He was shod
in old, black leather slippers, well polished. He gave an appearance of quiet,
intelligent, refined and kindly prosperity; and in his little eyes shone the varying
lights of emotional sensitiveness.
Riceyman Steps, twenty in number, are
divided by a half-landing into two series of ten. The man stopped on the
half-landing and swung round with a casual air of purposelessness which, however, concealed, imperfectly, a definite design. The suspicious and
cynical, slyly watching his movements, would have thought: ‘What’s that
fellow after?’
A man interested in a strange woman
acquires one equine attribute – he can look in two directions at once. This
man could, and did, look in two directions at once.
Below him and straight in front he saw a
cobbled section of King’s Cross Road – a hell of noise and dust and
dirt, with the County of London tramcars, and motor-lorries and heavy horse-drawn
vans sweeping north and south in a vast clangour of iron thudding and grating on
iron and granite, beneath the bedroom windows of a defenceless populace. On the far
side of the road were, conspicuous to the right, the huge, red Nell Gwynn Tavern,
set on the site of Nell’s still huger palace, and displaying printed
exhortations to buy fruity Portuguese wines and to attend meetings of workers; and,
conspicuous to the left, red Rowton House, surpassing in immensity even Nell’s
vanished palace, divided into hundreds and hundreds of clean cubicles for the
accommodation of the defeated and the futile at a shilling a night, and displaying
on its iron façade a newspaper promise to divulge the names of the winners of
horse-races. Nearer to the man who could look two ways lay the tiny open space (not
open to vehicular traffic) which was officially included in the title
‘Riceyman Steps’. At the south corner of this was a second-hand
bookseller’s shop, and at the north an abandoned and decaying mission-hall;
both these abutted on King’s Cross Road. Then, on either hand, farther from
the thoroughfare and nearer the steps, came a few private houses with carefully
curtained windows, and one other shop – a confectioner’s. And next, also
on either hand, two business ‘yards’ full of lorries, goods, gear, and
the hum of hidden machinery. And the earth itself faintly throbbed; for, to the
vibrations of traffic and manufacture, the Underground Railway, running beneath
Riceyman Steps, added the muffled uproar of its subterranean
electric trains.
While gazing full at the spectacle of
King’s Cross Road the man on the steps peered downwards on his right at the
confectioner’s shop, which held the woman who had begun to inflame him. He
failed to descry her, but his thoughts pleasantly held her image, and she held his
thoughts. He dreamed that one day he would share with her sympathetic soul his own
vision of this wonderful Clerkenwell in which he lived and she now lived. He would
explain to her eager ear that once Clerkenwell was a murmuring green land of
medicinal springs, wells, streams with mills on their banks, nunneries, aristocrats,
and holy clerks who presented mystery-plays. Yes, he would tell her about the drama
of Adam and Eve being performed in the costume of Adam and Eve to a simple and
unshocked people. (Why not? She was a widow and no longer young.) And he would point
out to her how the brown backs of the houses which fronted on King’s Cross
Road resembled the buttressed walls of a mighty fortress, and how the grim,
ochreish, unwindowed backs of the houses of Riceyman Square (behind him) looked just
like lofty, medieval keeps. And he would relate to her the story of the palace of
Nell Gwynn, contemporary of Louise de la Vallière, and dividing with Louise the
honour of being the first and most ingenuous of modern vampires. Never before had he
had the idea of unfolding his mind on these enthralling subjects to a woman.
Rain began to fall. It fell on the
bargain-books exposed in a stand outside the bookseller’s shop. The man did
not move. Then a swift gentlemanly person stepped suddenly out of King’s Cross
Road into the approach to the steps, and after a moment’s hesitation entered
the shop. The man on the steps quietly limped down and followed the potential
customer into the shop, which was his own.
2
The Customer
The shop had one window in King’s
Cross Road, but the entrance, with another window, was in Riceyman Steps. The
King’s Cross Road window held only cheap editions, in their paper jackets, of
popular modern novels, such as those of Ethel M. Dell, Charles Garvice, Zane Grey,
Florence Barclay, Nat Gould, and Gene Stratton Porter. The side window was set out
with old books, first editions, illustrated editions, and complete library editions
in calf or morocco of renowned and serious writers, whose works, indispensable to
the collections of self-respecting book-gentlemen (as distinguished from bookmen),
have passed through decades of criticism into the impregnable paradise of eternal
esteem. The side window was bound to attract the attention of collectors and
bibliomaniacs. It seemed strangely, even fatally, out of place in that dingy and
sordid neighbourhood where existence was a dangerous and difficult adventure in
almost frantic quest of food, drink and shelter, where the familiar and beloved
landmarks were public-houses, and where the immense majority of the population read
nothing but sporting prognostications and results, and, on Sunday mornings, accounts
of bloody crimes and juicy sexual irregularities.
Nevertheless, the shop was, in fact,
well placed in Riceyman Steps. It had a picturesque air, and Riceyman Steps also had
a picturesque air, with all its outworn shabbiness, grime and decay. The steps
leading up to Riceyman Square, the glimpse of the Square at the
top, with its church bearing a massive cross on the west front, the curious
perpendicular effects of the tall, blind, ochreish houses – all these touched
the imagination of every man who had in his composition any unusually strong
admixture of the universal human passion – love of the past. The shop
reinforced the appeal of its environment.
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