"Bettersea trem? Right, miss!" My wife, who has been married long enough to feel deeply gratified at being mistaken for a maiden lady, smiled seraphically at the conductor, and allowed herself to be hoisted up the steps of the majestic vehicle provided by a paternal county council to convey passengers—at a loss to the ratepayers, I understand—from the Embankment to Battersea. Presently we ground our way round a curve and began to cross Westminster Bridge. The conductor, "What part of Bettersea did you require, sir?" he asked of me. I coughed and answered evasively:— "Oh, about the middle." "We haven't been there before," added my wife, quite gratuitously. The conductor smiled indulgently and punched our tickets. "I'll tell you when to get down," he said, and left us. For some months we had been considering the question of buying a dog, and a good deal of our spare time—or perhaps I should say of my spare time, for a woman's time is naturally all her own—had been pleasantly My wife vacillated between a bloodhound, because bloodhounds are so aristocratic in appearance, and a Pekinese, because they are dernier cri. We like to be dernier cri even in Much Moreham. Her younger sister, Eileen, who spends a good deal of time with us, having no parents of her own, suggested an Old English sheep dog, explaining that it would be company for my wife when I was away from home. I coldly recommended a mastiff. Our son John, aged three, on being consulted, expressed a preference for twelve tigers in a box, and was not Finally we decided on an Aberdeen terrier, of an age and sex to be settled by circumstances, and I was instructed to communicate with a gentleman in the North who advertised in our morning paper that Aberdeen terriers were his specialty. In due course we received a reply. The advertiser recommended two animals—namely, Celtic Chief, aged four months, and Scotia's Pride, aged one year. Pedigrees were inclosed, each about as complicated as the family tree of the House of Hapsburg; and the favor of an early reply was requested, as both dogs were being hotly bid for by an anonymous client in Constantinople. The price of Celtic Chief was Finally Stella, my wife, said:— "We don't really want a dog with a pedigree. We only want something that will bark at beggars and be gentle with baby. Why not go to the Home for Lost Dogs at Battersea? I believe you can get any dog you like there for five shillings. We will run up to town next Wednesday and see about it—and I might get some clothes as well." Hence our presence on the tram. Presently the conductor, who had kindly pointed out to us such objects of local interest as the River Thames and the Houses of Parliament, stopped the tram in a crowded thoroughfare and announced that we were in Battersea. "Alight here," he announced facetiously, "for 'Ome for Lost Dawgs!" Guiltily realizing that there is many a true word spoken in jest, we obeyed him, and the tram went rocking and whizzing out of sight. We had eschewed a cab. "When you are only going to pay five shillings for a dog," my wife had pointed out, with convincing logic, "it is silly to go and pay perhaps another five shillings for a cab. It doubles the price of the dog at once. "Now," I inquired briskly, "how are we going to find this place?" "Haven't you any idea where it is?" "No. I have a sort of vague notion that it is on an island in the middle of the river, called the Isle of Dogs, or Barking Reach, or something like that. However, I have no doubt—" "Hadn't we better ask some one?" suggested Stella. I demurred. "If there is one thing I dislike," I said, "it is accosting total strangers and badgering them for information they don't possess—not that that will prevent them from giving it. If we start asking the way we shall find "Yes, dear," said Stella soothingly. "Now I suggest—" My hand went to my pocket. "No, darling," interposed my wife, hastily; "not a map, please!" It is a curious psychological fact that women have a constitutional aversion to maps and railroad time-tables. They would rather consult a half-witted errand boy or a deaf railroad porter. "Do not let us make a spectacle of ourselves in the public streets again! I have not yet forgotten the day when you tried to find the Crystal Palace. Besides, it will only blow away. Ask that dear little boy there. He is looking at us so wistfully." Yes; I admit it was criminal folly. A man who asks a London street boy The wistful little boy smiled up at us. He had a pinched face and large eyes. "Lost Dogs' 'Ome, sir?" he said courteously. "It's a good long way. Do you want to get there quick?" "Yes." "Then if I was you, sir," replied the infant, edging to the mouth of an alleyway, "I should bite a policeman!" And, with an ear-splitting yell, he vanished. We walked on, hot-faced. "Little wretch!" said Stella. "We simply asked for it," I rejoined. "What are we going to do next?" My question was answered in a "Wait a minute and I will ask him," I said, starting forward. But my wife would not hear of it. "Certainly not," she replied. "If we ask him he will simply offer to show us the way. Then we shall have to talk to him—about hydrophobia, and lethal chambers, and distemper—and it may be for miles. I simply couldn't bear it! We shall have to tip him, too. Let us follow him quietly." To those who have never attempted to track a fellow creature surreptitiously through the streets of London on a hot day, the feat may appear simple. It is in reality a most exhausting, dilatory, and humiliating exercise. Our difficulty lay not so much in keeping our friend in sight as in avoiding frequent and unexpected collisions with him. The general idea, as they say on field days, was to keep about twenty yards behind him; but under certain circumstances distance has an uncanny habit of annihilating itself. The man himself was no hustler. Once or twice he stopped to light his pipe or converse with a friend. During these interludes Stella and I loafed guiltily on the pavement, pointing out to one another objects Our quarry's next proceeding was to dive into a public house. We turned and surveyed one another. "What are we to do now?" inquired my wife. "Go inside, too," I replied with more enthusiasm than I had hitherto displayed. "At least, I think I ought to. You can please yourself." "I will not be left in the street," said Stella firmly. "We must just wait here together until he comes out." "There may be another exit," I objected. "We had better go in. I shall take something, just to keep up appearances; and you must sit down in the ladies' bar, or the snug, or whatever they call it." "Certainly not!" said Stella. We had arrived at this impasse when the man suddenly reappeared, wiping his mouth. Instantly and silently we fell in behind him. For the first time the man appeared "We ought to get there soon at this pace," I gasped. "Hello! He's gone again!" "He turned down to the right," said Stella excitedly. The lust of the chase was fairly on us now. We swung eagerly round the corner into a quiet by-street. Our man was nowhere to be seen and the street was almost empty. "Come on!" said Stella. "He may have turned in somewhere." We hurried down the street. Suddenly, For the next five minutes we practically ran—all three of us. The man was obviously frightened out of his wits, and kept making frenzied and spasmodic spurts, from which we surmised that he was getting to the end of his powers of endurance. "If only we could overtake him," I said, hauling my exhausted spouse along by the arm, "we could explain that—" "He's gone again!" exclaimed Stella. She was right. The man had turned another corner. We followed him round hotfoot, and found ourselves in a prim little cul-de-sac, with villas on each side. Across the end of the street ran a high wall, obviously screening a railroad track. "We've got him!" I exclaimed. I felt as Moltke must have felt when he closed the circle at Sedan. "But where is the Dogs' Home, dear?" inquired Stella. The question was never answered, for at this moment the man ran up the steps of the fourth villa on the left and slipped a latchkey into the lock. The door closed behind him with a venomous snap and we were left alone in the street, guideless and dogless. A minute later the man appeared The commanding female, after a prolonged and withering glare, plucked a hairpin from her head and ostentatiously proceeded to skewer together the starchy white curtains that framed the window. Privacy secured and the sanctity of the English home thus pointedly vindicated, she and her husband disappeared into the murky background, where they doubtless sat down to an excellent high tea. Exhausted and discomfited, we drifted away. "I am going home," said Stella in a hollow voice. "And I think," she I apologized. It is the simplest plan, really. |