They sat up, and Mrs. Darnell went
hurriedly to the door.
'That's Alice,' she said. 'She is always in in time.
It has only just struck ten.'
Darnell shivered with annoyance. His lips, he
knew, had almost been opened. Mary's pretty handkerchief,
delicately scented from a little flagon that
a school friend had given her, lay on the floor, and he
picked it up, and kissed it, and hid it away.
The question of the range occupied them all through
June and far into July. Mrs. Darnell took every opportunity
of going to the West End and investigating
the capacity of the latest makes, gravely viewing the
new improvements and hearing what the shopmen had
to say; while Darnell, as he said, 'kept his eyes open'
about the City. They accumulated quite a literature
of the subject, bringing away illustrated pamphlets,
and in the evenings it was an amusement to look at the
pictures. They viewed with reverence and interest
the drawings of great ranges for hotels and public
institutions, mighty contrivances furnished with a series
of ovens each for a different use, with wonderful apparatus
for grilling, with batteries of accessories which
seemed to invest the cook almost with the dignity of
a chief engineer. But when, in one of the lists, they
encountered the images of little toy 'cottage' ranges,
for four pounds, and even for three pounds ten, they
grew scornful, on the strength of the eight or ten pound
article which they meant to purchase—when the merits
of the divers patents had been thoroughly thrashed
out.[34]
The 'Raven' was for a long time Mary's favourite.
It promised the utmost economy with the highest
efficiency, and many times they were on the point of
giving the order. But the 'Glow' seemed equally
seductive, and it was only £8. 5s. as compared with
£9. 7s. 6d., and though the 'Raven' was supplied to
the Royal Kitchen, the 'Glow' could show more fervent
testimonials from continental potentates.
It seemed a debate without end, and it endured day
after day till that morning, when Darnell woke from
the dream of the ancient wood, of the fountains rising
into grey vapour beneath the heat of the sun. As he
dressed, an idea struck him, and he brought it as a
shock to the hurried breakfast, disturbed by the
thought of the City 'bus which passed the corner of
the street at 9.15.
'I've got an improvement on your plan, Mary,' he
said, with triumph. 'Look at that,' and he flung a
little book on the table.
He laughed. 'It beats your notion all to fits.
After all, the great expense is the coal. It's not the
stove—at least that's not the real mischief. It's the
coal is so dear. And here you are. Look at those
oil stoves. They don't burn any coal, but the cheapest
fuel in the world—oil; and for two pounds ten you can
get a range that will do everything you want.'
'Give me the book,' said Mary, 'and we will talk it
over in the evening, when you come home. Must you
be going?'
Darnell cast an anxious glance at the clock.
'Good-bye,' and they kissed each other seriously and
dutifully, and Mary's eyes made Darnell think of those[35]
lonely water-pools, hidden in the shadow of the ancient
woods.
So, day after day, he lived in the grey phantasmal
world, akin to death, that has, somehow, with most of
us, made good its claim to be called life. To Darnell
the true life would have seemed madness, and when,
now and again, the shadows and vague images reflected
from its splendour fell across his path, he was afraid,
and took refuge in what he would have called the sane
'reality' of common and usual incidents and interests.
His absurdity was, perhaps, the more evident, inasmuch
as 'reality' for him was a matter of kitchen
ranges, of saving a few shillings; but in truth the folly
would have been greater if it had been concerned with
racing stables, steam yachts, and the spending of many
thousand pounds.
But so went forth Darnell, day by day, strangely
mistaking death for life, madness for sanity, and purposeless
and wandering phantoms for true beings. He
was sincerely of opinion that he was a City clerk, living
in Shepherd's Bush—having forgotten the mysteries
and the far-shining glories of the kingdom which was
his by legitimate inheritance.
II
All day long a fierce and heavy heat had brooded
over the City, and as Darnell neared home he saw the
mist lying on all the damp lowlands, wreathed in coils
about Bedford Park to the south, and mounting to the
west, so that the tower of Acton Church loomed out[36]
of a grey lake. The grass in the squares and on the
lawns which he overlooked as the 'bus lumbered
wearily along was burnt to the colour of dust. Shepherd's
Bush Green was a wretched desert, trampled
brown, bordered with monotonous poplars, whose
leaves hung motionless in air that was still, hot smoke.
The foot passengers struggled wearily along the pavements,
and the reek of the summer's end mingled with
the breath of the brickfields made Darnell gasp, as if
he were inhaling the poison of some foul sick-room.
He made but a slight inroad into the cold mutton
that adorned the tea-table, and confessed that he
felt rather 'done up' by the weather and the day's
work.
'I have had a trying day, too,' said Mary. 'Alice
has been very queer and troublesome all day, and I
have had to speak to her quite seriously. You know I
think her Sunday evenings out have a rather unsettling
influence on the girl.
1 comment