Let’s have the bill and be
gone.”
The two men went out in silence, and stood a moment in the cool
air, watching the hurrying traffic of Coventry Street pass before
them to the accompaniment of the ringing bells of hansoms and the
cries of the newsboys; the deep far murmur of London surging up ever
and again from beneath these louder noises.
“It is a strange case, isn’t it?” said Dyson at length. “What do
you think of it?”
“My dear fellow. I haven’t heard the end, so I will reserve my
opinion. When will you give me the sequel?”
“Come to my rooms some evening; say next Thursday. Here’s the
address. Good-night; I want to get down to the Strand.” Dyson hailed
a passing hansom, and Salisbury turned northward to walk home to his
lodgings.
Mr. Salisbury, as may have been gathered from the few remarks which
he had found it possible to introduce in the course of the evening,
was a young gentleman of a peculiarly solid form of intellect, coy
and retiring before the mysterious and the uncommon, with a
constitutional dislike of paradox. During the restaurant dinner he
had been forced to listen in almost absolute silence to a strange
tissue of improbabilities strung together with the ingenuity of a
born meddler in plots and mysteries, and it was with a feeling of
weariness that he crossed Shaftesbury Avenue, and dived into the
recesses of Soho, for his lodgings were in a modest neighbourhood to
the north of Oxford Street. As he walked he speculated on the
probable fate of Dyson, relying on literature, unbefriended by a
thoughtful relative, and could not help concluding that so much
subtlety united to a too vivid imagination would in all likelihood
have been rewarded with a pair of sandwich-boards or a super’s
banner. Absorbed in this train of thought, and admiring the perverse
dexterity which could transmute the face of a sickly woman and a case
of brain disease into the crude elements of romance, Salisbury
strayed on through the dimly lighted streets, not noticing the gusty
wind which drove sharply round corners and whirled the stray rubbish
of the pavement into the air in eddies, while black clouds gathered
over the sickly yellow moon. Even a stray drop or two of rain blown
into his face did not rouse him from his meditations, and it was only
when with a sudden rush the storm tore down upon the street that he
began to consider the expediency of finding some shelter. The rain,
driven by the wind, pelted down with the violence of a thunderstorm,
dashing up from the stones and hissing through the air, and soon a
perfect.torrent of water coursed along the kennels and accumulated in
pools over the choked-up drains.
The few stray passengers who had been loafing rather than walking
about the street had scuttered away, like frightened rabbits, to some
invisible places of refuge, and though Salisbury whistled loud and
long for a hansom, no hansom appeared. He looked about him, as if to
discover how far he might be from the haven of Oxford Street, but
strolling carelessly along, he had turned out of his way, and found
himself in an unknown region, and one to all appearance devoid even
of a public house where shelter could be bought for the modest sum of
two pence. The street lamps were few and at-long intervals, and
burned behind grimy glasses with the sickly light of oil, and by this
wavering glimmer Salisbury could make out the shadowy and vast old~
houses of which the street was composed. As he passed along,
hurrying, and shrinking from the full sweep of the rain, he noticed
the innumerable bell-handles, with names that seemed about to vanish
of old age graven on brass plates beneath them, and here and there a
richly carved penthouse overhung the door, blackening with the grime
of fifty years. The storm seemed to grow more and more furious; he
was wet through, and a new hat had become a ruin, and still Oxford
Street seemed as far off as ever; it was with deep relief that the
dripping man caught sight of a dark archway which seemed to promise
shelter from the rain if not from the wind. Salisbury took up his
position in the driest corner and looked about him; he was standing
in a kind of passage contrived under part of a house, and behind him
stretched a narrow footway leading between blank walls to regions
unknown. He had stood there for some time, vainly endeavouring to rid
himself of some of his superfluous moisture, and listening for the
passing wheel of a hansom, when his attention was aroused by a loud
noise coming from the direction of the passage behind, and growing
louder as it drew nearer. In a couple of minutes he could make out
the shrill, raucous voice of a woman, threatening and renouncing and
making the very stones echo with her accents, while now and then a
man grumbled and expostulated. Though to all appearance devoid of
romance, Salisbury had some relish for street rows, and was, indeed,
somewhat of an amateur in the more amusing phases of drunkenness; he
therefore composed himself to listen and observe with something of
the air of a subscriber to grand opera. To his annoyance, however,
the tempest seemed suddenly to be composed, and he could hear nothing
but the impatient steps of the woman and the slow lurch of the man as
they came towards him. Keeping back in the shadow of the wall, he
could see the two drawing nearer; the man was evidently drunk, and
had much ado to avoid frequent collision with the wall as he tacked
across from one side to the other, like some bark beating up against
a wind. The woman was looking straight in front of her, with tears
streaming from her blazing eyes, but suddenly as they went by the
flame blazed up again, and she burst forth into a torrent of abuse,
facing round upon her companion.
“You low rascal, you mean, comtemptible cur,” she went on, after
an incoherent storm of curses, “you think I’m to work and slave for
you always, I suppose, while you’re after that Green Street girl and
drinking every penny you’ve got? But you’re mistaken,
Sam—indeed, I’ll bear it no longer. Damn you, you dirty thief,
I’ve done with you and your master too, so you can go your own
errands, and I only hope they’ll get you into trouble.”
The woman tore at the bosom of her dress, and taking something out
that looked like paper, crumpled it up and flung it away. It fell at
Salisbury’s feet. She ran out and disappeared in the darkness, while
the man lurched slowly into the street, grumbling indistinctly to
himself in a perplexed tone of voice. Salisbury looked out after him,
and saw him maundering along the pavement, halting now and then and
swaying indecisively, and then starting off at some fresh tangent.
The sky had cleared, and white fleecy clouds were fleeting across the
moon, high in the heaven. The light came and went by turns, as the
clouds passed by, and, turning round as the.clear, white rays shone
into the passage, Salisbury saw the little ball of crumpled paper
which the woman had cast down. Oddly curious to know what it might
contain, he picked it up and put it in his pocket, and set out afresh
on his journey.
Salisbury was a man of habit. When he got home, drenched to the skin,
his clothes hanging lank about him, and a ghastly dew besmearing his
hat, his only thought was of his health, of which he took studious
care.
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