stared speechlessly at them both. He saw the green-shaded desk-lamp
spinning round before his eyes and the expanse of bookshelves dissolving into
a multi-coloured haze. Then he felt himself going hot, shamefully hot; he
managed to stammer: “I—I must—congratulate
you—both.”
Philippa was not looking at him.
His eyes kept wandering from one to the other of them; she was so
beautiful, he perceived now, and Sir Henry, with all his sprightliness, was
so monstrously old. He had never noticed before how hideous were those rolls
of fat between his chin and his neck, and how he very slightly slobbered over
his sibilants.
“Yes, I congratulate you,” he repeated.
He went out for lunch, paced up and down in Regent’s Park during the
afternoon, and spent the evening at a restaurant and a music-hall. Towards
midnight he went to the Comet office and asked to see Aitchison.
Aitchison, a hard-bitten Scotsman of sixty, smiled rather cynically when A.J.
suggested being sent abroad as a foreign correspondent; he guessed the
reason, and personally thought it not at all a bad idea that A.J. should live
down his notoriety abroad. There was, of course, no moral stigma attached to
a seven-day sentence for trying to rescue a suffragette, but the boy had made
a fool of himself and one can be laughed out of a profession as well as
drummed out. The foreign correspondent notion, however, was hopeless; A.J.
would be as useless, journalistically, abroad as at home. Aitchison knew all
this well enough, and when A.J. further went on to suggest being sent out to
the Far East to report the Russo-Japanese War which had just begun, he
laughed outright. It was impossible, he answered; jobs like that required
experience, and A.J. possessed none; reporting a war wasn’t like
writing a highbrow middle about the stained-glass at Chartres. Besides, it
would all be far too expensive; the Comet wasn’t a wealthy paper
and probably wouldn’t have a correspondent of its own at all. To which
A.J. replied that, as for money, he had a little himself and was so anxious
to try his luck that he would willingly spend it in travelling out East if
the Comet would give him credentials as its correspondent and take
anything he sent that was acceptable. Aitchison thought this over and quickly
reached the conclusion that it was an ideal arrangement—for the
Comet. It was, to begin with, a way of getting rid of A.J., and it was
also a way by which the Comet could obtain all the kudos of having a
war-correspondent without the disagreeable necessity of footing the bill for
his expenses—though, of course, if A.J. did send them anything good the
Comet would be delighted to pay for it. And in haste less A.J. should
see any flaw in this most admirable scheme, Aitchison accepted, adding:
“Naturally you’ll bear in mind the policy of this paper—we
don’t much care for the Russians, you know. Not much use you sending us
stuff we can’t print, especially when it’ll cost you God knows
how much a word to cable.”
A.J. left for Siberia at the beginning of April. Sir Henry declined either
to approve or to disapprove of the arrangement; all he made clear was that
A.J. could not expect any more chances, and that, if he wanted the hundred
pounds, he must go abroad as one of the prime conditions. Siberia was
undoubtedly abroad; its prospects for the emigrant were A.J.’s affair
entirely. During the last week of hectic preparation that preceded the
departure A.J. saw rather little of the old man, and the final good-byes both
with him and with Philippa were very formal.
No one saw him off at Charing Cross, and he felt positive relief when, a
couple of hours later, the boat swung out of Dover Harbour and he saw England
fading into the mist of a spring morning. Two days afterwards he was in
Berlin; and two days after that in Moscow. There he caught the Trans-Siberian
express and began the ten-days’ train journey to Irkutsk.
The train was comfortable but crowded, and most of the way he studied a
Russian grammar and phrase-book. Every mile that increased his distance from
London added to a certain bitter zest that he felt; whatever was to happen,
success or failure, was sure to be preferable to book-reviewing in
Bloomsbury.
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