Mr. Pete was in a state of the liveliest exasperation. He had been in the consular service for more than twenty years and he had had to deal with all manner of vexatious people, officials who would not listen to reason, merchants who took the British Government for a debt collecting agency, missionaries who resented as gross injustice any attempt at fair play; but he never recollected a case which had left him more completely at a loss. He was a mild-mannered man, but for no reason he flew into a passion with his writer and he very nearly sacked the Eurasian clerk because he had wrongly spelt two words in a letter placed before him for his official signature. He was a conscientious man and he could not persuade himself to leave his office before the clock struck four, but the moment it did he jumped up and called for his hat and stick. Because his boy did not bring them at once he abused him roundly. They say that the consuls all grow a little odd; and the merchants who can live for thirty-five years in China without learning enough of the language to ask their way in the street, say that it is because they He was a man who took his work hardly, worrying himself to death over every trifle, but as a rule a walk on the wall soothed and rested him. The city stood in the midst of a great plain and often at sundown from the wall you could see in the distance the snow-capped mountains, the mountains of Tibet; but now he walked quickly, looking neither to the right nor to the left, and his fat spaniel frisked about him unobserved. He talked to himself rapidly in a low monotone. The cause of his irritation was a visit that he had that day received from a lady who called herself Mrs. YÜ and whom he with a consular passion for precision insisted on calling Miss Lambert. This in itself sufficed to deprive their intercourse of amenity. She was an Englishwoman married to a Chinese. She had arrived two years before with "How did you meet Mr. YÜ?" asked the consul frigidly. "Well, you see, it's like this," she answered. "Dad was in a very good position, and when he died mother said: 'Well, it seems a sinful waste to keep all these rooms empty, I'll put a card in the window.'" The consul interrupted her. "He had lodgings with you?" "Well, they weren't exactly lodgings," she said. "Shall we say apartments then?" replied the consul, with his thin, slightly vain smile. That was generally the explanation of these marriages. Then because he thought her a very foolish vulgar woman he explained bluntly that according to English law she was not married to YÜ and that the best thing she could do was to go back to England at once. She began to cry and his heart softened a little to her. He promised to put her in charge of some missionary ladies who would look after her on the long journey, and indeed, if she liked, he would see if meanwhile she "What's the good of going back to England?" she said at last. "I 'aven't got nowhere to go to." "You can go to your mother." "She was all against my marrying Mr. YÜ. I should never hear the last of it if I was to go back now." The consul began to argue with her, but the more he argued the more determined she became, and at last he lost his temper. "If you like to stay here with a man who isn't your husband it's your own look out, but I wash my hands of all responsibility." Her retort had often rankled. "Then you've got no cause to worry," she said, and the look on her face returned to him whenever he thought of her. That was two years ago and he had seen her once or twice since then. It appeared that she got on very badly both with her mother-in-law and with her husband's other wife, and she had come to the consul with preposterous questions about her rights according to Chinese law. He repeated his offer to get her away, but she remained steadfast in her refusal to go, and their interview always ended in the consul's flying into a passion. He was almost inclined to pity the rascally YÜ who had to keep the peace between three warring women. According to his English wife's account he was not unkind to her. He tried to act fairly by both his wives. Miss Lambert did "They're trying to poison me," she screamed and she put before him a bowl of some foul smelling food. "It's poisoned," she said. "I've been ill for the last ten days, it's only by a miracle I've escaped." She gave him a long story, circumstantial and probable enough to convince him: after all nothing was more likely than that the Chinese women should use familiar methods to get rid of an intruder who was hateful to them. "Do they know you've come here?" "Of course they do; I told them I was going to show them up." Now at last was the moment for decisive action. The consul looked at her in his most official manner. "Well, you must never go back there. I refuse to put up with your nonsense any longer. I insist on your leaving this man who isn't your husband." But he found himself helpless against the woman's insane obstinacy. He repeated all the arguments he had used so often, but she would not "But what on earth makes you stay with the man?" he cried. She hesitated for a moment and a curious look came into her eyes. "There's something in the way his hair grows on his forehead that I can't help liking," she answered. The consul had never heard anything so outrageous. It really was the last straw. And now while he strode along, trying to walk off his anger, though he was not a man who often used bad language he really could not restrain himself, and he said fiercely: "Women are simply bloody." |