “No troops,” he sighed. “I told my Chief about it,
and he said we must wait till they chopped a white man. He advised me if
ever I felt like it not to commit a--a barren felo de se, but to let the
Sheshaheli do it. Then he could report, and then we could mop 'em up!”

“Most immoral! That's how we got--” Stalky quoted the name of a province
won by just such a sacrifice.

“Yes, but the beasts dominated one end of my cotton-belt like anything.
They chivied me out of it when I went to take soil for analysis--me and
Imam Din.”

“Sahib! Is there a need?” The voice came out of the darkness, and the
eyes shone over Adam's shoulder ere it ceased.

“None. The name was taken in talk.” Adam abolished him with a turn of
the finger. “I couldn't make a casus belli of it just then, because my
Chief had taken all the troops to hammer a gang of slave kings up north.
Did you ever hear of our war against Ibn Makarrah? He precious nearly
lost us the Protectorate at one time, though he's an ally of ours now.”

“Wasn't he rather a pernicious brute, even as they go?” said Stalky.
“Wade told me about him last year.”

“Well, his nickname all through the country was 'The Merciful,' and he
didn't get that for nothing. None of our people ever breathed his
proper name. They said 'He' or 'That One,' and they didn't say it aloud,
either. He fought us for eight months.”

“I remember. There was a paragraph about it in one of the papers,” I
said.

“We broke him, though. No--the slavers don't come our way, because our
men have the reputation of dying too much, the first month after they're
captured. That knocks down profits, you see.”

“What about your charming friends, the Sheshahelis?” said the Infant.

“There's no market for Sheshaheli. People would as soon buy crocodiles.
I believe, before we annexed the country, Ibn Makarrah dropped down on
'em once--to train his young men--and simply hewed 'em in pieces.
The bulk of my people are agriculturists--just the right stamp for
cotton-growers. What's Mother playing?--'_Once in royal_'?”

The organ that had been crooning as happily as a woman over her babe
restored, steadied to a tune.

“Magnificent! Oh, magnificent!” said the Infant loyally. I had never
heard him sing but once, and then, though it was early in the tolerant
morning, his mess had rolled him into a lotus pond.

“How did you get your cannibals to work for you?” asked Strickland.

“They got converted to civilization after my Chief smashed Ibn
Makarrah--just at the time I wanted 'em. You see my Chief had promised
me in writing that if I could scrape up a surplus he would not bag it
for his roads this time, but I might have it for my cotton game. I only
needed two hundred pounds. Our revenues didn't run to it.”

“What is your revenue?” Stalky asked in the vernacular.

“With hut-tax, traders' game and mining licenses, not more than fourteen
thousand rupees; every penny of it ear-marked months ahead.” Adam
sighed.

“Also there is a fine for dogs straying in the Sahib's camp. Last year
it exceeded three rupees,” Imam Din said quietly.

“Well, I thought that was fair. They howled so. We were rather strict on
fines. I worked up my native clerk--Bulaki Ram--to a ferocious pitch
of enthusiasm. He used to calculate the profits of our cotton-scheme
to three points of decimals, after office. I tell you I envied your
magistrates here hauling money out of motorists every week I had managed
to make our ordinary revenue and expenditure just about meet, and I
was crazy to get the odd two hundred pounds for my cotton. That sort of
thing grows on a chap when he's alone--and talks aloud!”

“Hul-lo! Have you been there already?” the father said, and Adam nodded.

“Yes. Used to spout what I could remember of 'Marmion' to a tree, sir.
Well then my luck turned. One evening an English-speaking nigger came in
towing a corpse by the feet. (You get used to little things like that.)
He said he'd found it, and please would I identify, because if it
was one of Ibn Makarrah's men there might be a reward. It was an old
Mohammedan, with a strong dash of Arab--a smallboned, bald-headed chap,
and I was just wondering how it had kept so well in our climate when it
sneezed. You ought to have seen the nigger! He fetched a howl and bolted
like--like the dog in 'Tom Sawyer,' when he sat on the what's-its-name
beetle. He yelped as he ran, and the corpse went on sneezing. I could
see it had been sarkied. (That's a sort of gum-poison, pater, which
attacks the nerve centres. Our chief medical officer is writing a
monograph about it.) So Imam Din and I emptied out the corpse one time,
with my shaving soap and trade gunpowder, and hot water.

“I'd seen a case of sarkie before; so when the skin peeled off his feet,
and he stopped sneezing, I knew he'd live. He was bad, though; lay like
a log for a week while Imam Din and I massaged the paralysis out of him.
Then he told us he was a Hajji--had been three times to Mecca--come in
from French Africa, and that he'd met the nigger by the wayside--just
like a case of thuggee, in India--and the nigger had poisoned him. That
seemed reasonable enough by what I knew of Coast niggers.”

“You believed him?” said his father keenly.

“There was no reason I shouldn't. The nigger never came back, and the
old man stayed with me for two months,” Adam returned. “You know what
the best type of a Mohammedan gentleman can be, pater? He was that.”

“None finer, none finer,” was the answer.

“Except a Sikh,” Stalky grunted.

“He'd been to Bombay; he knew French Africa inside out; he could quote
poetry and the Koran all day long. He played chess--you don't know what
that meant to me--like a master. We used to talk about the regeneration
of Turkey and the Sheik-ul-Islam between moves. Oh, everything under the
sun we talked about! He was awfully open-minded. He believed in slavery,
of course, but he quite saw that it would have to die out. That's why
he agreed with me about developing the resources of the district by
cotton-growing, you know.”

“You talked of that too?” said Strickland.

“Rather. We discussed it for hours. You don't know what it meant to me.
A wonderful man. Imam Din, was not our Hajji marvellous?”

“Most marvellous! It was all through the Hajji that we found the money
for our cotton-play.” Imam Din had moved, I fancy, behind Strickland's
chair.

“Yes. It must have been dead against his convictions too. He brought me
news when I was down with fever at Dupé that one of Ibn Makarrah's men
was parading through my District with a bunch of slaves--in the Fork!”

“What's the matter with the Fork, that you can't abide it?” said Stalky.
Adam's voice had risen at the last word.

“Local etiquette, sir,” he replied, too earnest to notice Stalky's
atrocious pun. “If a slaver runs slaves through British territory he
ought to pretend that they're his servants. Hawkin' 'em about in the
Fork--the forked stick that you put round their necks, you know--is
insolence--same as not backing your topsails in the old days. Besides,
it unsettles the District.”

“I thought you said slavers didn't come your way,” I put in.

“They don't. But my Chief was smoking 'em out of the North all that
season, and they were bolting into French territory any road they could
find. My orders were to take no notice so long as they circulated, but
open slave-dealing in--the--Fork, was too much. I couldn't go myself, so I
told a couple of our Makalali police and Imam Din to make talk with
the gentleman one time. It was rather risky, and it might have been
expensive, but it turned up trumps. They were back in a few days with
the slaver (he didn't show fight) and a whole crowd of witnesses, and
we tried him in my bedroom, and fined him properly. Just to show you
how demoralized the brute must have been (Arabs often go dotty after a
defeat), he'd snapped up four or five utterly useless Sheshaheli, and
was offering 'em to all and sundry along the road. Why, he offered 'em
to you, didn't he, Imam Din?”

“I was witness that he offered man-eaters for sale,” said Imam Din.

“Luckily for my cotton-scheme, that landed him both ways. You see, he
had slaved and exposed slaves for sale in British territory. That meant
the double fine if I could get it out of him.”

“What was his defence?” said Strickland, late of the Punjab Police.

“As far as I remember--but I had a temperature of 104 degrees at the
time--he'd mistaken the meridians of longitude. Thought he was in French
territory. Said he'd never do it again, if we'd let him off with a fine.
I could have shaken hands with the brute for that. He paid up cash like
a motorist and went off one time.”

“Did you see him?”

“Ye-es. Didn't I, Imam Din?”

“Assuredly the Sahib both saw and spoke to the slaver. And the Sahib
also made a speech to the man-eaters when he freed them, and they swore
to supply him with labour for all his cotton-play. The Sahib leaned on
his own servant's shoulder the while.”

“I remember something of that. I remember Bulaki Ram giving me the
papers to sign, and I distinctly remember him locking up the money in
the safe--two hundred and ten beautiful English sovereigns. You don't
know what that meant to me! I believe it cured my fever; and as soon
as I could, I staggered off with the Hajji to interview the Sheshaheli
about labour. Then I found out why they had been so keen to work! It
wasn't gratitude. Their big village had been hit by lightning and burned
out a week or two before, and they lay flat in rows around me asking me
for a job. I gave it 'em.”

“And so you were very happy?” His mother had stolen up behind us. “You
liked your cotton, dear?” She tidied the lump away.

“By Jove, I was happy!” Adam yawned. “Now if any one,” he looked at
the Infant, “cares to put a little money into the scheme, it'll be the
making of my District. I can't give you figures, sir, but I assure--”

“You'll take your arsenic, and Imam Din'll take you up to bed, and I'll
come and tuck you in.”

Agnes leaned forward, her rounded elbows on his shoulders, hands joined
across his dark hair, and “Isn't he a darling?” she said to us, with
just the same heart-rending lift to the left eyebrow and the same break
of her voice as sent Strickland mad among the horses in the year '84. We
were quiet when they were gone. We waited till Imam Din returned to us
from above and coughed at the door, as only dark-hearted Asia can.

“Now,” said Strickland, “tell us what truly befell, son of my servant.”

“All befell as our Sahib has said. Only--only there was an
arrangement--a little arrangement on account of his cotton-play.”

“Tell! Sit! I beg your pardon, Infant,” said Strickland.

But the Infant had already made the sign, and we heard Imam Din hunker
down on the floor: One gets little out of the East at attention.

“When the fever came on our Sahib in our roofed house at Dupé,” he
began, “the Hajji listened intently to his talk. He expected the names
of women; though I had already told him that Our virtue was beyond
belief or compare, and that Our sole desire was this cotton-play. Being
at last convinced, the Hajji breathed on our Sahib's forehead, to sink
into his brain news concerning a slave-dealer in his district who had
made a mock of the law. Sahib,” Imam Din turned to Strickland, “our
Sahib answered to those false words as a horse of blood answers to
the spur. He sat up. He issued orders for the apprehension of the
slavedealer. Then he fell back. Then we left him.”

“Alone--servant of my son, and son of my servant?” said his father.

“There was an old woman which belonged to the Hajji. She had come in
with the Hajji's money-belt. The Hajji told her that if our Sahib died,
she would die with him. And truly our Sahib had given me orders to
depart.”

“Being mad with fever--eh?”

“What could we do, Sahib? This cotton-play was his heart's desire. He
talked of it in his fever. Therefore it was his heart's desire that
the Hajji went to fetch. Doubtless the Hajji could have given him money
enough out of hand for ten cotton-plays; but in this respect also our
Sahib's virtue was beyond belief or compare. Great Ones do not exchange
moneys. Therefore the Hajji said--and I helped with my counsel--that we
must make arrangements to get the money in all respects conformable with
the English Law. It was great trouble to us, but--the Law is the Law.
And the Hajji showed the old woman the knife by which she would die if
our Sahib died. So I accompanied the Hajji.”

“Knowing who he was?” said Strickland.

“No! Fearing the man. A virtue went out from him overbearing the virtue
of lesser persons. The Hajji told Bulaki Ram the clerk to occupy the
seat of government at Dupé till our return. Bulaki Ram feared the Hajji,
because the Hajji had often gloatingly appraised his skill in figures
at five thousand rupees upon any slave-block. The Hajji then said to
me: 'Come, and we will make the man-eaters play the cotton-game for my
delight's delight.' The Hajji loved our Sahib with the love of a father
for his son, of a saved for his saviour, of a Great One for a Great One.
But I said: 'We cannot go to that Sheshaheli place without a hundred
rifles. We have here five.' The Hajji said: 'I have untied as knot in my
head-handkerchief which will be more to us than a thousand.' I saw that
he had so loosed it that it lay flagwise on his shoulder. Then I knew
that he was a Great One with virtue in him.

“We came to the highlands of the Sheshaheli on the dawn of the second
day--about the time of the stirring of the cold wind. The Hajji walked
delicately across the open place where their filth is, and scratched
upon the gate which was shut. When it opened I saw the man-eaters lying
on their cots under the eaves of the huts. They rolled off: they rose
up, one behind the other the length of the street, and the fear on their
faces was as leaves whitening to a breeze. The Hajji stood in the gate
guarding his skirts from defilement. The Hajji said: 'I am here once
again. Give me six and yoke up.' They zealously then pushed to us with
poles six, and yoked them with a heavy tree. The Hajji then said: 'Fetch
fire from the morning hearth, and come to windward.' The wind is strong
on those headlands at sunrise, so when each had emptied his crock of
fire in front of that which was before him, the broadside of the town
roared into flame, and all went. The Hajji then said: 'At the end of
a time there will come here the white man ye once chased for sport. He
will demand labour to plant such and such stuff. Ye are that labour, and
your spawn after you.' They said, lifting their heads a very little from
the edge of the ashes: 'We are that labour, and our spawn after us.'
The Hajji said: 'What is also my name?' They said: 'Thy name is also
The Merciful.' The Hajji said: 'Praise then my mercy'; and while they did
this, the Hajji walked away, I following.”

The Infant made some noise in his throat, and reached for more Burgundy.

“About noon one of our six fell dead. Fright only frights Sahib! None
had--none could--touch him. Since they were in pairs, and the other of
the Fork was mad and sang foolishly, we waited for some heathen to do
what was needful. There came at last Angari men with goats. The Hajji
said: 'What do ye see? They said: 'Oh, our Lord, we neither see nor
hear.' The Hajji said: 'But I command ye to see and to hear and to say.'
They said: 'Oh, our Lord, it is to our commanded eyes as though slaves
stood in a Fork.' The Hajji said: 'So testify before the officer who
waits you in the town of Dupé.' They said: 'What shall come to us
after?' The Hajji said: 'The just reward for the informer. But if ye do
not testify, then a punishment which shall cause birds to fall from
the trees in terror and monkeys to scream for pity.' Hearing this,
the Angari men hastened to Dupé. The Hajji then said to me: 'Are those
things sufficient to establish our case, or must I drive in a village
full?' I said that three witnesses amply established any case, but as
yet, I said, the Hajji had not offered his slaves for sale. It is true,
as our Sahib said just now, there is one fine for catching slaves, and
yet another for making to sell them. And it was the double fine that
we needed, Sahib, for our Sahib's cotton-play. We had fore-arranged
all this with Bulaki Ram, who knows the English Law, and, I thought the
Hajji remembered, but he grew angry, and cried out: 'O God, Refuge of
the Afflicted, must I, who am what I am, peddle this dog's meat by the
roadside to gain his delight for my heart's delight?' None the less, he
admitted it was the English Law, and so he offered me the six--five--in
a small voice, with an averted head. The Sheshaheli do not smell of sour
milk as heathen should. They smell like leopards, Sahib. This is because
they eat men.”

“Maybe,” said Strickland. “But where were thy wits? One witness is not
sufficient to establish the fact of a sale.”

“What could we do, Sahib? There was the Hajji's reputation to consider.
We could not have called in a heathen witness for such a thing. And,
moreover, the Sahib forgets that the defendant himself was making this
case. He would not contest his own evidence. Otherwise, I know the law
of evidence well enough.

“So then we went to Dupé, and while Bulaki Ram waited among the Angari
men, I ran to see our Sahib in bed. His eyes were very bright, and his
mouth was full of upside-down orders, but the old woman had not loosened
her hair for death. The Hajji said: 'Be quick with my trial. I am not
Job!' The Hajji was a learned man. We made the trial swiftly to a sound
of soothing voices round the bed. Yet--yet, because no man can be sure
whether a Sahib of that blood sees, or does not see, we made it strictly
in the manner of the forms of the English Law. Only the witnesses and
the slaves and the prisoner we kept without for his nose's sake.”

“Then he did not see the prisoner?” said Strickland.

“I stood by to shackle up an Angari in case he should demand it, but by
God's favour he was too far fevered to ask for one. It is quite true
he signed the papers. It is quite true he saw the money put away in the
safe--two hundred and ten English pounds and it is quite true that the
gold wrought on him as a strong cure. But as to his seeing the prisoner,
and having speech with the man-eaters--the Hajji breathed all that on
his forehead to sink into his sick brain. A little, as ye have heard,
has remained.... Ah, but when the fever broke, and our Sahib called
for the fine-book, and the thin little picture-books from Europe with
the pictures of ploughs and hoes, and cotton-mills--ah, then he
laughed as he used to laugh, Sahib. It was his heart's desire, this
cotton-play. The Hajji loved him, as who does not? It was a little,
little arrangement, Sahib, of which--is it necessary to tell all the
world?”

