He did not
remember into which pocket he had put it, and as he dived now into
one and now into another, he experienced a strange feeling of
apprehension lest it should not be there at all, though he could not
for the life of him have explained the importance he attached to what
was in all probability mere rubbish. But he sighed with relief when
his fingers touched the crumpled surface in an inside pocket, and he
drew it out gently and laid it on the little desk by his easy chair
with as much care as if it had been some rare jewel. Salisbury sat
smoking and staring at his find for a few minutes, an odd temptation
to throw the thing in the fire and have done with it struggling with
as odd a speculation as to its possible contents, and as to the
reason why the infuriated woman should have flung a bit of paper from
her with such vehemence. As might be expected, it was the latter
feeling that conquered in the end, and yet it was with something like
repugnance that he at last took the paper and unrolled it, and laid
it out before him. It was a piece of common dirty paper, to all
appearance torn out of a cheap exercise book, and in the middle were
a few lines written in a queer cramped hand. Salisbury bent his head
and stared eagerly at it for a moment, drawing a long breath, and
then fell back in his chair gazing blankly before him, till at last
with a sudden revulsion he burst into a peal of laughter, so long and
loud and uproarious that the landlady’s baby in the floor below awoke
from sleep and echoed his mirth with hideous yells. But he laughed
again and again, and took the paper up to read a second time what
seemed such meaningless nonsense.
“Q. has had to go and see his friends in Paris,” it began.
“Traverse Handel S. ‘Once around the grass, and twice around the
lass, and thrice around the maple-tree.’ “
Salisbury took up the paper and crumpled it as the angry woman had
done, and aimed it at the fire. He did not throw it there, however,
but tossed it carelessly into the well of the desk, and laughed
again. The sheer folly of the thing offended him, and he was ashamed
of his own eager speculation, as one who pores over the high-sounding
announcements in the agony column of the daily paper, and finds
nothing but advertisement and trivality. He walked to the window, and
stared out at the languid morning life of his quarter; the maids in
slatternly print dresses washing door-steps, the fish-monger and the
butcher on their rounds, and the tradesmen standing at the doors of
their small shops, drooping for lack of trade and excitement. In the
distance a blue haze gave some grandeur to the prospect, but the view
as a whole was depressing, and would only.have interested a student
of the life of London, who finds something rare and choice in its
every aspect. Salisbury turned away in disgust, and settled himself
in the easy chair, upholstered in a bright shade of green, and decked
with yellow gimp, which was the pride and attraction of the
apartments. Here he composed himself to his morning’s
occupation—the perusal of a novel that dealt with sport and
love in a manner that suggested the collaboration of a stud-groom and
a ladies’ college. In an ordinary way, however, Salisbury would have
been carried on by the interest of the story up to lunch time, but
this morning he fidgeted in and out of his chair, took the book up
and laid it down again, and swore at last to himself and at himself
in mere irritation.
In point of fact the jingle of the paper found in the archway had
“got into his head,” and do what he would he could not help muttering
over and over, “Once around the grass, and twice around the lass, and
thrice around the maple-tree.” It became a positive pain, like the
foolish burden of a music-hall song, everlastingly quoted, and sung
at all hours of the day and night, and treasured by the street boys
as an unfailing resource for six months together. He went out into
the streets, and tried to forget his enemy in the jostling of the
crowds and the roar and clatter of the traffic, but presently he
would find himself stealing quietly aside, and pacing some deserted
byway.
vainly puzzling his brains, and trying to fix some meaning to
phrases that were meaningless. It was a positive relief when Thursday
came, and he remembered that he had made an appointment to go and see
Dyson; the flimsy reveries of the self-styled man of letters appeared
entertaining when compared with this ceaseless iteration, this maze
of thought from which there seemed no possibility of escape. Dyson’s
abode was in one of the quietest of the quiet streets that lead down
from the Strand to the river, and when Salisbury passed from the
narrow stairway into his friend’s room, he saw that the uncle had
been beneficent indeed. The floor glowed and flamed with all the
colours of the East; it was, as Dyson pompously remarked, “a sunset
in a dream,”
and the lamplight, the twilight of London streets, was shut out
with strangely worked curtains, glittering here and there with
threads of gold. In the shelves of an oak armoire stood jars and
plates of old French china, and the black and white of etchings not
to be found in the Haymarket or in Bond Street, stood out against the
splendour of a Japanese paper. Salisbury sat down on the settle by
the hearth, and sniffed and mingled fumes of incense and tobacco,
wondering and dumb before all this splendour after the green rep and
the oleographs, the gilt-framed mirror, and the lustres of his own
apartment.
“I am glad you have come, ‘ said Dyson. “Comfortable little room,
isn’t it? But you don’t look very well, Salisbury. Nothing disagreed
with you, has it?”
“No; but I have been a good deal bothered for the last few days.
The fact is I had an odd kind of—of—adventure, I suppose
I may call it, that night I saw you, and it has worried me a good
deal. And the provoking part of it is that it’s the merest
nonsense—but, however, I will tell you all about it, by and by.
You were going to let me have the rest of that odd story you began at
the restaurant.”
“Yes. But I am afraid, Salisbury, you are incorrigible. You are a
slave to what you call matter of fact. You know perfectly well that
in your heart you think the oddness in that case is of my making, and
that it is all really as plain as the police reports. However, as I
have begun, I will go on. But first we will have something to drink,
and you may as well light your pipe.”
Dyson went up to the oak cupboard, and drew from its depths a
rotund bottle and two little glasses, quaintly gilded.
“It’s Benedictine,” he said.
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