The books showed scarcely a trace of the drizzle.
‘Thank you, Elsie.’
‘Don’t mention it,
sir.’
Mr Earlforward switched on one electric
light in the middle of the shop, switched off the light in his den, and lit a candle
there. Then he took a thermos flask, a cup, and two slices of bread on a plate from
the interior of the grandfather’s clock, poured steaming tea into the cup, and
enjoyed his evening meal. When the bell of St Andrew’s jangled six, he shut
and darkened the shop. The war habit of closing early suited him very well for
several reasons. Then, blowing out the candle, he began again to burn electricity in
the den, and tapped slowly and moved to and fro with deliberation, examining
booktitles, tapping out lists, tapping out addresses on envelopes, licking stamps,
and performing other pleasant little tasks of routine. And all the time he dwelt
with exquisite pleasure on the bodily appearance and astonishing moral
characteristics of Mrs Arb. What a woman! He had been right about that woman from
the first glance. She was a woman in a million.
At a quarter to seven he put his boots
on and collected his letters for the post. But before leaving to go to the post he
suddenly thought of a ten-shilling Treasury note received from Dr Raste, and took it
from his waistcoat pocket. It was a beautiful new note, a delicate object, carefully
folded by someone who understood that new notes deserve good treatment. He put it,
with other less brilliant cash, into the safe. As he departed from the shop for the
post office at Mount Pleasant, he picked out ‘Snacks and Titbits’ from
its shelf again, and slipped it into his side-pocket.
The rain had ceased.
He inhaled the fresh, damp air with an innocent and genuine delight. Mrs Arb’s
shop was the sole building illuminated in Riceyman Steps; it looked warm and
feminine; it attracted. The church rose darkly, a formidable mass, in the opening at
the top of the steps. The little group of dwelling-houses next to his own
establishment showed not a sign of life; they seldom did; he knew nothing of their
tenants, and felt absolutely no curiosity concerning them. His little yard abutted
on the yard of the nearest house, but the wall between them was seven feet high; no
sound ever came over it.
He turned into the main road. Although
he might have dropped his correspondence into the pillar-box close by, he preferred
to go to the mighty Mount Pleasant organism, with its terrific night-movement of
vans and flung mailbags, because it seemed surer, safer, for his letters.
Like many people who live alone, he had
a habit of talking to himself in the street. His thoughts would from time to time
suddenly burst almost with violence into a phrase. Then he would smile to himself.
‘Me at my age!’ … ‘Yes, and of course there’s
that!’ … ‘Want some getting used to!’ …
He would laugh rather sheepishly.
The vanquished were already beginning to
creep into the mazes of Rowton House. They clicked through a turnstile – that
was all he knew about existence in Rowton House, except that there were plants with
large green leaves in the windows of the common-room. Some of the vanquished entered
with boldness, but the majority walked furtively, as into a house of ill-fame. Just
opposite Rowton House the wisdom and enterprise of two railway companies had filled
a blank wall with a large poster exhibiting the question: ‘Why not take a
winter holiday where sunshine reigns?’ etc. Beneath this blank wall a newsman
displayed the posters of the evening papers, together with stocks of the papers. Mr
Earlforward always read the placards for news. There was nothing
much to-night. ‘Death of a well-known statesman.’ Mr Earlforward, as an
expert in interpretation, was aware that ‘well-known’ on a newspaper
placard meant exactly the opposite of what it meant in any other place; it meant not
well-known. The placards always divided dead celebrities, genuine and false, into
three categories. If Blank was a supreme personage the placards said: ‘Blank
dead’. Two most impressive words. If Blank was a real personage, but not quite
supreme, the placards said: ‘Death of Blank.’ Three words, not so
impressive.
1 comment