“And when didst thou know who the Hajji was?” said Strickland.

“Not for a certainty till he and our Sahib had returned from their
visit to the Sheshaheli country. It is quite true as our Sahib says, the
man-eaters lay flat around his feet, and asked for spades to cultivate
cotton. That very night, when I was cooking the dinner, the Hajji said
to me: 'I go to my own place, though God knows whether the Man with the
Stone Eyes have left me an ox, a slave, or a woman.' I said: 'Thou art
then That One?' The Hajji said: 'I am ten thousand rupees reward into
thy hand. Shall we make another law-case and get more cotton machines
for the boy?' I said: 'What dog am I to do this? May God prolong thy
life a thousand years!' The Hajji said: 'Who has seen to-morrow? God has
given me as it were a son in my old age, and I praise Him. See that the
breed is not lost!'

“He walked then from the cooking-place to our Sahib's office-table under
the tree, where our Sahib held in his hand a blue envelope of Service
newly come in by runner from the North. At this, fearing evil news for
the Hajji, I would have restrained him, but he said: 'We be both Great
Ones. Neither of us will fail.' Our Sahib looked up to invite the Hajji
to approach before he opened the letter, but the Hajji stood off till
our Sahib had well opened and well read the letter. Then the Hajji said:
'Is it permitted to say farewell?' Our Sahib stabbed the letter on the
file with a deep and joyful breath and cried a welcome. The Hajji said:
'I go to my own place,' and he loosed from his neck a chained heart
of ambergris set in soft gold and held it forth. Our Sahib snatched
it swiftly in the closed fist, down turned, and said 'If thy name be
written hereon, it is needless, for a name is already engraved on my
heart.' The Hajji said: 'And on mine also is a name engraved; but there
is no name on the amulet.' The Hajji stooped to our Sahib's feet, but
our Sahib raised and embraced him, and the Hajji covered his mouth with
his shoulder-cloth, because it worked, and so he went away.”

“And what order was in the Service letter?” Stalky murmured.

“Only an order for our Sahib to write a report on some new cattle
sickness. But all orders come in the same make of envelope. We could not
tell what order it might have been.”

“When he opened the letter--my son--made he no sign? A cough? An oath?”
 Strickland asked.

“None, Sahib. I watched his hands. They did not shake. Afterward he
wiped his face, but he was sweating before from the heat.”

“Did he know? Did he know who the Hajji was?” said the Infant in
English.

“I am a poor man. Who can say what a Sahib of that get knows or does not
know? But the Hajji is right. The breed should not be lost. It is not
very hot for little children in Dupé, and as regards nurses, my sister's
cousin at Jull--”

“H'm! That is the boy's own concern. I wonder if his Chief ever knew?”
 said Strickland.

“Assuredly,” said Imam Din. “On the night before our Sahib went down to
the sea, the Great Sahib--the Man with the Stone Eyes--dined with him in
his camp, I being in charge of the table. They talked a long while and
the Great Sahib said: 'What didst thou think of That One?' (We do not
say Ibn Makarrah yonder.) Our Sahib said: 'Which one?' The Great Sahib
said: 'That One which taught thy man-eaters to grow cotton for thee. He
was in thy District three months to my certain knowledge, and I looked
by every runner that thou wouldst send me in his head.' Our Sahib said:
'If his head had been needed, another man should have been appointed to
govern my District, for he was my friend.' The Great Sahib laughed and
said: 'If I had needed a lesser man in thy place be sure I would have
sent him, as, if I had needed the head of That One, be sure I would have
sent men to bring it to me. But tell me now, by what means didst thou
twist him to thy use and our profit in this cotton-play?' Our Sahib
said: 'By God, I did not use that man in any fashion whatever. He was
my friend.' The Great Sahib said: 'Toh Vac! (Bosh!) Tell!' Our Sahib
shook his head as he does--as he did when a child--and they looked at
each other like sword-play men in the ring at a fair. The Great Sahib
dropped his eyes first and he said: 'So be it. I should perhaps have
answered thus in my youth. No matter. I have made treaty with That One
as an ally of the State. Some day he shall tell me the tale.' Then I
brought in fresh coffee, and they ceased. But I do not think That One
will tell the Great Sahib more than our Sahib told him.”

“Wherefore?” I asked.

“Because they are both Great Ones, and I have observed in my life
that Great Ones employ words very little between each other in their
dealings; still less when they speak to a third concerning those
dealings. Also they profit by silence.... Now I think that the
mother has come down from the room, and I will go rub his feet till he
sleeps.”

His ears had caught Agnes's step at the stair-head and presently she
passed us on her way to the music room humming the Magnificat.




THE NEW KNIGHTHOOD

            Who gives him the Bath?
              “I,” said the wet,
            Rank Jungle-sweat,
              “I'll give him the Bath!”

            Who'll sing the psalms?
              “We,” said the Palms.
            “Ere the hot wind becalms,
              We'll sing the psalms.”

            Who lays on the sword?
              “I,” said the Sun,
            “Before he has done,
              I'll lay on the sword.”

            Who fastens his belt?
              “I,” said Short-Rations,
            “I know all the fashions
              Of tightening a belt!”

            Who buckles his spur?
              “I,” said his Chief,
            Exacting and brief,
              “I'll give him the spur.”

            Who'll shake his hand?
              “I,” said the Fever,
            “And I'm no deceiver,
              I'll shake his hand.”

            Who brings him the wine?
              “I,” said Quinine,
            “It's a habit of mine,
              I'll come with his wine.”

            Who'll put him to proof?
              “I,” said All Earth,
            “Whatever he's worth,
              I'll put to the proof.”

            Who'll choose him for Knight?
              “I,” said his Mother,
            “Before any other,
              My very own knight!”

         And after this fashion, adventure to seek,
         Was Sir Galahad made--as it might be last week!




THE PUZZLER

I had not seen Penfentenyou since the Middle Nineties, when he was
Minister of Ways and Woodsides in De Thouar's first Administration. Last
summer, though he nominally held the same portfolio, he was his Colony's
Premier in all but name, and the idol of his own province, which is two
and a half times the size of England. Politically, his creed was his
growing country; and he came over to England to develop a Great Idea in
her behalf.

Believing that he had put it in train, I made haste to welcome him to my
house for a week.

That he was chased to my door by his own Agent-General in a motor; that
they turned my study into a Cabinet Meeting which I was not invited to
attend; that the local telegraph all but broke down beneath the strain
of hundred word coded cables; and that I practically broke into the
house of a stranger to get him telephonic facilities on a Sunday, are
things I overlook. What I objected to was his ingratitude, while I thus
tore up England to help him. So I said: “Why on earth didn't you see
your Opposite Number in Town instead of bringing your office work here?”

“Eh? Who?” said he, looking up from his fourth cable since lunch.

“See the English Minister for Ways and Woodsides.”

“I saw him,” said Penfentenyou, without enthusiasm.

It seemed that he had called twice on the gentleman, but without an
appointment--(“I thought if I wasn't big enough, my business was”)--and
each time had found him engaged. A third party intervening, suggested
that a meeting might be arranged if due notice were given.

“Then,” said Penfentenyou, “I called at the office at ten o'clock.”

“But they'd be in bed,” I cried.

“One of the babies was awake. He told me that--that 'my sort of
questions'”--he slapped the pile of cables--“were only taken between 11
and 2 P.M. So I waited.”

“And when you got to business?” I asked.

He made a gesture of despair. “It was like talking to children. They'd
never heard of it.”

“And your Opposite Number?”

Penfentenyou described him.

“Hush! You mustn't talk like that!” I shuddered. “He's one of the best
of good fellows. You should meet him socially.”

“I've done that too,” he said. “Have you?”

“Heaven forbid!” I cried; “but that's the proper thing to say.”

“Oh, he said all the proper things. Only I thought as this was England
that they'd more or less have the hang of all the--general hang-together
of my Idea. But I had to explain it from the beginning.”

“Ah! They'd probably mislaid the papers,” I said, and I told him
the story of a three-million pound insurrection caused by a deputy
Under-Secretary sitting upon a mass of green-labelled correspondence
instead of reading it.

“I wonder it doesn't happen every week,” he answered. “D'you mind my
having the Agent-General to dinner again tonight? I'll wire, and he can
motor down.”

The Agent-General arrived two hours later, a patient and expostulating
person, visibly torn between the pulling Devil of a rampant Colony,
and the placid Baker of a largely uninterested England. But with
Penfentenyou behind him he had worked; for he told us that Lord
Lundie--the Law Lord was--the final authority on the legal and
constitutional aspects of the Great Idea, and to him it must be
referred.

“Good Heavens alive!” thundered Penfentenyou. “I told you to get that
settled last Christmas.”

“It was the middle of the house-party season,” said the Agent-General
mildly. “Lord Lundie's at Credence Green now--he spends his holidays
there. It's only forty miles off.”

“Shan't I disturb his Holiness?” said Penfentenyou heavily. “Perhaps
'my sort of questions,”' he snorted, “mayn't be discussed except at
midnight.”

“Oh, don't be a child,” I said.

“What this country needs,” said Penfentenyou, “is--” and for ten minutes
he trumpeted rebellion.

“What you need is to pay for your own protection,” I cut in when he
drew breath, and I showed him a yellowish paper, supplied gratis by
Government, which is called Schedule D. To my merciless delight he had
never seen the thing before, and I completed my victory over him and
all the Colonies with a Brassey's “Naval Annual” and a “Statesman's Year
Book.”

The Agent-General interposed with agent-generalities (but they were
merely provocateurs) about Ties of Sentiment.

“They be blowed!” said Penfentenyou. “What's the good of sentiment
towards a Kindergarten?”

“Quite so. Ties of common funk are the things that bind us together; and
the sooner you new nations realize it the better. What you need is an
annual invasion. Then you'd grow up.”

“Thank you! Thank you!” said the Agent-General. “That's what I am always
trying to tell my people.”

“But, my dear fool,” Penfentenyou almost wept, “do you pretend that
these banana-fingered amateurs at home are grown up?”

“You poor, serious, pagan man,” I retorted, “if you take 'em that way,
you'll wreck your Great Idea.”

“Will you take him to Lord Lundie's to-morrow?” said the Agent-General
promptly.

“I suppose I must,” I said, “if you won't.”

“Not me! I'm going home,” said the Agent-General, and departed. I am
glad that I am no colony's Agent-General.

Penfentenyou continued to argue about naval contributions till 1.15
A.M., though I was victor from the first.

At ten o'clock I got him and his correspondence into the motor, and
he had the decency to ask whether he had been unpolished over-night.
I replied that I waited an apology. This he made excuse for renewed
arguments, and used wayside shows as illustrations of the decadence of
England.

For example we burst a tyre within a mile of Credence Green, and, to
save time, walked into the beautifully kept little village. His eye was
caught by a building of pale-blue tin, stencilled “Calvinist Chapel,”
 before whose shuttered windows an Italian organ-grinder with a
petticoated monkey was playing “Dolly Grey.”

“Yes. That's it!” snapped the egoist. “That's a parable of the general
situation in England. And look at those brutes!” A huge household
removals van was halted at a public-house. The men in charge were
drinking beer from blue and white mugs. It seemed to me a pretty sight,
but Penfentenyou said it represented Our National Attitude.

Lord Lundie's summer resting-place we learned was a farm, a little out
of the village, up a hill round which curled a high hedged road. Only
an initiated few spend their holidays at Credence Green, and they have
trained the householders to keep the place select. Penfentenyou made a
grievance of this as we walked up the lane, followed at a distance by
the organ-grinder.

“Suppose he is having a house-party,” he said: “Anything's possible in
this insane land.”

Just at that minute we found ourselves opposite an empty villa. Its roof
was of black slate, with bright unweathered ridge-tiling; its walls were
of blood-coloured brick, cornered and banded with vermiculated stucco
work, and there was cobalt, magenta, and purest apple-green window-glass
on either side of the front door. The whole was fenced from the road by
a low, brick-pillared, flint wall, topped with a cast-iron Gothic rail,
picked out in blue and gold.

Tight beds of geranium, calceolaria, and lobelia speckled the
glass-plat, from whose centre rose one of the finest araucarias (its
other name by the way is “monkey-puzzler”) that it has ever been my
lot to see. It must have been full thirty feet high, and its foliage
exquisitely answered the iron railings. Such bijou ne plus ultras,
replete with all the amenities, do not, as I pointed out to
Penfentenyou, transpire outside of England.

A hedge, swinging sharp right, flanked the garden, and above it on
a slope of daisy-dotted meadows we could see Lord Lundie's tiled and
half-timbered summer farmhouse. Of a sudden we heard voices behind the
tree--the fine full tones of the unembarrassed English, speaking to
their equals--that tore through the hedge like sleet through rafters.

“That it is not called 'monkey-puzzler' for nothing, I willingly
concede”--this was a rich and rolling note--“but on the other hand--”

“I submit, me lud, that the name implies that it might, could, would,
or should be ascended by a monkey, and not that the ascent is a physical
impossibility. I believe one of our South American spider monkeys
wouldn't hesitate... By Jove, it might be worth trying, if--”

This was a crisper voice than the first. A third, higher-pitched, and
full of pleasant affectations, broke in.

“Oh, practical men, there is no ape here. Why do you waste one of God's
own days on unprofitable discussion? Give me a match!”

“I've a good mind to make you demonstrate in your own person. Come on,
Bubbles! We'll make Jimmy climb!”

There was a sound of scuffling, broken by squeaks from Jimmy of the high
voice. I turned back and drew Penfentenyou into the side of the flanking
hedge. I remembered to have read in a society paper that Lord Lundie's
lesser name was “Bubbles.”

“What are they doing?” Penfentenyou said sharply. “Drunk?”

“Just playing! Superabundant vitality of the Race, you know. We'll watch
'em,” I answered. The noise ceased.

“My deliver,” Jimmy gasped. “The ram caught in the thicket, and--I'm the
only one who can talk Neapolitan! Leggo my collar!” He cried aloud in a
foreign tongue, and was answered from the gate.

“It's the Calvinistic organ-grinder,” I whispered. I had already found
a practicable break at the bottom of the hedge. “They're going to try to
make the monkey climb, I believe.”

“Here--let me look!” Penfentenyou flung himself down, and rooted till he
too broke a peep-hole. We lay side by side commanding the entire garden
at ten yards' range.

“You know 'em?” said Penfentenyou, as I made some noise or other.

“By sight only. The big fellow in flannels is Lord Lundie; the
light-built one with the yellow beard painted his picture at the last
Academy: He's a swell R.A., James Loman.”

“And the brown chap with the hands?”

“Tomling, Sir Christopher Tomling, the South American engineer who built
the--”

“San Juan Viaduct. I know,” said Penfentenyou. “We ought to have had him
with us.... Do you think a monkey would climb the tree?”

The organ-grinder at the gate fenced his beast with one arm as
Jimmy talked.

“Don't show off your futile accomplishments,” said Lord Lundie. “Tell
him it's an experiment. Interest him!”

“Shut up, Bubbles. You aren't in court,” Jimmy replied. “This needs
delicacy. Giuseppe says--”

“Interest the monkey,” the brown engineer interrupted. “He won't climb
for love. Cut up to the house and get some biscuits, Bubbles--sugar ones
and an orange or two. No need to tell our womenfolk.”

The huge white figure lobbed off at a trot which would not have
disgraced a boy of seventeen. I gathered from something Jimmy let fall
that the three had been at Harrow together.

“That Tomling has a head on his Shoulders,” muttered Penfentenyou. “Pity
we didn't get him for the Colony. But the question is, will the monkey
climb?”

“Be quick, Jimmy. Tell the man we'll give him five bob for the loan of
the beast. Now run the organ under the tree, and we'll dress it when
Bubbles comes back,” Sir Christopher cried.

“I've often wondered,” said Penfentenyou, “whether it would puzzle
a monkey?” He had forgotten the needs of his Growing Nation, and was
earnestly parting the white-thorn stems with his fingers.

   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *

Giuseppe and Jimmy did as they were told, the monkey following them with
a wary and malignant eye.

