It was her natural, respectable state to be so.
‘It’s for Mrs Arb,
sir,’ Elsie began.
‘Mrs Arb?’ questioned Mr
Earlforward, puzzled for an instant by the unfamiliar name. ‘Yes, yes, I know.
Well? What have you got to do with Mrs Arb?’
‘I work for her in my afternoons,
sir.’
‘But I never knew this!’
‘I only began to-day, sir. She
sent me across, seeing as I’m engaged here, to see if you’d got a good,
cheap, second-hand cookery-book.’
Mr Earlforward’s demeanour
reflected no change in his mood, but Elsie had raised him into heaven. It was not to
give him notice that she had come! She would stay with him! She would stay for ever,
or until he had no need of her. And she would make a link with Mrs Arb, the new
proprietress of the confectioner’s shop across the way. Of course the name of
the new proprietress was Arb. He had not thought of her name. He had thought only of
herself. Even now he had no notion of her Christian name.
‘Oh! So she wants a cookery-book,
does she? What sort of a cookery-book?’
‘She said
she’s thinking of going in for sandwiches, sir, and things, she said, and
having a sign put up for it. Snacks, like.’
The word ‘snacks’ gave Mr
Earlforward an idea. He walked across to what he called the ‘modern
side’ of the shop. In the course of the war, when food-rationed stay-at-homes
really had to stay at home, and, having nothing else to do while waiting for
air-raids, took to literature in desperation, he had done a very large trade in
cheap editions of novels, and quite a good trade in cheap cookery-books that
professed to teach rationed housewives how to make substance out of shadow. Gently
rubbing his little beard, he stood and gazed rather absently at a shelf of small
paper-protected volumes, while Elsie waited with submission.
Silence within, but the dulled and still
hard rumble of ceaseless motion beyond the book-screened windows! A spell! An
enchantment upon these two human beings, both commonplace and both marvellous, bound
together and yet incurious each of the other and incurious of the mysteries in which
they and all their fellows lived! Mr Earlforward never asked the meaning of life,
for he had a lifelong ruling passion. Elsie never asked the meaning of life, for she
was dominated and obsessed by a tremendous instinct to serve. Mr Earlforward, though
a kindly man, had persuaded himself that Elsie would go on charing until she died,
without any romantic recompense from fate for her early tragedy, and he was well
satisfied that this should be so. Because the result would inconvenience him, he
desired that she should not fall in love again and marry; he preferred that she
should spend her strength and youth and should grow old for him in sterile celibacy.
He had absolutely no eye for the exciting effect of the white and the brown
apron-strings crossing and recrossing round her magnificent waist. And Elsie knew
only that Mr Earlforward had material wants, which she satisfied as well as she
could. She did not guess, nor come within a hundred miles of
guessing, that he was subject to dreams and ideals and longings. That the universe
was enigmatic had not even occurred to her, nor to him; they were too busy with
their share in working it out.
‘Now here’s a book that
ought to suit Mrs Arb,’ said Mr Earlforward, picking a volume from the shelf
and moving towards the entrance, where the clear daylight was. ‘“Snacks
and Titbits.” Let me see. Sandwiches.’ He turned over leaves.
‘Sandwiches. There’s nearly seven pages about sandwiches.’
‘How much would it be,
sir?’
‘One shilling.’
‘Oh! She said she couldn’t
pay more than sixpence, sir, she said.’
Mr Earlforward looked up with a fresh
interest. He was exhilarated, even inspired, by the conception of a woman who,
wishing to brighten her business with a new line of goods, was not prepared to spend
more than sixpence on the indispensable basis of the enterprise. The conception
powerfully appealed to him, and his regard for Mrs Arb increased.
‘See here, Elsie. Take this over
for Mrs Arb to look at. And tell her, with my compliments, that you can’t get
cookery-books – not any that are any good – for sixpence in these
days.’
‘Yes, sir.’
Elsie put the book under her aprons and
hurried off.
‘She sends you her
compliments, and she says she can’t pay more than sixpence, sir. I’m
that sorry, sir,’ Elsie announced, returning.
Mr Earlforward blandly replaced the book
on its shelf, and Elsie waited in vain for any comment, then left.
‘I say, Elsie,’ he recalled
her. ‘It’s not raining much, but it might soon. As you’re here,
you’d better help me in with the stand. That’ll save me taking the books
out before it’s moved, and it’ll save you trouble in the
morning.’
‘Yes,
sir,’ Elsie eagerly agreed.
One at either end of it, they lugged
within the heavy bookstand that stretched along the length of the window on the
flagstones outside the shop.
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