Myddleton West still lived in the rooms over a fancy wool shop in Fetter Lane, which he had rented when he first came to London. At times he had thought of going into one of the Inns close by, and had inspected chambers there, but he found so many ghosts on every landing that, although a man of fair courage, he became affrighted. Over the fancy wool shop in Fetter Lane, no shadows interfered. The Misses Langley kept his rooms carefully dusted, seeing that the panel photograph of an attractive young nurse, with a thoughtful face, never moved from its position of honour on the mantelpiece. Myddleton West was getting on in the world and earning agreeable cheques every month; like many young men in this position, he found it difficult to increase his expenses without taking inordinate pains. Consequently he gave up attempts in “Hullo!” said Myddleton West. “Excuse me interrupting, sir, in your writing work.” “Doesn’t matter, Miss Langley.” “As I often say to my sister,” persisted the thin lady at the doorway, “no one can possibly write sense if they’re to be continually broken in on—if I may use the expression—and—” “Somebody called to see me?” asked West, patiently. “And badgered out of their life,” concluded the lady. “I’m sure writing must be quite sufficient a tax on the brains without—” “Miss Langley.” “Sir to you.” “Do I understand that some one has called to see me?” “Mr. West,” confessed Miss Langley, with a burst of frankness, “some one has called to see you.” “Then,” said Myddleton West, definitely, “show them up.” “It isn’t a them, sir, it’s only a bit of a lad.” “Very well, show him up.” West finished the sentence which he had commenced, and then, hearing a slipping footstep, swung round in his chair again. A boy in a long worn frock-coat, his bowler hat dented, stood at the doorway, white of face, his under lip not quite under control. “Wha’ cheer?” said the boy with an effort to appear at ease. “How goes it with you?” “Wait a bit,” said Myddleton West, rising and standing in front of the fireplace. “Let me see now if I can remember you. Take off your hat.” West dropped his pince-nez and peered across the room at the boy. “I’ll have three shots,” he said presently. “Your name is Cumberland.” “Not a bit like it.” “I met you—let me see—at an inquest in Hoxton some years ago; I saw you later at the police station.” “You’re getting warmer. Now try the letter L.” “And your name is Lincoln.” “Bit more to the left.” “Lancaster!” “A bull’s-eye!” said the white-faced boy approvingly. “What’ll you ’ave, cigar or a cokernut?” He staggered a little and caught the back of the chair. “You are a good guesser,” replied Bobbie, slipping to the chair. “I ’aven’t had a thing to eat for—for a day and a half.” Myddleton West snatched a serviette from the drawer and spread it on the table in front of the boy. In another moment half a loaf of bread, a knuckle of ham, and cheese were on the serviette; in much less than another moment Bobbie had commenced. “Excuse me wolfin’ me food,” said the boy with his mouth full. “Don’t suppose you know what it is to be famishing. I’ve had rather rough times the last few days.” “But you went to the Poor Law schools surely. Did you run away?” “Yes,” said Bobbie ruefully. “And I wish now I hadn’t. Can I trouble you for a glass of water, sir?” “Like some lemonade?” asked Myddleton West. “So long as it’s moist, sir, and there’s plenty of it, I don’t mind what it is.” “And you’re not getting on well as an independent man?” “I’m getting on,” said Bobbie, holding up the glass with a trembling hand, “pretty awful.” He drank and smacked his lips appreciatively, “Ah!” he said, “that’s something like!” “Eat slowly.” “Does it matter if I finish the bread, sir?” “I shall be disappointed if you don’t.” “Then rather’n cause you any annoyance,” said Bobbie with reviving spirits, “I’ll undertake to clear it all up.” The meal finished, the boy asked for a cigarette, and, smoking this with great enjoyment, told Myddleton West his adventures. The journey back from Brenchley had not been without drawbacks. At Orpington, Bobbie had interfered on behalf of the gipsy’s wife, with the perfectly natural result that she had turned on him indignantly, and both man and wife had, in turns, thrashed him, and had then started him adrift without his cornet. From Orpington to London he had walked. “And now,” said Bobbie—“and now my difficulty is how to get back to the ’omes without looking a silly fool. What would you advise, sir?” “I should send a wire,” counselled Myddleton West promptly. “Apologize for your absence, and say that you will be there in a few hours.” “It’d pave the way a bit,” acknowledged the boy. “Here’s a form. Write the address of the Superintendent.” “You must tell us what else to say.” The telegram drawn up on the dictation of the newspaper man, seemed to Bobbie an admirable document; one calculated to remove difficulties. Miss Langley being summoned, the boy was