“Here's a discovery,” said Jimmy. “The singing part of this organ comes
off the wheels.” He spoke volubly to the proprietor. “Oh, it's so as
Giuseppe can take it to his room o' nights. And play it. D'you hear
that? The organ-grinder, after his day's crime, plays his accursed
machine for love. For love, Chris! And Michael Angelo was one of 'em!”

“Don't jaw! Tell him to take the beast's petticoat off,” said Sir
Christopher Tomling.

Lord Lundie returned, very little winded, through a gap higher up the
hedge.

“They're all out, thank goodness!” he cried, “but I've raided what I
could. _Marrons glacés_, candied fruit, and a bag of oranges.”

“Excellent!” said the world-renowned contractor.

“Jimmy, you're the light-weight; jump up on the organ and impale these
things on the leaves as I hand 'em!”

“I see,” said Jimmy, capering like a springbuck. “Upward and onward, eh?
First, he'll reach out for--how infernal prickly these leaves are!--this
biscuit. Next we'll lure him on--(that's about the reach of his
arm)--with the _marron glacé_, and then he'll open out this orange. How
human! How like your ignoble career, Bubbles!”

With care and elaboration they ornamented that tree's lower branches
with sugar-topped biscuits, oranges, bits of banana, and _marrons glacés_
till it looked a very ape's path to Paradise.

“Unchain the Gyascutis!” said Sir Christopher commandingly. Giuseppe
placed the monkey atop of the organ, where the beast, misunderstanding,
stood on his head.

“He's throwing himself on the mercy of the Court, me lud,” said Jimmy.
“No--now he's interested. Now he's reaching after higher things. What
wouldn't I give to have here” (he mentioned a name not unhonoured in
British Art). “Ambition plucking apples of Sodom!” (the monkey had
pricked himself and was swearing). “Genius hampered by Convention? Oh,
there's a whole bushelful of allegories in it!”

“Give him time. He's balancing the probabilities,” said Lord Lundie.

The three closed round the monkey,--hanging on his every motion with
an earnestness almost equal to ours. The great judge's head--seamed and
vertical forehead, iron mouth, and pike-like under-jaw, all set on that
thick neck rising out of the white flannelled collar--was thrown against
the puckered green silk of the organ-front as it might have been a cameo
of Titus. Jimmy, with raised eyes and parted lips, fingered his grizzled
chestnut beard, and I was near enough to note, the capable beauty of his
hands. Sir Christopher stood a little apart, his arms folded behind his
back, one heavy brown boot thrust forward, chin in as curbed, and black
eyebrows lowered to shade the keen eyes.

Giuseppe's dark face between flashing earrings, a twisted rag of red and
yellow silk round his throat, turned from the reaching yearning monkey
to the pink and white biscuits spiked on the bronzed leafage. And upon
them all fell the serious and workmanlike sun of an English summer
forenoon.

“Fils de Saint Louis, montez au ciel!” said Lord Lundie suddenly in a
voice that made me think of Black Caps. I do not know what the
monkey thought, because at that instant he leaped off the organ and
disappeared.

There was a clash of broken glass behind the tree.

The monkey's face, distorted with passion, appeared at an upper window
of the house, and a starred hole in the stained-glass window to the left
of 'the front door showed the first steps of his upward path.

“We've got to catch him,” cried Sir Christopher. “Come along!”

They pushed at the door, which was unlocked.

“Yes. But consider the ethics of the case,” said Jimmy. “Isn't this
burglary or something, Bubbles?”

“Settle that when he's caught,” said Sir Christopher. “We're responsible
for the beast.”

A furious clanging of bells broke out of the empty house, followed by
muffed gurglings and trumpetings.

“What the deuce is that?” I asked, half aloud.

“The plumbing, of course,” said Penfentenyou. “What a pity! I believe
he'd have climbed if Lord Lundie hadn't put him off!”

“Wait a moment, Chris,” said Jimmy the interpreter; “Guiseppe says he
may answer to the music of his infancy. Giuseppe, therefore, will go
in with the organ. Orpheus with his lute, you know. Avante, Orpheus!
There's no Neapolitan for bathroom, but I fancy your friend is there.”

“I'm not going into another man's house with a hurdy-gurdy,” said Lord
Lundie, recoiling, as Giuseppe unshipped the working mechanism of the
organ (it developed a hang-down leg) from its wheels, slipped a strap
round his shoulders, and gave the handle a twist.

“Don't be a cad, Bubbles,” was Jimmy's answer. “You couldn't leave us
now if you were on the Woolsack. Play, Orpheus! The Cadi accompanies.”

   *    *    *     *   *    *    *    *    *


With a whoop, a buzz, and a crash, the organ sprang to life under
the hand of Giuseppe, and the procession passed through the
grained-to-imitate-walnut front door. A moment later we saw the monkey
ramping on the roof.

“He'll be all over the township in a minute if we don't head him,” said
Penfentenyou, leaping to his feet, and crashing into the garden. We
headed him with pebbles till he retired through a window to the tuneful
reminder that he had left a lot of little things behind him. As we
passed the front door it swung open, and showed Jimmy the artist sitting
at the bottom of a newly-cleaned staircase. He waggled his hands at us,
and when we entered we saw that the man was stricken speechless. His
eyes grew red--red like a ferret's--and what little breath he had
whistled shrilly. At first we thought it was a fit, and then we saw that
it was mirth--the inopportune mirth of the Artistic Temperament.

The house palpitated to an infamous melody punctuated by the stump of
the barrel-organ's one leg, as Giuseppe, above, moved from room to room
after his rebel slave. Now and again a floor shook a little under the
combined rushes of Lord Lundie and Sir Christopher Tomling, who gave
many and contradictory orders. But when they could they cursed Jimmy
with splendid thoroughness.

“Have you anything to do with the house?” panted Jimmy at last. “Because
we're using it just now.” He gulped. “And I'm--ah--keeping cavè.”

“All right,” said Penfentenyou, and shut the hall door.

“Jimmy, you unspeakable blackguard, Jimmy, you cur! You coward!”
 (Lord Lundie's voice overbore the flood of melody.) “Come up here!
Giussieppe's saying something we don't understand.”

Jimmy listened and interpreted between hiccups.

“He says you'd better play the organ, Bubbles, and let him do the
stalking. The monkey knows him.”

“By Jove, he's quite right,” said Sir Christopher from the landing.
“Take it, Bubbles, at once.”

“My God!” said Lord Lundie in horror.

The chase reverberated over our heads, from the attics to the first
floor and back again. Bodies and Voices met in collision and argument,
and once or twice the organ hit walls and doors. Then it broke forth in
a new manner.

“He's playing it,” said Jimmy. “I know his acute Justinian ear. Are you
fond of music?”

“I think Lord Lundie plays very well for a beginner,” I ventured.

“Ah! That's the trained legal intellect. Like mastering a brief. I
haven't got it.” He wiped his eyes and shook.

“Hi!” said Penfentenyou, looking through the stained glass window down
the garden. “What's that!”

   *    *    *     *   *    *    *    *    *


A household removals van, in charge of four men, had halted at the
gate. A husband and his wife householders beyond question--quavered
irresolutely up the path. He looked tired. She was certainly cross.
In all this haphazard world the last couple to understand a scientific
experiment.

I laid hands on Jimmy--the clamour above drowning speech and with
Penfentenyou's aid, propped him against the window, that he should see.

He saw, nodded, fell as an umbrella can fall, and kneeling, beat his
forehead on the shut door. Penfentenyou slid the bolt.

The furniture men reinforced the two figures on the path, and advanced,
spreading generously.

“Hadn't we better warn them up-stairs?” I suggested:

“No. I'll die first!” said Jimmy. “I'm pretty near it now. Besides, they
called me names.”

I turned from the Artist to the Administrator.

“Ceteris paribus, I think we'd better be going,” said Penfentenyou,
dealer in crises.

“Ta--take me with you,” said Jimmy. “I've no reputation to lose, but I'd
like to watch 'em from--er--outside the picture.”

“There's always a modus vivendi,” Penfentenyou murmured, and tiptoed
along the hall to a back door, which he opened quite silently. We passed
into a tangle of gooseberry bushes where, at his statesmanlike example,
we crawled on all fours, and regained the hedge.

Here we lay up, secure in our alibi.

“But your firm,”--the woman was wailing to the furniture removals
men--“your firm promised me everything should be in yesterday. And it's
to-day! You should have been here yesterday!”

“The last tenants ain't out yet, lydy,” said one of them.

Lord Lundie was rapidly improving in technique, though organ-grinding,
unlike the Law, is more of a calling than a trade, and he hung
occasionally on a dead centre. Giuseppe, I think, was singing, but I
could not understand the drift of Sir Christopher's remarks. They were
Spanish.

The woman said something we did not catch.

“You might 'ave sub-let it,” the man insisted. “Or your gentleman 'ere
might.”

“But I didn't. Send for the Police at once.”

“I wouldn't do that, lydy. They're only fruit pickers on a beano. They
aren't particular where they sleep.”

“D'you mean they've been sleeping there? I only had it cleaned last
week. Get them out.”

“Oh, if you say so, we'll 'ave 'em out of it in two twos. Alf, fetch me
the spare swingle-bar.”

“Don't! You'll knock the paint off the door. Get them out!”

“What the 'ell else am I trying to do for you, lydy?” the man answered
with pathos; but the woman wheeled on her mate.

“Edward! They're all drunk here, and they're all mad there. Do
something!” she said.

Edward took one short step forward, and sighed “Hullo!” in the direction
of the turbulent house. The woman walked up and down, the very figure
of Domestic Tragedy. The furniture men swayed a little on their heels,
and--

“Got him!” The shout rang through all the windows at once. It was
followed by a blood-hound-like bay from Sir Christopher, a maniacal
prestissimo on the organ, and loud cries, for Jimmy. But Jimmy, at my
side, rolled his congested eyeballs, owl-wise.

“I never knew them,” he said. “I'm an orphan.”

   *    *    *     *   *    *    *    *    *


The front door opened, and the three came forth to short-lived triumph.
I had never before seen a Law Lord dressed as for tennis, with a
stump-leg barrel-organ strapped to his shoulder. But it is a shy bird
in this plumage. Lord Lundie strove to disembarrass himself of his
accoutrements much as an ill-trained Punch and Judy dog tries to escape
backwards through his frilled collar. Sir Christopher, covered with
limewash, cherished a bleeding thumb, and the almost crazy monkey tore
at Giuseppe's hair.

The men on both sides reeled, but the woman stood her ground. “Idiots!”
 she said, and once more, “Idiots!”

I could have gladdened a few convicts of my acquaintance with a
photograph of Lord Lundie at that instant.

“Madam,” he began, wonderfully preserving the roll in his voice, “it was
a monkey.”

Sir Christopher sucked his thumb and nodded.

“Take it away and go,” she replied. “Go away!”

I would have gone, and gladly, on this permission, but these still
strong men must ever be justifying themselves. Lord Lundie turned to the
husband, who for the first time spoke.

“I have rented this house. I am moving in,” he said.

“We ought to have been in yesterday,” the woman interrupted.

“Yes. We ought to have been in yesterday. Have you slept there
overnight?” said the man peevishly.

“No; I assure you we haven't,” said Lord Lundie.

“Then go away. Go quite away,” cried the woman.

They went--in single file down the path. They went silently, restrapping
the organ on its wheels, and rechaining the monkey to the organ.

“Damn it all!” said Penfentenyou. “They do face the music, and they do
stick by each other in private life!”

“Ties of Common Funk,” I answered. Giuseppe ran to the gate and fled
back to the possible world. Lord Lundie and Sir Christopher, constrained
by tradition, paced slowly.

Then it came to pass that the woman, who walked behind them, lifted up
her eyes, and beheld the tree which they had dressed.

“Stop!” she called; and they stopped. “Who did that?”

There was no answer. The Eternal Bad Boy in every man hung its head
before the Eternal Mother in every woman.

“Who put these disgusting things there?” she repeated.

Suddenly Penfentenyou, Premier of his Colony in all but name, left Jimmy
and me, and appeared at the gate. (If he is not turned out of office,
that is how he will appear on the Day of Armageddon.)

“Well done you!” he cried zealously, and doffed his hat to the woman.
“Have you any children, madam?” he demanded.

“Yes, two. They should have been here to-day. The firm promised--”

“Then we're not a minute too soon. That monkey escaped. It was a very
dangerous beast. 'Might have frightened your children into fits. All the
organ-grinder's fault! A most lucky thing these gentlemen caught it when
they did. I hope you aren't badly mauled, Sir Christopher?” Shaken as
I was (I wanted to get away and laugh) I could not but admire the
scoundrel's consummate tact in leading his second highest trump. An ass
would have introduced Lord Lundie and they would not have believed him.

It took the trick. The couple smiled, and gave respectful thanks for
their deliverance by such hands from such perils.

“Not in the least,” said Lord Lundie. “Anybody--any father--would have
done as much, and--pray don't apologize--your mistake was quite natural.”
 A furniture man sniggered here, and Lord Lundie rolled an Eye of Doom on
their ranks. “By the way, if you have trouble with these persons--they
seem to have taken as much as is good for them--please let me know.
Er--Good morning!”

They turned into the lane.

“Heavens!” said Jimmy, brushing himself down. “Who's that real man
with the real head?” and we hurried after them, for they were running
unsteadily, squeaking like rabbits as they ran. We overtook them in a
little nut wood half a mile up the road, where they had turned aside,
and were rolling. So we rolled with them, and ceased not till we had
arrived at the extremity of exhaustion.

“You--you saw it all, then?” said Lord Lundie, rebuttoning his
nineteen-inch collar.

“I saw it was a vital question from the first,” responded Penfentenyou,
and blew his nose.

“It was. By the way, d'you mind telling me your name?”


Summa. Penfentenyou's Great Idea has gone through, a little chipped
at the edges, but in fine and far-reaching shape. His Opposite Number
worked at it like a mule--a bewildered mule, beaten from behind, coaxed
from in front, and propped on either soft side by Lord Lundie of the
compressed mouth and the searing tongue.

Sir Christopher Tomling has been ravished from the Argentine, where,
after all, he was but preparing trade-routes for hostile peoples, and
now adorns the forefront of Penfentenyou's Advisory Board. This was an
unforeseen extra, as was Jimmy's gratis full-length--(it will be in this
year's Academy) of Penfentenyou, who has returned to his own place.

Now and again, from afar off, between the slam and bump of his shifting
scenery, the glare of his manipulated limelight, and the controlled
rolling of his thunder-drums, I catch his voice, lifted in encouragement
and advice to his fellow-countrymen. He is quite sound on Ties of
Sentiment, and--alone of Colonial Statesmen ventures to talk of the Ties
of Common Funk.

Herein I have my reward.




THE PUZZLER

 The Celt in all his variants from Builth to Ballyhoo,
 His mental processes are plain--one knows what he will do,
 And can logically predicate his finish by his start:
 But the English--ah, the English!--they are quite a race apart.

 Their psychology is bovine, their outlook crude and rare;
 They abandon vital matters to be tickled with a straw;
 But the straw that they were tickled with--the chaff that
       they were fed with--
 They convert into a weaver's beam to break their foeman's head
     with.

  For undemocratic reasons and for motives not of State,
  They arrive at their conclusions--largely inarticulate.
  Being void of self-expression they confide their views to none;
  But sometimes, in a smoking-room, one learns why things were
      done.

  In telegraphic sentences, half swallowed at the ends,
  They hint a matter's inwardness--and there the matter ends.
  And while the Celt is talking from Valencia to Kirkwall,
  The English--ah, the English!--don't say anything at all!




LITTLE FOXES

A TALE OF THE GIHON HUNT

A fox came out of his earth on the banks of the Great River Gihon,
which waters Ethiopia. He saw a white man riding through the dry
dhurra-stalks, and, that his destiny might be fulfilled, barked at him.

The rider drew rein among the villagers round his stirrup.

“What,” said he, “is that?”

“That,” said the Sheikh of the village, “is a fox, O Excellency Our
Governor.”

“It is not, then, a jackal?”

“No jackal, but Abu Hussein the father of cunning.”

“Also,” the white man spoke half aloud, “I am Mudir of this Province.”

“It is true,” they cried. “Ya, Saart el Mudir” (O Excellency Our
Governor).

The Great River Gihon, well used to the moods of kings, slid between his
mile-wide banks toward the sea, while the Governor praised God in a loud
and searching cry never before heard by the river.

When he had lowered his right forefinger from behind his right ear, the
villagers talked to him of their crops--barley, dhurrah, millet, onions,
and the like. The Governor stood in his stirrups. North he looked up
a strip of green cultivation a few hundred yards wide that lay like a
carpet between the river and the tawny line of the desert. Sixty miles
that strip stretched before him, and as many behind. At every half-mile
a groaning water-wheel lifted the soft water from the river to the crops
by way of a mud-built aqueduct. A foot or so wide was the water-channel;
five foot or more high was the bank on which it ran, and its base was
broad in proportion. Abu Hussein, misnamed the Father of Cunning, drank
from the river below his earth, and his shadow was long in the low sun.
He could not understand the loud cry which the Governor had cried.

The Sheikh of the village spoke of the crops from which the rulers of
all lands draw revenue; but the Governor's eyes were fixed, between his
horse's ears, on the nearest water-channel.

“Very like a ditch in Ireland,” he murmured, and smiled, dreaming of a
razor-topped bank in distant Kildare.

Encouraged by that smile, the Sheikh continued. “When crops fail it is
necessary to remit taxation. Then it is a good thing, O Excellency
Our Governor, that you come and see the crops which have failed, and
discover that we have not lied.”

“Assuredly.” The Governor shortened his reins. The horse cantered on,
rose at the embankment of the water-channel, changed leg cleverly on
top, and hopped down in a cloud of golden dust.

Abu Hussein from his earth watched with interest. He had never before
seen such things.

“Assuredly,” the Governor repeated, and came back by the way he had
gone. “It is always best to see for one's self.”

An ancient and still bullet-speckled stern-wheel steamer, with a barge
lashed to her side, came round the river bend. She whistled to tell the
Governor his dinner was ready, and the horse, seeing his fodder piled on
the barge, whinnied back.

“Moreover,” the Sheikh added, “in the days of the Oppression the Emirs
and their creatures dispossessed many people of their lands. All up and
down the river our people are waiting to return to their lawful fields.”

“Judges have been appointed to settle that matter,” said the Governor.
“They will presently come in steamers and hear the witnesses.”

“Wherefore? Did the Judges kill the Emirs? We would rather be judged by
the men who executed God's judgment on the Emirs. We would rather abide
by your decision, O Excellency Our Governor.”

The Governor nodded. It was a year since he had seen the Emirs stretched
close and still round the reddened sheepskin where lay El Mahdi, the
Prophet of God. Now there remained no trace of their dominion except the
old steamer, once part of a Dervish flotilla, which was his house and
office. She sidled into the shore, lowered a plank, and the Governor
followed his horse aboard.

Lights burned on her till late, dully reflected in the river that tugged
at her mooring-ropes. The Governor read, not for the first time, the
administration reports of one John Jorrocks, M.F.H.

“We shall need,” he said suddenly to his Inspector, “about ten couple.
I'll get 'em when I go home. You'll be Whip, Baker?”

The Inspector, who was not yet twenty-five, signified his assent in the
usual manner, while Abu Hussein barked at the vast desert moon.

“Ha!” said the Governor, coming out in his pyjamas, “we'll be giving you
capivi in another three months, my friend.”

     *      *      *      *      *

It was four, as a matter of fact, ere a steamer with a melodious
bargeful of hounds anchored at that landing. The Inspector leaped down
among them, and the homesick wanderers received him as a brother.

“Everybody fed 'em everything on board ship, but they're real dainty
hounds at bottom,” the Governor explained. “That's Royal you've got hold
of--the pick of the bunch--and the bitch that's got hold of you--she's
a little excited--is May Queen. Merriman, out of Cottesmore Maudlin, you
know.”

“I know. 'Grand old betch with the tan eyebrows,'” the Inspector cooed.
“Oh, Ben! I shall take an interest in life now. Hark to 'em! O hark!”

Abu Hussein, under the high bank, went about his night's work. An eddy
carried his scent to the barge, and three villages heard the crash of
music that followed. Even then Abu Hussein did not know better than to
bark in reply.

“Well, what about my Province?” the Governor asked.

“Not so bad,” the Inspector answered, with Royal's head between his
knees. “Of course, all the villages want remission of taxes, but, as far
as I can see, the whole country's stinkin' with foxes. Our trouble will
be choppin' 'em in cover. I've got a list of the only villages entitled
to any remission. What d'you call this flat-sided, blue-mottled beast
with the jowl?”

“Beagle-boy. I have my doubts about him. Do you think we can get two
days a week?”

“Easy; and as many byes as you please. The Sheikh of this village here
tells me that his barley has failed, and he wants a fifty per cent
remission.”

“We'll begin with him to-morrow, and look at his crops as we go. Nothing
like personal supervision,” said the Governor.

They began at sunrise. The pack flew off the barge in every direction,
and, after gambols, dug like terriers at Abu Hussein's many earths. Then
they drank themselves pot-bellied on Gihon water while the Governor and
the Inspector chastised them with whips. Scorpions were added; for May
Queen nosed one, and was removed to the barge lamenting. Mystery (a
puppy, alas!) met a snake, and the blue-mottled Beagle-boy (never a
dainty hound) ate that which he should have passed by. Only Royal, of
the Belvoir tan head and the sad, discerning eyes, made any attempt to
uphold the honour of England before the watching village.

“You can't expect everything,” said the Governor after breakfast.

“We got it, though--everything except foxes. Have you seen May Queen's
nose?” said the Inspector.

“And Mystery's dead. We'll keep 'em coupled next time till we get well
in among the crops. I say, what a babbling body-snatcher that Beagle-boy
is! Ought to be drowned!”

“They bury people so damn casual hereabouts. Give him another chance,”
 the Inspector pleaded, not knowing that he should live to repent most
bitterly.

“Talkin' of chances,” said the Governor, “this Sheikh lies about his
barley bein' a failure. If it's high enough to hide a hound at this time
of year, it's all right. And he wants a fifty per cent remission, you
said?”

“You didn't go on past the melon patch where I tried to turn Wanderer.
It's all burned up from there on to the desert. His other water-wheel
has broken down, too,” the Inspector replied.

“Very good. We'll split the difference and allow him twenty-five per
cent off. Where'll we meet to-morrow?”

“There's some trouble among the villages down the river about their
land-titles. It's good goin' ground there, too,” the Inspector said.

The next meet, then, was some twenty miles down the river, and the pack
were not enlarged till they were fairly among the fields. Abu Hussein
was there in force--four of him. Four delirious hunts of four minutes
each--four hounds per fox--ended in four earths just above the river.
All the village looked on.

“We forgot about the earths. The banks are riddled with 'em. This'll
defeat us,” said the Inspector.

“Wait a moment!” The Governor drew forth a sneezing hound. “I've just
remembered I'm Governor of these parts.”

“Then turn out a black battalion to stop for us. We'll need 'em, old
man.”

The Governor straightened his back. “Give ear, O people!” he cried. “I
make a new Law!”

The villagers closed in. He called:--

“Henceforward I will give one dollar to the man on whose land Abu
Hussein is found. And another dollar”--he held up the coin--“to the man
on whose land these dogs shall kill him. But to the man on whose land
Abu Hussein shall run into a hole such as is this hole, I will give not
dollars, but a most unmeasurable beating. Is it understood?”

“Our Excellency,” a man stepped forth, “on my land Abu Hussein was found
this morning. Is it not so, brothers?”

None denied. The Governor tossed him over four dollars without a word.

“On my land they all went into their holes,” cried another. “Therefore I
must be beaten.”

“Not so. The land is mine, and mine are the beatings.”

This second speaker thrust forward his shoulders already bared, and the
villagers shouted.

“Hullo! Two men anxious to be licked? There must be some swindle about
the land,” said the Governor. Then in the local vernacular: “What are
your rights to the beating?”

As a river-reach changes beneath a slant of the sun, that which had been
a scattered mob changed to a court of most ancient justice. The hounds
tore and sobbed at Abu Hussein's hearthstone, all unnoticed among
the legs of the witnesses, and Gihon, also accustomed to laws, purred
approval.

“You will not wait till the Judges come up the river to settle the
dispute?” said the Governor at last.

“No!” shouted all the village save the man who had first asked to be
beaten. “We will abide by Our Excellency's decision. Let Our Excellency
turn out the creatures of the Emirs who stole our land in the days of
the Oppression.”

“And thou sayest?” the Governor turned to the man who had first asked to
be beaten.

“I say _I_ will wait till the wise Judges come down in the steamer.
Then I will bring my many witnesses,” he replied.

“He is rich. He will bring many witnesses,” the village Sheikh muttered.

“No need. Thy own mouth condemns thee!” the Governor cried. “No man
lawfully entitled to his land would wait one hour before entering upon
it. Stand aside!” The man, fell back, and the village jeered him.

The second claimant stooped quickly beneath the lifted hunting-crop. The
village rejoiced.

“Oh, Such an one; Son of such an one,” said the Governor, prompted by
the Sheikh, “learn, from the day when I send the order, to block up all
the holes where Abu Hussein may hide--on--thy--land!”

The light flicks ended. The man stood up triumphant. By that accolade
had the Supreme Government acknowledged his title before all men.

While the village praised the perspicacity of the Governor, a naked,
pock-marked child strode forward to the earth, and stood on one leg,
unconcerned as a young stork.

“Hal” he said, hands behind his back. “This should be blocked up with
bundles of dhurra stalks--or, better, bundles of thorns.”

“Better thorns,” said the Governor. “Thick ends innermost.”

The child nodded gravely and squatted on the sand.

“An evil day for thee, Abu Hussein,” he shrilled into the mouth of the
earth. “A day of obstacles to thy flagitious returns in the morning.”

“Who is it?” the Governor asked the Sheikh. “It thinks.”

“Farag the Fatherless. His people were slain in the days of the
Oppression. The man to whom Our Excellency has awarded the land is, as
it were, his maternal uncle.”

“Will it come with me and feed the big dogs?” said the Governor.

The other peering children drew back. “Run!” they cried. “Our Excellency
will feed Farag to the big dogs.”

“I will come,” said Farag. “And I will never go.” He threw his arm round
Royal's neck, and the wise beast licked his face.

“Binjamin, by Jove!” the Inspector cried.

“No!” said the Governor. “I believe he has the makings of a James Pigg!”

Farag waved his hand to his uncle, and led Royal on to the barge. The
rest of the pack followed.

     *      *      *      *      *

Gihon, that had seen many sports, learned to know the Hunt barge well.
He met her rounding his bends on grey December dawns to music wild and
lamentable as the almost forgotten throb of Dervish drums, when, high
above Royal's tenor bell, sharper even than lying Beagle-boy's falsetto
break, Farag chanted deathless war against Abu Hussein and all his seed.
At sunrise the river would shoulder her carefully into her place, and
listen to the rush and scutter of the pack fleeing up the gang-plank,
and the tramp of the Governor's Arab behind them. They would pass over
the brow into the dewless crops where Gihon, low and shrunken, could
only guess what they were about when Abu Hussein flew down the bank
to scratch at a stopped earth, and flew back into the barley again. As
Farag had foretold, it was evil days for Abu Hussein ere he learned to
take the necessary steps and to get away crisply. Sometimes Gihon saw
the whole procession of the Hunt silhouetted against the morning-blue,
bearing him company for many merry miles. At every half mile the horses
and the donkeys jumped the water-channels--up, on, change your leg, and
off again like figures in a zoetrope, till they grew small along the
line of waterwheels. Then Gibon waited their rustling return through
the crops, and took them to rest on his bosom at ten o'clock. While the
horses ate, and Farag slept with his head on Royal's flank, the Governor
and his Inspector worked for the good of the Hunt and his Province.

After a little time there was no need to beat any man for neglecting
his earths. The steamer's destination was telegraphed from waterwheel
to waterwheel, and the villagers stopped out and put to according. If an
earth were overlooked, it meant some dispute as to the ownership of the
land, and then and there the Hunt checked and settled it in this wise:
The Governor and the Inspector side by side, but the latter half a
horse's length to the rear; both bare-shouldered claimants well in
front; the villagers half-mooned behind them, and Farag with the pack,
who quite understood the performance, sitting down on the left. Twenty
minutes were enough to settle the most complicated case, for, as the
Governor said to a judge on the steamer, “One gets at the truth in a
hunting-field a heap quicker than in your lawcourts.”

“But when the evidence is conflicting?” the Judge suggested.

“Watch the field. They'll throw tongue fast enough if you're running a
wrong scent. You've never had an appeal from one of my decisions yet.”

The Sheikhs on horseback--the lesser folk on clever donkeys--the
children so despised by Farag soon understood that villages which
repaired their waterwheels and channels stood highest in the Governor's
favour. He bought their barley for his horses.

“Channels,” he said, “are necessary that we may all jump them. They are
necessary, moreover, for the crops. Let there be many wheels and sound
channels--and much good barley.”

“Without money,” replied an aged Sheikh, “there are no waterwheels.”

“I will lend the money,” said the Governor.

“At what interest, O Our Excellency?”

“Take you two of May Queen's puppies to bring up in your village in
such a manner that they do not eat filth, nor lose their hair, nor catch
fever from lying in the sun, but become wise hounds.”

“Like Ray-yal--not like Bigglebai?” (Already it was an insult along
the River to compare a man to the shifty anthropophagous blue-mottled
harrier.)

“Certainly, like Ray-yal--not in the least like Bigglebai. That shall be
the interest on the loan. Let the puppies thrive and the waterwheel be
built, and I shall be content,” said the Governor.

“The wheel shall be built, but, O Our Excellency, if by God's favour
the pups grow to be well-smellers, not filth-eaters, not unaccustomed to
their names, not lawless, who will do them and me justice at the time of
judging the young dogs?”

“Hounds, man, hounds! Ha-wands, O Sheikh, we call them in their
manhood.”

“The ha-wands when they are judged at the Sha-ho. I have unfriends down
the river to whom Our Excellency has also entrusted ha-wands to bring
up.”

“Puppies, man! Pah-peaz we call them, O Sheikh, in their childhood.”

“Pah-peat. My enemies may judge my pah-peaz unjustly at the Sha-ho. This
must be thought of.”

“I see the obstacle. Hear now! If the new waterwheel is built in a month
without oppression, thou, O Sheikh, shalt be named one of the judges to
judge the pah-peaz at the Sha-ho. Is it understood?”

“Understood. We will build the wheel. I and my seed are responsible for
the repayment of the loan. Where are my pah-peaz? If they eat fowls,
must they on any account eat the feathers?”

“On no account must they eat the feathers. Farag in the barge will tell
thee how they are to live.”

There is no instance of any default on the Governor's personal and
unauthorized loans, for which they called him the Father of Waterwheels.
But the first puppy-show at the capital needed enormous tact and the
presence of a black battalion ostentatiously drilling in the barrack
square to prevent trouble after the prize-giving.

But who can chronicle the glories of the Gihon Hunt--or their shames?
Who remembers the kill in the market-place, when the Governor bade the
assembled sheikhs and warriors observe how the hounds would instantly
devour the body of Abu Hussein; but how, when he had scientifically
broken it up, the weary pack turned from it in loathing, and Farag wept
because he said the world's face had been blackened? What men who have
not yet ridden beyond the sound of any horn recall the midnight run
which ended--Beagleboy leading--among tombs; the hasty whip-off, and the
oath, taken above bones, to forget the worry? The desert run, when Abu
Hussein forsook the cultivation, and made a six-mile point to earth in
a desolate khor--when strange armed riders on camels swooped out of a
ravine, and instead of giving battle, offered to take the tired hounds
home on their beasts. Which they did, and vanished.

Above all, who remembers the death of Royal, when a certain Sheikh
wept above the body of the stainless hound as it might have been his
son's--and that day the Hunt rode no more? The badly-kept log-book says
little of this, but at the end of their second season (forty-nine brace)
appears the dark entry: “New blood badly wanted. They are beginning to
listen to beagle-boy.”

     *      *      *      *      *

The Inspector attended to the matter when his leave fell due.

“Remember,” said the Governor, “you must get us the best blood in
England--real, dainty hounds--expense no object, but don't trust your
own judgment. Present my letters of introduction, and take what they
give you.”

The Inspector presented his letters in a society where they make much
of horses, more of hounds, and are tolerably civil to men who can
ride. They passed him from house to house, mounted him according to his
merits, and fed him, after five years of goat chop and Worcester sauce,
perhaps a thought too richly.

The seat or castle where he made his great coup does not much matter.
Four Masters of Foxhounds were at table, and in a mellow hour the
Inspector told them stories of the Gihon Hunt. He ended: “Ben said I
wasn't to trust my own judgment about hounds, but I think there ought to
be a special tariff for Empire-makers.”