conveyed to the kitchen downstairs, where, furnished with a cake of yellow soap, he remained under the tap for about ten minutes. This so much improved his appearance that when Myddleton West started with him to take train at Blackfriars, the two sisters forced upon his acceptance a triangular chunk of seed cake and a gay almanack with a portrait of the Princess of Wales, which Bobbie decided to take as a propitiatory offering to the mother of Collingwood Cottage. The telegram was despatched from an office in Fleet Street after Bobbie had read it through once more with increased satisfaction. The fares from Temple Station to Bishopsgate and from Liverpool Street to the destination being ascertained from a railway time book, Bobbie agreed to accept from Myddleton West the precise amount and no more. He showed gratitude with less reserve than he would have exhibited in the years before he entered the Homes, and, as he trotted beside the long-legged journalist, he endeavoured politely to find a subject for conversation that would be pleasing to his companion. “How are you getting along with your young lady, sir?” he asked with interest. “No progress,” replied West. “You don’t go the right way to work,” said Bobbie knowingly. “Women folk can be managed if you only exercise a bit of what I call ingenuity.” “I am always willing, Master Lancaster, to listen to the voice of experience.” “What you want to do,” said the young sage, changing step as they went down Arundel Street, “is to be artful without lettin’ ’em see that you’re artful.” “I know of no plan,” said West, “by which, under modern conditions, you can force a lady to marry you if she has decided not to do so.” “Pretend there’s another lady,” suggested Bobbie; “Always a risk that the announcement may be received with undisguised satisfaction.” “Can but give it a trial,” urged Bobbie. “If she’s an ordinary sort of young lady, strikes me she’ll marry you like a shot. Is this my station?” “This is the Temple Station,” said West. “Buy your ticket and be careful not to get out of the train before you get to Bishopsgate.” “All right,” said Bobbie. “I’m old enough to take care of meself.” “Let me know that you get down safely.” “I shall be as right as rain now. I feel like twenty shillings in the pound since I saw you, sir.” “Good-bye,” said Myddleton West, holding out his hand, “and good luck to you.” “Good-bye,” said Bobbie, taking the hand awkwardly, “and good luck to you, sir. You know what I mean. And I’m—I’m very much obliged for all your—” “There’s a train coming,” interrupted West. “Down you go.” Bobbie, seated near the window of the impetuous underground train, held tightly the large card intender for the mother of Collingwood Cottage, and as he read advertisements in the compartment congratulated himself on the change of circumstances that had come to him within the last hour. He felt grateful for this, and decided that once safely back in the homes and enjoying the sunshine of favour again, he would comport himself in a manner that would be gratifying to those who wished him well. The bitter days of the journey up from Brenchley had proved to him that the world was full of unforeseen and highly inconvenient rocks for a boy who had no one to pilot him; he must wait until he became older before he courted the responsibility of taking charge of himself. In less than an hour he would be through the gates of the Homes; the delicate matter of his return would be all over, and the past few days could be sponged from Other passengers in the compartment went out at one of the stations, and Bobbie stood up at the open window as the train hurried through the black smoky tunnel. The train pulled up, gasping, at another station, starting again immediately with a rough jerk that knocked the card out of Bobbie’s hand on to the platform. He jumped out, picked up the portrait and attempted to re-enter the compartment. The porters shouted,— “Stan’ away from the train there!” “Stan’ away, can’t you, stan’ away!” “Whoa! Stop! You’ll break the door!” The train pulled up suddenly in a great state of annoyance. At the end of the platform, where the black tunnel began, the boy had been flung and lay a mere bundle on the platform. The carriage door closed; the train went on into the tunnel ill-temperedly. The entire staff and a few stray passengers surrounded the senseless bundle on the platform. “Here,” said the inspector to one of the porters, “you’re a ‘first aid’ man. See if you can tell what the damage is.” “He’s ’urt,” said the “first aid” man, with a professional air. “Yes, yes,” remarked the inspector, “we could have all guessed that.” “It’s a case for the ’ospital,” said the “first aid” man cautiously. “I don’t feel justified in trying my ’and at it.” “Then,” said the inspector, “fetch the ambulance cart, someone, for the poor little beggar, and let’s get him there as quick as possible. We can’t have passengers dying about here.” |