As soon as his hosts could speak, they reassured him on this point.

“And now tell us about your first puppy-show all over again,” said one.

“And about the earth-stoppin'. Was that all Ben's own invention?” said
another.

“Wait a moment,” said a large, clean-shaven man--not an M.F.H.--at the
end of the table. “Are your villagers habitually beaten by your Governor
when they fail to stop foxes' holes?”

The tone and the phrase were enough even if, as the Inspector confessed
afterwards, the big, blue double-chinned man had not looked so like
Beagle-boy. He took him on for the honour of Ethiopia.

“We only hunt twice a week--sometimes three times. I've never known a
man chastised more than four times a week unless there's a bye.”

The large loose-lipped man flung his napkin down, came round the table,
cast himself into the chair next the Inspector, and leaned forward
earnestly, so that he breathed in the Inspector's face.

“Chastised with what?” he said.

“With the kourbash--on the feet. A kourbash is a strip of old hippo-hide
with a sort of keel on it, like the cutting edge of a boar's tusk. But
we use the rounded side for a first offender.”

“And do any consequences follow this sort of thing? For the victim, I
mean--not for you?”

“Ve-ry rarely. Let me be fair. I've never seen a man die under the lash,
but gangrene may set up if the kourbash has been pickled.”

“Pickled in what?” All the table was still and interested.

“In copperas, of course. Didn't you know that” said the Inspector.

“Thank God I didn't.” The large man sputtered visibly.

The Inspector wiped his face and grew bolder.

“You mustn't think we're careless about our earthstoppers. We've a Hunt
fund for hot tar. Tar's a splendid dressing if the toe-nails aren't
beaten off. But huntin' as large a country as we do, we mayn't be back
at that village for a month, and if the dressings ain't renewed, and
gangrene sets in, often as not you find your man pegging about on his
stumps. We've a well-known local name for 'em down the river. We call
'em the Mudir's Cranes. You see, I persuaded the Governor only to
bastinado on one foot.”

“On one foot? The Mudir's Cranes!” The large man turned purple to the
top of his bald head. “Would you mind giving me the local word for
Mudir's Cranes?”

From a too well-stocked memory the Inspector drew one short adhesive
word which surprises by itself even unblushing Ethiopia. He spelt it
out, saw the large man write it down on his cuff and withdraw. Then the
Inspector translated a few of its significations and implications to the
four Masters of Foxhounds. He left three days later with eight couple of
the best hounds in England--a free and a friendly and an ample gift from
four packs to the Gihon Hunt. He had honestly meant to undeceive the
large blue mottled man, but somehow forgot about it.

The new draft marks a new chapter in the Hunt's history. From an
isolated phenomenon in a barge it became a permanent institution with
brick-built kennels ashore, and an influence social, political, and
administrative, co-terminous with the boundaries of the province. Ben,
the Governor, departed to England, where he kept a pack of real dainty
hounds, but never ceased to long for the old lawless lot. His successors
were ex-officio Masters of the Gihon Hunt, as all Inspectors were Whips.
For one reason, Farag, the kennel huntsman, in khaki and puttees, would
obey nothing under the rank of an Excellency, and the hounds would obey
no one but Farag; for another, the best way of estimating crop returns
and revenue was by riding straight to hounds; for a third, though
Judges down the river issued signed and sealed land-titles to all lawful
owners, yet public opinion along the river never held any such title
valid till it had been confirmed, according to precedent, by the
Governor's hunting crop in the hunting field, above the wilfully
neglected earth. True, the ceremony had been cut down to three mere
taps on the shoulder, but Governors who tried to evade that much found
themselves and their office compassed about with a great cloud of
witnesses who took up their time with lawsuits and, worse still,
neglected the puppies. The older sheikhs, indeed, stood out for the
unmeasurable beatings of the old days--the sharper the punishment, they
argued, the surer the title; but here the hand of modern progress was
against them, and they contented themselves with telling tales of Ben
the first Governor, whom they called the Father of Waterwheels, and of
that heroic age when men, horses, and hounds were worth following.

This same Modern Progress which brought dog biscuit and brass water-taps
to the kennels was at work all over the world. Forces, Activities, and
Movements sprang into being, agitated themselves, coalesced, and, in
one political avalanche, overwhelmed a bewildered, and not in the least
intending it, England. The echoes of the New Era were borne into the
Province on the wings of inexplicable cables. The Gihon Hunt read
speeches and sentiments, and policies which amazed them, and they
thanked God, prematurely, that their Province was too far off, too hot,
and too hard worked to be reached by those speakers or their policies.
But they, with others, under-estimated the scope and purpose of the New
Era.

One by one, the Provinces of the Empire were hauled up and baited, hit
and held, lashed under the belly, and forced back on their haunches for
the amusement of their new masters in the parish of Westminster. One by
one they fell away, sore and angry, to compare stripes with each other
at the ends of the uneasy earth. Even so the Gihon Hunt, like Abu
Hussein in the old days, did not understand. Then it reached
them through the Press that they habitually flogged to death good
revenue-paying cultivators who neglected to stop earths; but that
the few, the very few who did not die under hippohide whips soaked in
copperas, walked about on their gangrenous ankle-bones, and were known
in derision as the Mudir's Cranes. The charges were vouched for in
the House of Commons by a Mr. Lethabie Groombride, who had formed a
Committee, and was disseminating literature. The Province groaned; the
Inspector--now an Inspector of Inspectors--whistled. He had forgotten
the gentleman who sputtered in people's faces.

“He shouldn't have looked so like Beagle-boy!” was his sole defence when
he met the Governor at breakfast on the steamer after a meet.

“You shouldn't have joked with an animal of that class,” said Peter the
Governor. “Look what Farag has brought me!”

It was a pamphlet, signed on behalf of a Committee by a lady secretary,
but composed by some person who thoroughly understood the language of
the Province. After telling the tale of the beatings, it recommended
all the beaten to institute criminal proceedings against their Governor,
and, as soon as might be, to rise against English oppression and
tyranny. Such documents were new in Ethiopia in those days.

The Inspector read the last half page. “But--but,” he stammered, “this
is impossible. White men don't write this sort of stuff.”

“Don't they, just?” said the Governor. “They get made Cabinet Ministers
for doing it too. I went home last year. I know.”

“It'll blow over,” said the Inspector weakly.

“Not it. Groombride is coming down here to investigate the matter in a
few days.”

“For himself?”

“The Imperial Government's behind him. Perhaps you'd like to look at my
orders.” The Governor laid down an uncoded cable. The whiplash to it
ran: “You will afford Mr. Groombride every facility for his inquiry,
and will be held responsible that no obstacles are put in his way to
the fullest possible examination of any witnesses which he may consider
necessary. He will be accompanied by his own interpreter, who must not
be tampered with.”

“That's to me--Governor of the Province!” said Peter the Governor.

“It seems about enough,” the Inspector answered.

Farag, kennel-huntsman, entered the saloon, as was his privilege.

“My uncle, who was beaten by the Father of Waterwheels, would approach,
O Excellency,” he said, “and there are others on the bank.”

“Admit,” said the Governor.

There tramped aboard sheikhs and villagers to the number of seventeen.
In each man's hand was a copy of the pamphlet; in each man's eye terror
and uneasiness of the sort that Governors spend and are spent to clear
away. Farag's uncle, now Sheikh of the village, spoke: “It is written in
this book, Excellency, that the beatings whereby we hold our lands are
all valueless. It is written that every man who received such a beating
from the Father of Waterwheels who slow the Emirs, should instantly
begin a lawsuit, because the title to his land is not valid.”

“It is so written. We do not wish lawsuits. We wish to hold the land as
it was given to us after the days of the Oppression,” they cried.

The Governor glanced at the Inspector. This was serious. To cast doubt
on the ownership of land means, in Ethiopia, the letting in of waters,
and the getting out of troops.

“Your titles are good,” said the Governor. The Inspector confirmed with
a nod.

“Then what is the meaning of these writings which came from down the
river where the Judges are?” Farag's uncle waved his copy. “By whose
order are we ordered to slay you, O Excellency Our Governor?”

“It is not written that you are to slay me.”

“Not in those very words, but if we leave an earth unstopped, it is
the same as though we wished to save Abu Hussein from the hounds. These
writings say: 'Abolish your rulers.' How can we abolish except we kill?
We hear rumours of one who comes from down the river soon to lead us to
kill.”

“Fools!” said the Governor. “Your titles are good. This is madness!”

“It is so written,” they answered like a pack.

“Listen,” said the Inspector smoothly. “I know who caused the writings
to be written and sent. He is a man of a blue-mottled jowl, in aspect
like Bigglebai who ate unclean matters. He will come up the river and
will give tongue about the beatings.”

“Will he impeach our land-titles? An evil day for him!”

“Go slow, Baker,” the Governor whispered. “They'll kill him if they get
scared about their land.”

“I tell a parable.” The Inspector lit a cigarette. “Declare which of you
took to walk the children of Milkmaid?”

“Melik-meid First or Second?” said Farag quickly.

“The second--the one which was lamed by the thorn.”

“No--no. Melik-meid the Second strained her shoulder leaping my
water-channel,” a sheikh cried. “Melik-meid the First was lamed by the
thorns on the day when Our Excellency fell thrice.”

“True--true. The second Melik-meid's mate was Malvolio, the pied hound,”
 said the Inspector.

“I had two of the second Melik-meid's pups,” said Farag's uncle. “They
died of the madness in their ninth month.”

“And how did they do before they died?” said the Inspector.

“They ran about in the sun, and slavered at the mouth till they died.”

“Wherefore?”

“God knows. He sent the madness. It was no fault of mine.”

“Thy own mouth hath answered thee.” The Inspector laughed. “It is with
men as it is with dogs. God afflicts some with a madness. It is no fault
of ours if such men run about in the sun and froth at the mouth. The
man who is coming will emit spray from his mouth in speaking, and will
always edge and push in towards his hearers. When ye see and hear him ye
will understand that he is afflicted of God: being mad. He is in God's
hands.”

“But our titles--are our titles to our lands good?” the crowd repeated.

“Your titles are in my hands--they are good,” said the Governor.

“And he who wrote the writings is an afflicted of God?” said Farag's
uncle.

“The Inspector hath said it,” cried the Governor. “Ye will see when the
man comes. O sheikhs and men, have we ridden together and walked puppies
together, and bought and sold barley for the horses that after these
years we should run riot on the scent of a madman--an afflicted of God?”

“But the Hunt pays us to kill mad jackals,” said Farag's uncle. “And he
who questions my titles to my land--”

“Aahh! 'Ware riot!” The Governor's hunting-crop cracked like a
three-pounder. “By Allah,” he thundered, “if the afflicted of God come
to any harm at your hands, I myself will shoot every hound and every
puppy, and the Hunt shall ride no more. On your heads be it. Go in
peace, and tell the others.”

“The Hunt shall ride no more,” said Farag's uncle. “Then how can the
land be governed? No--no, O Excellency Our Governor, we will not harm
a hair on the head of the afflicted of God. He shall be to us as is Abu
Hussein's wife in the breeding season.”

When they were gone the Governor mopped his forehead.

“We must put a few soldiers in every village this Groombride visits,
Baker. Tell 'em to keep out of sight, and have an eye on the villagers.
He's trying 'em rather high.”

“O Excellency,” said the smooth voice of Farag, laying the Field and
Country Life square on the table, “is the afflicted of God who resembles
Bigglebai one with the man whom the Inspector met in the great house in
England, and to whom he told the tale of the Mudir's Cranes?”

“The same man, Farag,” said the Inspector.

“I have often heard the Inspector tell the tale to Our Excellency at
feeding-time in the kennels; but since I am in the Government service
I have never told it to my people. May I loose that tale among the
villages?”

The Governor nodded. “No harm,” said he.

     *      *      *      *      *

The details of Mr. Groombride's arrival, with his interpreter, whom he
proposed should eat with him at the Governor's table, his allocution
to the Governor on the New Movement, and the sins of Imperialism, I
purposely omit. At three in the afternoon Mr. Groombride said: “I will
go out now and address your victims in this village.”

“Won't you find it rather hot?” said the Governor. “They generally take
'a nap till sunset at this time of year.”

Mr. Groombride's large, loose lips set. “That,” he replied pointedly,
“would be enough to decide me. I fear you have not quite mastered your
instructions. May I ask you to send for my interpreter? I hope he has
not been tampered with by your subordinates.”

He was a yellowish boy called Abdul, who had well eaten and drunk with
Farag. The Inspector, by the way, was not present at the meal.

“At whatever risk, I shall go unattended,” said Mr. Groombride. “Your
presence would cow them--from giving evidence. Abdul, my good friend,
would you very kindly open the umbrella?”

He passed up the gang-plank to the village, and with no more prelude
than a Salvation Army picket in a Portsmouth slum, cried: “Oh, my
brothers!”

He did not guess how his path had been prepared. The village was
widely awake. Farag, in loose, flowing garments, quite unlike a kennel
huntsman's khaki and puttees, leaned against the wall of his uncle's
house. “Come and see the afflicted of God,” he cried musically, “whose
face, indeed, resembles that of Bigglebai.”

The village came, and decided that on the whole Farag was right.

“I can't quite catch what they are saying,” said Mr. Groombride.

“They saying they very much pleased to see you, Sar,” Adbul interpreted.

“Then I do think they might have sent a deputation to the steamer; but
I suppose they were frightened of the officials. Tell them not to be
frightened, Abdul.”

“He says you are not to be frightened,” Abdul explained. A child
here sputtered with laughter. “Refrain from mirth,” Farag cried. “The
afflicted of God is the guest of The Excellency Our Governor. We are
responsible for every hair of his head.”

“He has none,” a voice spoke. “He has the white and the shining mange.”

“Now tell them what I have come for, Abdul, and please keep the umbrella
well up. I think I shall reserve myself for my little vernacular speech
at the end.”

“Approach! Look! Listen!” Abdul chanted. “The afflicted of God will now
make sport. Presently he will speak in your tongue, and will consume
you with mirth. I have been his servant for three weeks. I will tell you
about his undergarments and his perfumes for his head.”

He told them at length.

“And didst thou take any of his perfume bottles?” said Farag at the end.

“I am his servant. I took two,” Abdul replied.

“Ask him,” said Farag's uncle, “what he knows about our land-titles. Ye
young men are all alike.” He waved a pamphlet. Mr. Groombride smiled to
see how the seed sown in London had borne fruit by Gihon. Lo! All the
seniors held copies of the pamphlet.

“He knows less than a buffalo. He told me on the steamer that he was
driven out of his own land by Demah-Kerazi which is a devil inhabiting
crowds and assemblies,” said Abdul.

“Allah between us and evil!” a woman cackled from the darkness of a hut.
“Come in, children, he may have the Evil Eye.”

“No, my aunt,” said Farag. “No afflicted of God has an evil eye. Wait
till ye hear his mirth-provoking speech which he will deliver. I have
heard it twice from Abdul.”

“They seem very quick to grasp the point. How far have you got, Abdul?”

“All about the beatings, sar. They are highly interested.”

“Don't forget about the local self-government, and please hold the
umbrella over me. It is hopeless to destroy unless one first builds up.”

“He may not have the Evil Eye,” Farag's uncle grunted, “but his devil
led him too certainly to question my land-title. Ask him whether he
still doubts my land-title?”

“Or mine, or mine?” cried the elders.

“What odds? He is an afflicted of God,” Farag called. “Remember the tale
I told you.”

“Yes, but he is an Englishman, and doubtless of influence, or Our
Excellency would not entertain him. Bid the down-country jackass ask
him.”

“Sar,” said Abdul, “these people, much fearing they may be turned out
of their land in consequence of your remarks. Therefore they ask you to
make promise no bad consequences following your visit.”

Mr. Groombride held his breath and turned purple. Then he stamped his
foot.

“Tell them,” he cried, “that if a hair of any one of their heads is
touched by any official on any account whatever, all England shall ring
with it. Good God! What callous oppression! The dark places of the
earth are full of cruelty.” He wiped his face, and throwing out his arms
cried: “Tell them, oh! tell the poor serfs not to be afraid of me. Tell
them I come to redress their wrongs--not, heaven knows, to add to their
burden.”

The long-drawn gurgle of the practised public speaker pleased them much.

“That is how the new water-tap runs out in the kennel,” said Farag. “The
Excellency Our Governor entertains him that he may make sport. Make him
say the mirth-moving speech.”

“What did he say about my land-titles?” Farag's uncle was not to be
turned.

“He says,” Farag interpreted, “that he desires, nothing better than that
you should live on your lands in peace. He talks as though he believed
himself to be Governor.”

“Well. We here are all witnesses to what he has said. Now go forward
with the sport.” Farag's uncle smoothed his garments. “How diversely
hath Allah made His creatures! On one He bestows strength to slay Emirs;
another He causes to go mad and wander in the sun, like the afflicted
sons of Melik-meid.”

“Yes, and to emit spray from the mouth, as the Inspector told us. All
will happen as the Inspector foretold,” said Farag. “I have never yet
seen the Inspector thrown out during any run.”

“I think,” Abdul plucked at Mr. Groombride's sleeves, “I think perhaps
it is better now, Sar, if you give your fine little native speech. They
not understanding English, but much pleased at your condescensions.”

“Condescensions?” Mr. Groombride spun round. “If they only knew how
I felt towards them in my heart! If I could express a tithe of my
feelings! I must stay here and learn the language. Hold up the umbrella,
Abdul! I think my little speech will show them I know something of their
vie intime.”

It was a short, simple, carefully learned address, and the accent,
supervised by Abdul on the steamer, allowed the hearers to guess its
meaning, which was a request to see one of the Mudir's Cranes; since the
desire of the speaker's life, the object to which he would consecrate
his days, was to improve the condition of the Mudir's Cranes. But first
he must behold them with his own eyes. Would, then, his brethren, whom
he loved, show him a Mudir's Crane whom he desired to love?

Once, twice, and again in his peroration he repeated his demand,
using always--that they might see he was acquainted with their local
argot--using always, I say, the word which the Inspector had given
him in England long ago--the short, adhesive word which, by itself,
surprises even unblushing Ethiopia.

There are limits to the sublime politeness of an ancient people. A
bulky, blue-chinned man in white clothes, his name red-lettered across
his lower shirtfront, spluttering from under a green-lined umbrella
almost tearful appeals to be introduced to the Unintroducible; naming
loudly the Unnameable; dancing, as it seemed, in perverse joy at mere
mention of the Unmentionable--found those limits. There was a moment's
hush, and then such mirth as Gihon through his centuries had never
heard--a roar like to the roar of his own cataracts in flood. Children
cast themselves on the ground, and rolled back and forth cheering and
whooping; strong men, their faces hidden in their clothes, swayed in
silence, till the agony became insupportable, and they threw up their
heads and bayed at the sun; women, mothers and virgins, shrilled shriek
upon mounting shriek, and slapped their thighs as it might have been the
roll of musketry. When they tried to draw breath, some half-strangled
voice would quack out the word, and the riot began afresh. Last to fall
was the city-trained Abdul. He held on to the edge of apoplexy, then
collapsed, throwing the umbrella from him.

Mr. Groombride should not be judged too harshly. Exercise and strong
emotion under a hot sun, the shock of public ingratitude, for the moment
rued his spirit. He furled the umbrella, and with it beat the prostrate
Abdul, crying that he had been betrayed.

In which posture the Inspector, on horseback, followed by the Governor,
suddenly found him.

     *      *      *      *      *

“That's all very well,” said the Inspector, when he had taken Abdul's
dramatically dying depositions on the steamer, “but you can't hammer a
native merely because he laughs at you. I see nothing for it but the law
to take its course.”

“You might reduce the charge to--er--tampering with an interpreter,”
 said the Governor. Mr. Groombride was too far gone to be comforted.

“It's the publicity that I fear,” he wailed. “Is there no possible
means of hushing up the affair? You don't know what a question--a single
question in the House means to a man of my position--the ruin of my
political career, I assure you.”

“I shouldn't have imagined it,” said the Governor thoughtfully.

“And, though perhaps I ought not to say it, I am not without honour
in my own country--or influence. A word in season, as you know, Your
Excellency. It might carry an official far.”

The Governor shuddered.

“Yes, that had to come too,” he said to himself. “Well, look here. If I
tell this man of yours to withdraw the charge against you, you can go
to Gehenna for aught I care. The only condition I make is that if you
write--I suppose that's part of your--business about your travels, you
don't praise me!”

So far Mr. Groombride has loyally adhered to this understanding.




GALLIO'S SONG

          All day long to the judgment-seat
           The crazed Provincials drew--
          All day long at their ruler's feet
           Howled for the blood of the Jew.
          Insurrection with one accord
           Banded itself and woke:
          And Paul was about to open his mouth
           When Achaia's Deputy spoke

          “Whether the God descend from above
           Or the man ascend upon high,
          Whether this maker of tents be Jove
           Or a younger deity--
          I will be no judge between your gods
           And your godless bickerings,
          Lictor, drive them hence with rods--
           I care for none of these things!

          “Were it a question of lawful due
           Or a labourer's hire denied,
          Reason would I should bear with you
           And order it well to be tried
          But this is a question of words and names
           And I know the strife it brings,
          I will not pass upon any your claims.
           I care for none of these things.

          “One thing only I see most clear,
           As I pray you also see.
          Claudius Caesar hath set me here
           Rome's Deputy to be.
          It is Her peace that ye go to break
           Not mine, nor any king's,
          But, touching your clamour of 'conscience sake,'
           I care for none of these things!”




THE HOUSE SURGEON

On an evening after Easter Day, I sat at a table in a homeward bound
steamer's smoking-room, where half a dozen of us told ghost stories. As
our party broke up a man, playing Patience in the next alcove, said to
me: “I didn't quite catch the end of that last story about the Curse on
the family's first-born.”

“It turned out to be drains,” I explained. “As soon as new ones were put
into the house the Curse was lifted, I believe. I never knew the people
myself.”

“Ah! I've had my drains up twice; I'm on gravel too.”

“You don't mean to say you've a ghost in your house? Why didn't you join
our party?”

“Any more orders, gentlemen, before the bar closes?” the steward
interrupted.

“Sit down again, and have one with me,” said the Patience player. “No,
it isn't a ghost. Our trouble is more depression than anything else.”

“How interesting? Then it's nothing any one can see?”

“It's--it's nothing worse than a little depression. And the odd part is
that there hasn't been a death in the house since it was built--in 1863.
The lawyer said so. That decided me--my good lady, rather--and he made me
pay an extra thousand for it.”

“How curious. Unusual, too!” I said.

“Yes; ain't it? It was built for three sisters--Moultrie was the
name--three old maids. They all lived together; the eldest owned it. I
bought it from her lawyer a few years ago, and if I've spent a pound
on the place first and last, I must have spent five thousand. Electric
light, new servants' wing, garden--all that sort of thing. A man and his
family ought to be happy after so much expense, ain't it?” He looked at
me through the bottom of his glass.

“Does it affect your family much?”

“My good lady--she's a Greek, by the way--and myself are middle-aged. We
can bear up against depression; but it's hard on my little girl. I say
little; but she's twenty. We send her visiting to escape it. She almost
lived at hotels and hydros, last year, but that isn't pleasant for her.
She used to be a canary--a perfect canary--always singing. You ought to
hear her. She doesn't sing now. That sort of thing's unwholesome for the
young, ain't it?”

“Can't you get rid of the place?” I suggested.

“Not except at a sacrifice, and we are fond of it. Just suits us three.
We'd love it if we were allowed.”

“What do you mean by not being allowed?”

“I mean because of the depression. It spoils everything.”

“What's it like exactly?”

“I couldn't very well explain. It must be seen to be appreciated, as the
auctioneers say. Now, I was much impressed by the story you were telling
just now.”

“It wasn't true,” I said.

“My tale is true. If you would do me the pleasure to come down and spend
a night at my little place, you'd learn more than you would if I talked
till morning. Very likely 'twouldn't touch your good self at all.
You might be--immune, ain't it? On the other hand, if this
influenza,--influence does happen to affect you, why, I think it will be
an experience.”

While he talked he gave me his card, and I read his name was L. Maxwell
M'Leod, Esq., of Holmescroft. A City address was tucked away in a
corner.

“My business,” he added, “used to be furs. If you are interested in
furs--I've given thirty years of my life to 'em.”

“You're very kind,” I murmured.

“Far from it, I assure you. I can meet you next Saturday afternoon
anywhere in London you choose to name, and I'll be only too happy to
motor you down. It ought to be a delightful run at this time of year--the
rhododendrons will be out. I mean it. You don't know how truly I mean
it. Very probably--it won't affect you at all. And--I think I may say I
have the finest collection of narwhal tusks in the world. All the best
skins and horns have to go through London, and L. Maxwell M'Leod, he
knows where they come from, and where they go to. That's his business.”

For the rest of the voyage up-channel Mr. M'Leod talked to me of the
assembling, preparation, and sale of the rarer furs; and told me things
about the manufacture of fur-lined coats which quite shocked me. Somehow
or other, when we landed on Wednesday, I found myself pledged to spend
that week-end with him at Holmescroft.

On Saturday he met me with a well-groomed motor, and ran me out, in an
hour and a half, to an exclusive residential district of dustless roads
and elegantly designed country villas, each standing in from three to
five acres of perfectly appointed land. He told me land was selling at
eight hundred pounds the acre, and the new golf links, whose Queen
Anne pavilion we passed, had cost nearly twenty-four thousand pounds to
create.

Holmescroft was a large, two-storied, low, creeper-covered residence.
A verandah at the south side gave on to a garden and two tennis courts,
separated by a tasteful iron fence from a most park-like meadow of five
or six acres, where two Jersey cows grazed. Tea was ready in the shade
of a promising copper beech, and I could see groups on the lawn of
young men and maidens appropriately clothed, playing lawn tennis in the
sunshine.

“A pretty scene, ain't it?” said Mr. M'Leod. “My good lady's sitting
under the tree, and that's my little girl in pink on the far court. But
I'll take you to your room, and you can see 'em all later.”

He led me through a wide parquet-floored hall furnished in pale lemon,
with huge Cloisonnée vases, an ebonized and gold grand piano, and banks
of pot flowers in Benares brass bowls, up a pale oak staircase to a
spacious landing, where there was a green velvet settee trimmed with
silver. The blinds were down, and the light lay in parallel lines on the
floors.

He showed me my room, saying cheerfully: “You may be a little tired. One
often is without knowing it after a run through traffic. Don't come down
till you feel quite restored. We shall all be in the garden.”

My room was rather warm, and smelt of perfumed soap. I threw up the
window at once, but it opened so close to the floor and worked so
clumsily that I came within an ace of pitching out, where I should
certainly have ruined a rather lop-sided laburnum below. As I set about
washing off the journey's dust, I began to feel a little tired. But, I
reflected, I had not come down here in this weather and among these new
surroundings to be depressed; so I began to whistle.

And it was just then that I was aware of a little grey shadow, as it
might have been a snowflake seen against the light, floating at an
immense distance in the background of my brain. It annoyed me, and I
shook my head to get rid of it. Then my brain telegraphed that it was
the forerunner of a swift-striding gloom which there was yet time to
escape if I would force my thoughts away from it, as a man leaping for
life forces his body forward and away from the fall of a wall. But the
gloom overtook me before I could take in the meaning of the message. I
moved toward the bed, every nerve already aching with the foreknowledge
of the pain that was to be dealt it, and sat down, while my amazed and
angry soul dropped, gulf by gulf, into that horror of great darkness
which is spoken of in the Bible, and which, as auctioneers say, must be
experienced to be appreciated.

Despair upon despair, misery upon misery, fear after fear, each causing
their distinct and separate woe, packed in upon me for an unrecorded
length of time, until at last they blurred together, and I heard a click
in my brain like the click in the ear when one descends in a diving
bell, and I knew that the pressures were equalised within and without,
and that, for the moment, the worst was at an end. But I knew also that
at any moment the darkness might come down anew; and while, I dwelt on
this speculation precisely as a man torments a raging tooth with his
tongue, it ebbed away into the little grey shadow on the brain of its
first coming, and once more I heard my brain, which knew what would
recur, telegraph to every quarter for help, release or diversion.

The door opened, and M'Leod reappeared. I thanked him politely, saying
I was charmed with my room, anxious to meet Mrs. M'Leod, much refreshed
with my wash, and so on and so forth. Beyond a little stickiness at
the corners of my mouth, it seemed to me that I was managing my words
admirably; the while that I myself cowered at the bottom of unclimbable
pits. M'Leod laid his hand on my shoulder, and said “You've got it now
already, ain't it?”

“Yes,” I answered. “It's making me sick!”

“It will pass off when you come outside. I give you my word it will then
pass off. Come!”

I shambled out behind him, and wiped my forehead in the hall.

“You musn't mind,” he said. “I expect the run tired you. My good lady is
sitting there under the copper beech.”

She was a fat woman in an apricot-coloured gown, with a heavily powdered
face, against which her black long-lashed eyes showed like currants
in dough. I was introduced to many fine ladies and gentlemen of those
parts. Magnificently appointed landaus and covered motors swept in and
out of the drive, and the air was gay with the merry outcries of the
tennis players.

As twilight drew on they all went away, and I was left alone with Mr.
and Mrs. M'Leod, while tall menservants and maidservants took away the
tennis and tea things. Miss M'Leod had walked a little down the drive
with a light-haired young man, who apparently knew everything about
every South American railway stock. He had told me at tea that these
were the days of financial specialisation.

“I think it went off beautifully, my dear,” said Mr. M'Leod to his wife;
and to me: “You feel all right now, ain't it? Of course you do.”

Mrs. M'Leod surged across the gravel. Her husband skipped nimbly before
her into the south verandah, turned a switch, and all Holmescroft was
flooded with light.

“You can do that from your room also,” he said as they went in. “There
is something in money, ain't it?”

Miss M'Leod came up behind me in the dusk. “We have not yet been
introduced,” she said, “but I suppose you are staying the night?”

“Your father was kind enough to ask me,” I replied.

She nodded. “Yes, I know; and you know too, don't you? I saw your face
when you came to shake hands with mamma. You felt the depression very
soon. It is simply frightful in that bedroom sometimes. What do you
think it is--bewitchment? In Greece, where I was a little girl, it might
have been; but not in England, do you think? Or do you?”

“Cheer up, Thea. It will all come right,” he insisted.

“No, papa.” She shook her dark head. “Nothing is right while it comes.”

“It is nothing that we ourselves have ever done in our lives that I
will swear to you,” said Mrs. M'Leod suddenly. “And we have changed our
servants several times. So we know it is not them.”

“Never mind. Let us enjoy ourselves while we can,” said Mr. M'Leod,
opening the champagne.

But we did not enjoy ourselves. The talk failed. There were long
silences.

“I beg your pardon,” I said, for I thought some one at my elbow was
about to speak.

“Ah! That is the other thing!” said Miss M'Leod. Her mother groaned.

We were silent again, and, in a few seconds it must have been, a live
grief beyond words--not ghostly dread or horror, but aching, helpless
grief--overwhelmed us, each, I felt, according to his or her nature,
and held steady like the beam of a burning glass. Behind that pain I was
conscious there was a desire on somebody's part to explain something on
which some tremendously important issue hung.

Meantime I rolled bread pills and remembered my sins; M'Leod considered
his own reflection in a spoon; his wife seemed to be praying, and the
girl fidgetted desperately with hands and feet, till the darkness passed
on--as though the malignant rays of a burning-glass had been shifted
from us.

“There,” said Miss M'Leod, half rising. “Now you see what makes a happy
home. Oh, sell it--sell it, father mine, and let us go away!”

“But I've spent thousands on it. You shall go to Harrogate next week,
Thea dear.”

“I'm only just back from hotels. I am so tired of packing.”

“Cheer up, Thea. It is over. You know it does not often come here twice
in the same night. I think we shall dare now to be comfortable.”

He lifted a dish-cover, and helped his wife and daughter. His face was
lined and fallen like an old man's after debauch, but his hand did not
shake, and his voice was clear. As he worked to restore us by speech
and action, he reminded me of a grey-muzzled collie herding demoralised
sheep.

After dinner we sat round the dining-room fire--the drawing-room might
have been under the Shadow for aught we knew--talking with the intimacy
of gipsies by the wayside, or of wounded comparing notes after a
skirmish. By eleven o'clock the three between them had given me every
name and detail they could recall that in any way bore on the house, and
what they knew of its history.

We went to bed in a fortifying blaze of electric light. My one fear was
that the blasting gust of depression would return--the surest way,
of course, to bring it. I lay awake till dawn, breathing quickly and
sweating lightly, beneath what De Quincey inadequately describes as
“the oppression of inexpiable guilt.” Now as soon as the lovely day was
broken, I fell into the most terrible of all dreams--that joyous one in
which all past evil has not only been wiped out of our lives, but has
never been committed; and in the very bliss of our assured innocence,
before our loves shriek and change countenance, we wake to the day we
have earned.

It was a coolish morning, but we preferred to breakfast in the south
verandah. The forenoon we spent in the garden, pretending to play games
that come out of boxes, such as croquet and clock golf. But most of the
time we drew together and talked. The young man who knew all about South
American railways took Miss M'Leod for a walk in the afternoon, and at
five M'Leod thoughtfully whirled us all up to dine in town.

“Now, don't say you will tell the Psychological Society, and that you
will come again,” said Miss M'Leod, as we parted. “Because I know you
will not.”

“You should not say that,” said her mother. “You should say, 'Goodbye,
Mr. Perseus. Come again.'”

“Not him!” the girl cried. “He has seen the Medusa's head!”

Looking at myself in the restaurant's mirrors, it seemed to me that I
had not much benefited by my week-end. Next morning I wrote out all
my Holmescroft notes at fullest length, in the hope that by so doing
I could put it all behind me. But the experience worked on my mind, as
they say certain imperfectly understood rays work on the body.

I am less calculated to make a Sherlock Holmes than any man I know,
for I lack both method and patience, yet the idea of following up the
trouble to its source fascinated me. I had no theory to go on, except
a vague idea that I had come between two poles of a discharge, and had
taken a shock meant for some one else. This was followed by a feeling
of intense irritation. I waited cautiously on myself, expecting to be
overtaken by horror of the supernatural, but my self persisted in
being humanly indignant, exactly as though it had been the victim of
a practical joke. It was in great pains and upheavals--that I felt in
every fibre but its dominant idea, to put it coarsely, was to get back
a bit of its own. By this I knew that I might go forward if I could find
the way.

After a few days it occurred to me to go to the office of Mr. J.M.M.
Baxter--the solicitor who had sold Holmescroft to M'Leod. I explained I
had some notion of buying the place. Would he act for me in the matter?

Mr. Baxter, a large, greyish, throaty-voiced man, showed no enthusiasm.
“I sold it to Mr. M'Leod,” he said. “It 'ud scarcely do for me to start
on the running-down tack now. But I can recommend--”

“I know he's asking an awful price,” I interrupted, “and atop of it he
wants an extra thousand for what he calls your clean bill of health.”

Mr. Baxter sat up in his chair. I had all his attention.

“Your guarantee with the house. Don't you remember it?”

“Yes, yes. That no death had taken place in the house since it was
built: I remember perfectly.”

He did not gulp as untrained men do when they lie, but his jaws moved
stickily, and his eyes, turning towards the deed boxes on the wall,
dulled. I counted seconds, one, two, three--one, two, three up to ten. A
man, I knew, can live through ages of mental depression in that time.

“I remember perfectly.” His mouth opened a little as though it had
tasted old bitterness.

“Of course that sort of thing doesn't appeal to me.” I went on. “I don't
expect to buy a house free from death.”

“Certainly not. No one does. But it was Mr. M'Leod's fancy--his wife's
rather, I believe; and since we could meet it--it was my duty to my
clients at whatever cost to my own feelings--to make him pay.”

“That's really why I came to you. I understood from him you knew the
place well.”

“Oh, yes. Always did. It originally belonged to some connections of
mine.”

“The Misses Moultrie, I suppose. How interesting! They must have loved
the place before the country round about was built up.”

“They were very fond of it indeed.”

“I don't wonder. So restful and sunny. I don't see how they could have
brought themselves to part with it.”

Now it is one of the most constant peculiarities of the English that in
polite conversation--and I had striven to be polite--no one ever does or
sells anything for mere money's sake.

“Miss Agnes--the youngest--fell ill” (he spaced his words a little),
“and, as they were very much attached to each other, that broke up the
home.”

“Naturally. I fancied it must have been something of that kind.
One doesn't associate the Staffordshire Moultries” (my Demon of
Irresponsibility at that instant created 'em), “with--with being hard
up.”

“I don't know whether we're related to them,” he answered importantly.
“We may be, for our branch of the family comes from the Midlands.”

I give this talk at length, because I am so proud of my first attempt at
detective work. When I left him, twenty minutes later, with instructions
to move against the owner of Holmescroft, with a view to purchase, I was
more bewildered than any Doctor Watson at the opening of a story.

Why should a middle-aged solicitor turn plovers' egg colour and drop his
jaw when reminded of so innocent and festal a matter as that no death
had ever occurred in a house that he had sold? If I knew my English
vocabulary at all, the tone in which he said the youngest sister “fell
ill” meant that she had gone out of her mind. That might explain his
change of countenance, and it was just possible that her demented
influence still hung about Holmescroft; but the rest was beyond me.

I was relieved when I reached M'Leod's City office, and could tell him
what I had done--not what I thought.

M'Leod was quite willing to enter into the game of the pretended
purchase, but did not see how it would help if I knew Baxter.

“He's the only living soul I can get at who was connected with
Holmescroft,” I said.

“Ah! Living soul is good,” said M'Leod. “At any rate our little girl
will be pleased that you are still interested in us. Won't you come down
some day this week?”

“How is it there now?” I asked.

He screwed up his face. “Simply frightful!” he said. “Thea is at
Droitwich.”

“I should like it immensely, but I must cultivate Baxter for the
present. You'll be sure and keep him busy your end, won't you?”

He looked at me with quiet contempt. “Do not be afraid. I shall be a
good Jew. I shall be my own solicitor.”

Before a fortnight was over, Baxter admitted ruefully that M'Leod
was better than most firms in the business: We buyers were coy,
argumentative, shocked at the price of Holmescroft, inquisitive, and
cold by turns, but Mr. M'Leod the seller easily met and surpassed us;
and Mr. Baxter entered every letter, telegram, and consultation at the
proper rates in a cinematograph-film of a bill. At the end of a month
he said it looked as though M'Leod, thanks to him, were really going
to listen to reason. I was many pounds out of pocket, but I had learned
something of Mr. Baxter on the human side. I deserved it. Never in my
life have I worked to conciliate, amuse, and flatter a human being as I
worked over my solicitor.

It appeared that he golfed. Therefore, I was an enthusiastic beginner,
anxious to learn. Twice I invaded his office with a bag (M'Leod lent it)
full of the spelicans needed in this detestable game, and a vocabulary
to match. The third time the ice broke, and Mr. Baxter took me to his
links, quite ten miles off, where in a maze of tramway lines, railroads,
and nursery-maids, we skelped our divotted way round nine holes like
barges plunging through head seas. He played vilely and had never
expected to meet any one worse; but as he realised my form, I think
he began to like me, for he took me in hand by the two hours together.
After a fortnight he could give me no more than a stroke a hole, and
when, with this allowance, I once managed to beat him by one, he was
honestly glad, and assured me that I should be a golfer if I stuck
to it. I was sticking to it for my own ends, but now and again my
conscience pricked me; for the man was a nice man. Between games he
supplied me with odd pieces of evidence, such as that he had known the
Moultries all his life, being their cousin, and that Miss Mary, the
eldest, was an unforgiving woman who would never let bygones be.
I naturally wondered what she might have against him; and somehow
connected him unfavourably with mad Agnes.

“People ought to forgive and forget,” he volunteered one day between
rounds. “Specially where, in the nature of things, they can't be sure of
their deductions. Don't you think so?”

“It all depends on the nature of the evidence on which one forms one's
judgment,” I answered.

“Nonsense!” he cried. “I'm lawyer enough to know that there's nothing in
the world so misleading as circumstantial evidence. Never was.”

“Why? Have you ever seen men hanged on it?”

“Hanged? People have been supposed to be eternally lost on it,” his face
turned grey again. “I don't know how it is with you, but my consolation
is that God must know. He must! Things that seem on the face of 'em like
murder, or say suicide, may appear different to God. Heh?”

“That's what the murderer and the suicide can always hope--I suppose.”

“I have expressed myself clumsily as usual. The facts as God knows
'em--may be different--even after the most clinching evidence. I've
always said that--both as a lawyer and a man, but some people won't--I
don't want to judge 'em--we'll say they can't--believe it; whereas I
say there's always a working chance--a certainty--that the worst hasn't
happened.” He stopped and cleared his throat. “Now, let's come on! This
time next week I shall be taking my holiday.”

“What links?” I asked carelessly, while twins in a perambulator got out
of our line of fire.

“A potty little nine-hole affair at a hydro in the Midlands. My cousins
stay there. Always will. Not but what the fourth and the seventh holes
take some doing. You could manage it, though,” he said encouragingly.
“You're doing much better. It's only your approach shots that are weak.”

“You're right. I can't approach for nuts! I shall go to pieces while
you're away--with no one to coach me,” I said mournfully.

“I haven't taught you anything,” he said, delighted with the compliment.

“I owe all I've learned to you, anyhow. When will you come back?”

“Look here,” he began. “I don't know, your engagements, but I've no one
to play with at Burry Mills. Never have. Why couldn't you take a few
days off and join me there? I warn you it will be rather dull. It's a
throat and gout place--baths, massage, electricity, and so forth. But the
fourth and the seventh holes really take some doing.”

“I'm for the game,” I answered valiantly; Heaven well knowing that I
hated every stroke and word of it.

“That's the proper spirit. As their lawyer I must ask you not to say
anything to my cousins about Holmescroft. It upsets 'em. Always did. But
speaking as man to man, it would be very pleasant for me if you could
see your way to--”

I saw it as soon as decency permitted, and thanked him sincerely.
According to my now well-developed theory he had certainly
misappropriated his aged cousins' monies under power of attorney, and
had probably driven poor Agnes Moultrie out of her wits, but I wished
that he was not so gentle, and good-tempered, and innocent eyed.

Before I joined him at Burry Mills Hydro, I spent a night at
Holmescroft. Miss M'Leod had returned from her Hydro, and first we made
very merry on the open lawn in the sunshine over the manners and customs
of the English resorting to such places. She knew dozens of hydros, and
warned me how to behave in them, while Mr. and Mrs. M'Leod stood aside
and adored her.

“Ah! That's the way she always comes back to us,” he said. “Pity it
wears off so soon, ain't it? You ought to hear her sing 'With mirth thou
pretty bird.'”

We had the house to face through the evening, and there we neither
laughed nor sung. The gloom fell on us as we entered, and did not shift
till ten o'clock, when we crawled out, as it were, from beneath it.

“It has been bad this summer,” said Mrs. M'Leod in a whisper after we
realised that we were freed. “Sometimes I think the house will get up
and cry out--it is so bad.”

“How?”

“Have you forgotten what comes after the depression?”

So then we waited about the small fire, and the dead air in the room
presently filled and pressed down upon us with the sensation (but words
are useless here) as though some dumb and bound power were striving
against gag and bond to deliver its soul of an articulate word. It
passed in a few minutes, and I fell to thinking about Mr. Baxter's
conscience and Agnes Moultrie, gone mad in the well-lit bedroom
that waited me. These reflections secured me a night during which I
rediscovered how, from purely mental causes, a man can be physically
sick; but the sickness was bliss compared to my dreams when the birds
waked. On my departure, M'Leod gave me a beautiful narwhal's horn, much
as a nurse gives a child sweets for being brave at a dentist's.

“There's no duplicate of it in the world,” he said, “else it would have
come to old Max M'Leod;” and he tucked it into the motor. Miss M'Leod
on the far side of the car whispered, “Have you found out anything, Mr.
Perseus?”

I shook my head.

“Then I shall be chained to my rock all my life,” she went on. “Only
don't tell papa.”

I supposed she was thinking of the young gentleman who specialised in
South American rails, for I noticed a ring on the third finger of her
left hand.

I went straight from that house to Burry Mills Hydro, keen for the first
time in my life on playing golf, which is guaranteed to occupy the mind.
Baxter had taken me a room communicating with his own, and after lunch
introduced me to a tall, horse-headed elderly lady of decided manners,
whom a white-haired maid pushed along in a bath-chair through the
park-like grounds of the Hydro. She was Miss Mary Moultrie, and she
coughed and cleared her throat just like Baxter. She suffered--she
told me it was a Moultrie castemark--from some obscure form of chronic
bronchitis, complicated with spasm of the glottis; and, in a dead, flat
voice, with a sunken eye that looked and saw not, told me what washes,
gargles, pastilles, and inhalations she had proved most beneficial. From
her I was passed on to her younger sister, Miss Elizabeth, a small and
withered thing with twitching lips, victim, she told me, to very
much the same sort of throat, but secretly devoted to another set of
medicines. When she went away with Baxter and the bath-chair, I fell
across a major of the Indian army with gout in his glassy eyes, and a
stomach which he had taken all round the Continent. He laid everything
before me; and him I escaped only to be confided in by a matron with
a tendency to follicular tonsilitis and eczema. Baxter waited hand and
foot on his cousins till five o'clock, trying, as I saw, to atone for
his treatment of the dead sister. Miss Mary ordered him about like a
dog.

“I warned you it would be dull,” he said when we met in the
smoking-room.

“It's tremendously interesting,” I said. “But how about a look round the
links?”

“Unluckily damp always affects my eldest cousin. I've got to buy her a
new bronchitis-kettle. Arthurs broke her old one yesterday.”

We slipped out to the chemist's shop in the town, and he bought a large
glittering tin thing whose workings he explained.

“I'm used to this sort of work. I come up here pretty often,” he said.
“I've the family throat too.”

“You're a good man,” I said. “A very good man.”

He turned towards me in the evening light among the beeches, and his
face was changed to what it might have been a generation before.

“You see,” he said huskily, “there was the youngest--Agnes. Before
she fell ill, you know. But she didn't like leaving her sisters. Never
would.” He hurried on with his odd-shaped load and left me among the
ruins of my black theories. The man with that face had done Agnes
Moultrie no wrong.


We never played our game. I was waked between two and three in the
morning from my hygienic bed by Baxter in an ulster over orange and
white pyjamas, which I should never have suspected from his character.

“My cousin has had some sort of a seizure,” he said. “Will you come? I
don't want to wake the doctor. Don't want to make a scandal. Quick!”

So I came quickly, and led by the white-haired Arthurs in a jacket and
petticoat, entered a double-bedded room reeking with steam and Friar's
Balsam. The electrics were all on. Miss Mary--I knew her by her
height--was at the open window, wrestling with Miss Elizabeth, who
gripped her round the knees.

Miss Mary's hand was at her own throat, which was streaked with blood.

“She's done it. She's done it too!” Miss Elizabeth panted. “Hold her!
Help me!”

“Oh, I say! Women don't cut their throats,” Baxter whispered.

“My God! Has she cut her throat?” the maid cried out, and with no
warning rolled over in a faint. Baxter pushed her under the wash-basins,
and leaped to hold the gaunt woman who crowed and whistled as she
struggled toward the window. He took her by the shoulder, and she struck
out wildly:

“All right! She's only cut her hand,” he said. “Wet towel quick!”

While I got that he pushed her backward. Her strength seemed almost as
great as his. I swabbed at her throat when I could, and found no mark;
then helped him to control her a little. Miss Elizabeth leaped back to
bed, wailing like a child.

“Tie up her hand somehow,” said Baxter. “Don't let it drip about the
place. She”--he stepped on broken glass in his slippers, “she must have
smashed a pane.”

Miss Mary lurched towards the open window again, dropped on her knees,
her head on the sill, and lay quiet, surrendering the cut hand to me.

“What did she do?” Baxter turned towards Miss Elizabeth in the far bed.

“She was going to throw herself out of the window,” was the answer.
“I stopped her, and sent Arthurs for you. Oh, we can never hold up our
heads again!”

Miss Mary writhed and fought for breath. Baxter found a shawl which he
threw over her shoulders.

“Nonsense!” said he. “That isn't like Mary;” but his face worked when he
said it.

“You wouldn't believe about Aggie, John. Perhaps you will now!” said
Miss Elizabeth. “I saw her do it, and she's cut her throat too!”

“She hasn't,” I said. “It's only her hand.”

Miss Mary suddenly broke from us with an indescribable grunt, flew,
rather than ran, to her sister's bed, and there shook her as one furious
schoolgirl would shake another.

“No such thing,” she croaked. “How dare you think so, you wicked little
fool?”

“Get into bed, Mary,” said Baxter. “You'll catch a chill.”

She obeyed, but sat up with the grey shawl round her lean shoulders,
glaring at her sister. “I'm better now,” she panted. “Arthurs let me
sit out too long. Where's Arthurs? The kettle.”

“Never mind Arthurs,” said Baxter. “You get the kettle.” I hastened to
bring it from the side table. “Now, Mary, as God sees you, tell me what
you've done.”

His lips were dry, and he could not moisten. them with his tongue.

Miss Mary applied herself to the mouth of the kettle, and between
indraws of steam said: “The spasm came on just now, while I was asleep.
I was nearly choking to death. So I went to the window I've done it
often before, without waking any one. Bessie's such an old maid about
draughts. I tell you I was choking to death. I couldn't manage the
catch, and I nearly fell out. That window opens too low. I cut my hand
trying to save myself. Who has tied it up in this filthy handkerchief?
I wish you had had my throat, Bessie. I never was nearer dying!” She
scowled on us all impartially, while her sister sobbed.

From the bottom of the bed we heard a quivering voice: “Is she dead?
Have they took her away? Oh, I never could bear the sight o' blood!”

“Arthurs,” said Miss Mary, “you are an hireling. Go away!”

It is my belief that Arthurs crawled out on all fours, but I was busy
picking up broken glass from the carpet.

Then Baxter, seated by the side of the bed, began to cross-examine in
a voice I scarcely recognised. No one could for an instant have doubted
the genuine rage of Miss Mary against her sister, her cousin, or her
maid; and that a doctor should have been called in--for she did me the
honour of calling me doctor--was the last drop. She was choking with her
throat; had rushed to the window for air; had near pitched out, and in
catching at the window bars had cut her hand. Over and over she made
this clear to the intent Baxter. Then she turned on her sister and
tongue-lashed her savagely.

“You mustn't blame me,” Miss Bessie faltered at last. “You know what we
think of night and day.”

“I'm coming to that,” said Baxter. “Listen to me. What you did,
Mary, misled four people into thinking you--you meant to do away with
yourself.”

“Isn't one suicide in the family enough? Oh God, help and pity us! You
couldn't have believed that!” she cried.

“The evidence was complete. Now, don't you think,” Baxter's finger
wagged under her nose--“can't you think that poor Aggie did the same
thing at Holmescroft when she fell out of the window?”

“She had the same throat,” said Miss Elizabeth. “Exactly the same
symptoms. Don't you remember, Mary?”

“Which was her bedroom?” I asked of Baxter in an undertone.

“Over the south verandah, looking on to the tennis lawn.”

“I nearly fell out of that very window when I was at
Holmescroft--opening it to get some air. The sill doesn't come much
above your knees,” I said.

“You hear that, Mary? Mary, do you hear what this gentleman says? Won't
you believe that what nearly happened to you must have happened to
poor Aggie that night? For God's sake--for her sake--Mary, won't you
believe?”

There was a long silence while the steam kettle puffed.

“If I could have proof--if I could have proof,” said she, and broke into
most horrible tears.

Baxter motioned to me, and I crept away to my room, and lay awake till
morning, thinking more specially of the dumb Thing at Holmescroft which
wished to explain itself. I hated Miss Mary as perfectly as though I had
known her for twenty years, but I felt that, alive or dead, I should not
like her to condemn me.

Yet at mid-day, when I saw Miss Mary in her bathchair, Arthurs behind
and Baxter and Miss Elizabeth on either side, in the park-like grounds
of the Hydro, I found it difficult to arrange my words.

“Now that you know all about it,” said Baxter aside, after the first
strangeness of our meeting was over, “it's only fair to tell you that
my poor cousin did not die in Holmescroft at all. She was dead when they
found her under the window in the morning. Just dead.”

“Under that laburnum outside the window?” I asked, for I suddenly
remembered the crooked evil thing.

“Exactly. She broke the tree in falling. But no death has ever taken
place in the house, so far as we were concerned. You can make yourself
quite easy on that point. Mr. M'Leod's extra thousand for what you
called the 'clean bill of health' was something toward my cousins'
estate when we sold. It was my duty as their lawyer to get it for
them--at any cost to my own feelings.”

I know better than to argue when the English talk about their duty. So I
agreed with my solicitor.

“Their sister's death must have been a great blow to your cousins,” I
went on. The bath-chair was behind me.

“Unspeakable,” Baxter whispered. “They brooded on it day and night.
No wonder. If their theory of poor Aggie making away with herself was
correct, she was eternally lost!”

“Do you believe that she made away with herself?”

“No, thank God! Never have! And after what happened to Mary last night,
I see perfectly what happened to poor Aggie. She had the family throat
too. By the way, Mary thinks you are a doctor. Otherwise she wouldn't
like your having been in her room.”

“Very good. Is she convinced now about her sister's death?”

“She'd give anything to be able to believe it, but she's a hard woman,
and brooding along certain lines makes one groovy. I have sometimes been
afraid of her reason--on the religious side, don't you know. Elizabeth
doesn't matter. Brain of a hen. Always had.”

Here Arthurs summoned me to the bath-chair, and the ravaged face,
beneath its knitted Shetland wool hood, of Miss Mary Moultrie.

“I need not remind you, I hope, of the seal of secrecy--absolute
secrecy--in your profession,” she began. “Thanks to my cousin's and my
sister's stupidity, you have found out----” she blew her nose.

“Please don't excite her, sir,” said Arthurs at the back.

“But, my dear Miss Moultrie, I only know what I've seen, of course,
but it seems to me that what you thought was a tragedy in your sister's
case, turns out, on your own evidence, so to speak, to have been an
accident--a dreadfully sad one--but absolutely an accident.”

“Do you believe that too?” she cried. “Or are you only saying it to
comfort me?”

“I believe it from the bottom of my heart. Come down to Holmescroft for
an hour--for half an hour and satisfy yourself.”

“Of what? You don't understand. I see the house every day--every night.
I am always there in spirit--waking or sleeping. I couldn't face it in
reality.”

“But you must,” I said. “If you go there in the spirit the greater need
for you to go there in the flesh. Go to your sister's room once more,
and see the window--I nearly fell out of it myself. It's--it's awfully
low and dangerous. That would convince you,” I pleaded.

“Yet Aggie had slept in that room for years,” she interrupted.

“You've slept in your room here for a long time, haven't you? But you
nearly fell out of the window when you were choking.”

“That is true. That is one thing true,” she nodded. “And I might have
been killed as--perhaps Aggie was killed.”

“In that case your own sister and cousin and maid would have said you
had committed suicide, Miss Moultrie. Come down to Holmescroft, and go
over the place just once.”

“You are lying,” she said quite quietly. “You don't want me to come down
to see a window. It is something else. I warn you we are Evangelicals.
We don't believe in prayers for the dead. 'As the tree falls--'”

“Yes. I daresay. But you persist in thinking that your sister committed
suicide--”

“No! No! I have always prayed that I might have misjudged her.”

Arthurs at the bath-chair spoke up: “Oh, Miss Mary! you would 'ave it
from the first that poor Miss Aggie 'ad made away with herself; an', of
course, Miss Bessie took the notion from you. Only Master--Mister John
stood out, and--and I'd 'ave taken my Bible oath you was making away
with yourself last night.”

Miss Mary leaned towards me, one finger on my sleeve.

“If going to Holmescroft kills me,” she said, “you will have the murder
of a fellow-creature on your conscience for all eternity.”

“I'll risk it,” I answered. Remembering what torment the mere reflection
of her torments had cast on Holmescroft, and remembering, above all, the
dumb Thing that filled the house with its desire to speak, I felt that
there might be worse things.

Baxter was amazed at the proposed visit, but at a nod from that terrible
woman went off to make arrangements. Then I sent a telegram to M'Leod
bidding him and his vacate Holmescroft for that afternoon. Miss Mary
should be alone with her dead, as I had been alone.

I expected untold trouble in transporting her, but to do her justice,
the promise given for the journey, she underwent it without murmur,
spasm, or unnecessary word. Miss Bessie, pressed in a corner by the
window, wept behind her veil, and from time to time tried to take
hold of her sister's hand. Baxter wrapped himself in his newly found
happiness as selfishly as a bridegroom, for he sat still and smiled.

“So long as I know that Aggie didn't make away with herself,” he
explained, “I tell you frankly I don't care what happened. She's as hard
as a rock--Mary. Always was. She won't die.”

We led her out on to the platform like a blind woman, and so got her
into the fly. The half-hour crawl to Holmescroft was the most racking
experience of the day. M'Leod had obeyed my instructions. There was no
one visible in the house or the gardens; and the front door stood open.

Miss Mary rose from beside her sister, stepped forth first, and entered
the hall.

“Come, Bessie,” she cried.

“I daren't. Oh, I daren't.”

“Come!” Her voice had altered. I felt Baxter start. “There's nothing to
be afraid of.”

“Good heavens!” said Baxter. “She's running up the stairs. We'd better
follow.”

“Let's wait below. She's going to the room.”

We heard the door of the bedroom I knew open and shut, and we waited in
the lemon-coloured hall, heavy with the scent of flowers.

“I've never been into it since it was sold,” Baxter sighed. “What a
lovely, restful plate it is! Poor Aggie used to arrange the flowers.”

“Restful?” I began, but stopped of a sudden, for I felt all over my
bruised soul that Baxter was speaking truth. It was a light, spacious,
airy house, full of the sense of well-being and peace--above all things,
of peace. I ventured into the dining-room where the thoughtful M'Leod's
had left a small fire. There was no terror there, present or lurking;
and in the drawing-room, which for good reasons we had never cared
to enter, the sun and the peace and the scent of the flowers worked
together as is fit in an inhabited house. When I returned to the hall,
Baxter was sweetly asleep on a couch, looking most unlike a middle-aged
solicitor who had spent a broken night with an exacting cousin.

There was ample time for me to review it all--to felicitate myself upon
my magnificent acumen (barring some errors about Baxter as a thief
and possibly a murderer), before the door above opened, and Baxter,
evidently a light sleeper, sprang awake.

“I've had a heavenly little nap,” he said, rubbing his eyes with the
backs of his hands like a child. “Good Lord! That's not their step!”

But it was. I had never before been privileged to see the Shadow
turned backward on the dial--the years ripped bodily off poor human
shoulders--old sunken eyes filled and alight--harsh lips moistened and
human.

“John,” Miss Mary called, “I know now. Aggie didn't do it!” and “She
didn't do it!” echoed Miss Mary, and giggled.

“I did not think it wrong to say a prayer,” Miss Mary continued. “Not
for her soul, but for our peace. Then I was convinced.”

“Then we got conviction,” the younger sister piped.

“We've misjudged poor Aggie, John. But I feel she knows now. Wherever
she is, she knows that we know she is guiltless.”

“Yes, she knows. I felt it too,” said Miss Elizabeth.

“I never doubted,” said John Baxter, whose face was beautiful at that
hour. “Not from the first. Never have!”

“You never offered me proof, John. Now, thank God, it will not be the
same any more. I can think henceforward of Aggie without sorrow.” She
tripped, absolutely tripped, across the hall. “What ideas these Jews
have of arranging furniture!” She spied me behind a big Cloisonnée vase.

“I've seen the window,” she said remotely. “You took a great risk in
advising me to undertake such a journey. However, as it turns out...
I forgive you, and I pray you may never know what mental anguish means!
Bessie! Look at this peculiar piano! Do you suppose, Doctor, these
people would offer one tea? I miss mine.”

“I will go and see,” I said, and explored M'Leod's new-built servants'
wing. It was in the servants' hall that I unearthed the M'Leod family,
bursting with anxiety.

“Tea for three, quick,” I said. “If you ask me any questions now,
I shall have a fit!” So Mrs. M'Leod got it, and I was butler, amid
murmured apologies from Baxter, still smiling and self-absorbed, and
the cold disapproval of Miss Mary, who thought the pattern of the china
vulgar. However, she ate well, and even asked me whether I would not
like a cup of tea for myself.

They went away in the twilight--the twilight that I had once feared.
They were going to an hotel in London to rest after the fatigues of the
day, and as their fly turned down the drive, I capered on the door step,
with the all-darkened house behind me.

Then I heard the uncertain feet of the M'Leods and bade them not to turn
on the lights, but to feel--to feel what I had done; for the Shadow was
gone, with the dumb desire in the air. They drew short, but afterwards
deeper, breaths, like bathers entering chill water, separated one from
the other, moved about the hall, tiptoed upstairs, raced down, and then
Miss M'Leod, and I believe her mother, though she denies this, embraced
me. I know M'Leod did.

It was a disgraceful evening. To say we rioted through the house is to
put it mildly. We played a sort of Blind Man's Buff along the darkest
passages, in the unlighted drawing-room, and little dining-room, calling
cheerily to each other after each exploration that here, and here, and
here, the trouble had removed itself. We came up to the bedroom--mine
for the night again--and sat, the women on the bed, and we men
on chairs, drinking in blessed draughts of peace and comfort and
cleanliness of soul, while I told them my tale in full, and received
fresh praise, thanks, and blessings.

When the servants, returned from their day's outing, gave us a supper
of cold fried fish, M'Leod had sense enough to open no wine. We had
been practically drunk since nightfall, and grew incoherent on water and
milk.

“I like that Baxter,” said M'Leod. “He's a sharp man. The death wasn't
in the house, but he ran it pretty close, ain't it?”

“And the joke of it is that he supposes I want to buy the place from
you,” I said. “Are you selling?”

“Not for twice what I paid for it--now,” said M'Leod. “I'll keep you in
furs all your life, but not our Holmescroft.”

“No--never our Holmescroft,” said Miss M'Leod. “We'll ask him here on
Tuesday, mamma.” They squeezed each other's hands.

“Now tell me,” said Mrs. M'Leod--“that tall one, I saw out of the
scullery window--did she tell you she was always here in the spirit? I
hate her. She made all this trouble. It was not her house after she had
sold it. What do you think?”

“I suppose,” I answered, “she brooded over what she believed was her
sister's suicide night and day--she confessed she did--and her thoughts
being concentrated on this place, they felt like a--like a burning
glass.”

“Burning glass is good,” said M'Leod.

“I said it was like a light of blackness turned on us,” cried the girl,
twiddling her ring. “That must have been when the tall one thought worst
about her sister and the house.”

“Ah, the poor Aggie!” said Mrs. M'Leod. “The poor Aggie, trying to
tell every one it was not so! No wonder we felt Something wished to say
Something. Thea, Max, do you remember that night?”

“We need not remember any more,” M'Leod interrupted. “It is not our
trouble. They have told each other now.”

“Do you think, then,” said Miss M'Leod, “that those two, the living
ones, were actually told something--upstairs--in your in the room?”

“I can't say. At any rate they were made happy, and they ate a big tea
afterwards. As your father says, it is not our trouble any longer--thank
God!”

“Amen!” said M'Leod. “Now, Thea, let us have some music after all these
months. 'With mirth, thou pretty bird,' ain't it? You ought to hear
that.”

And in the half-lighted hall, Thea sang an old English song that I had
never heard before.

With mirth, thou pretty bird, rejoice
    Thy Maker's praise enhanced;
Lift up thy shrill and pleasant voice,
    Thy God is high advanced!
Thy food before He did provide,
And gives it in a fitting side,
    Wherewith be thou sufficed!
Why shouldst thou now unpleasant be,
    Thy wrath against God venting,
That He a little bird made thee,
    Thy silly head tormenting,
Because He made thee not a man?
Oh, Peace! He hath well thought thereon,
    Therewith be thou sufficed!




THE RABBI'S SONG

         If thought can reach to Heaven,
           On Heaven let it dwell,
         For fear that Thought be given
           Like power to reach to Hell.
         For fear the desolation
           And darkness of thy mind,
         Perplex an habitation
           Which thou hast left behind.

         Let nothing linger after--
           No whispering ghost remain,
         In wall, or beam, or rafter,
           Of any hate or pain:
         Cleanse and call home thy spirit,
           Deny her leave to cast,
         On aught thy heirs inherit,
           The shadow of her past.

         For think, in all thy sadness,
           What road our griefs may take;
         Whose brain reflect our madness,
           Or whom our terrors shake.
         For think, lest any languish
           By cause of thy distress
         The arrows of our anguish
           Fly farther than we guess.

          Our lives, our tears, as water,
           Are spilled upon the ground;
         God giveth no man quarter,
           Yet God a means hath found;
         Though faith and hope have vanished,
           And even love grows dim;
         A means whereby His banished
           Be not expelled from Him!