<h2><SPAN name="IX" id="IX"></SPAN>IX</h2>
<p class="center"><strong>THE ADVENTURE OF A SAINT MARTIN’S SUMMER</strong></p>
<p>My good friend Blessington, who is a mighty
man in the Bordeaux wine-trade, happening
one day to lament the irreparable loss
of a deceased employé, an Admirable Crichton of
a myriad accomplishments and linguistic attainments
whose functions it had been, apparently, to travel
about between London, Bordeaux, Marseilles and
Algiers, I immediately thought of a certain living
and presumably unemployed paragon of my acquaintance.</p>
<p>“I know the very man you’re looking for,” said I.</p>
<p>“Who is he?”</p>
<p>“He’s a kind of human firework,” said I, “and
his name is Aristide Pujol.”</p>
<p>I sketched the man—in my desire to do a good
turn to Aristide, perhaps in exaggerated colour.</p>
<p>“Let me have a look at him,” said Blessington.</p>
<p>“He may be anywhere on the continent of
Europe,” said I. “How long can you give me to
produce him?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</SPAN></span>
“A week. Not longer.”</p>
<p>“I’ll do my best,” said I.</p>
<p>By good luck my telegram, sent off about four
o’clock, found him at 213 <em>bis</em> Rue Saint-Honoré.
He had just returned to Paris after some mad dash
for fortune (he told me afterwards a wild and disastrous
story of a Russian Grand-Duke, a Dancer
and a gold mine in the Dolomites) and had once
more resumed the dreary conduct of the Agence
Pujol at the Hôtel du Soleil et de l’Ecosse. My
summons being imperative, he abandoned the
Agence Pujol as a cat jumps off a wall, and,
leaving the guests of the Hotel guideless, to
the indignation of Monsieur Bocardon, whom he
had served this trick several times before, paid his
good landlady, Madam Bidoux, what he owed her,
took a third-class ticket to London, bought, lunatic
that he was, a ripe Brie cheese, a foot in diameter,
a present to myself, which he carried in his hand
most of the journey, and turned up at my house at
eight o’clock the next morning with absolutely
empty pockets and the happiest and most fascinating
smile that ever irradiated the face of man. As a
matter of fact, he burst his way past my scandalized
valet into my bedroom and woke me up.</p>
<p>“Here I am, my dear friend, and here is something
French you love that I have brought you,”
and he thrust the Brie cheese under my nose.</p>
<p>“— — —,” said I.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</SPAN></span>
If you were awakened by a Brie cheese, an hour
before your time, you would say the same. Aristide
sat at the foot of the bed and laughed till the tears
ran down his beard.</p>
<p>As soon as it was decent I sent him into the city
to interview Blessington. Three hours afterward
he returned more radiant than ever. He threw
himself into my arms; before I could disentagle
myself, he kissed me on both cheeks; then he danced
about the room.</p>
<p>“<em>Me voici</em>,” he said, “accredited representative of
the great Maison Dulau et Compagnie. I have
hundreds of pounds a year. I go about. I watch.
I control. I see that the Great British Public can
assuage its thirst with the pure juice of the grape
and not with the dregs of a laboratory. I test vintages.
I count barrels. I enter them in books. I
smile at Algerian wine growers and say, ‘Ha! ha!
none of your <em>petite piquette frélateé</em> for me but
good sound wine.’ It is diplomacy. It is as simple
as kissing hands. And I have a sustained income.
Now I can be <em>un bon bourgeois</em> instead of a stray
cat. And all due to you, <em>mon cher ami</em>. I am grateful—<em>voyons</em>—if
anybody ever says Aristide Pujol
is ungrateful, he is a liar. You believe me! Say
you believe me.”</p>
<p>He looked at me earnestly.</p>
<p>“I do, old chap,” said I.</p>
<p>I had known Aristide for some years, and in all
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</SPAN></span>
kinds of little ways he had continuously manifested
his gratitude for the trifling service I had rendered
him, at our first meeting, in delivering him out of
the hands of the horrific Madam Gougasse. That
gratitude is the expectation of favors to come was,
in the case of Aristide, a cynical and inapplicable
proposition. And here, as this (as far as I can
see) is the last of Aristide’s adventures I have to
relate, let me make an honest and considered statement:—</p>
<p>During the course of an interesting and fairly
prosperous life, I have made many delightful Bohemian,
devil-may-care acquaintances, but among
them all Aristide stands as the one bright star who
has never asked me to lend him money. I have
offered it times without number, but he has refused.
I believe there is no man living to whom Aristide
is in debt. In the depths of the man’s changeling
and feckless soul is a principle which has carried
him untarnished through many a wild adventure.
If he ever accepted money—money to the Provençal
peasant is the transcendental materialised, and Aristide
(save by the changeling theory) was Provençal
peasant bone and blood—it was always for what he
honestly thought was value received. If he met
a man who wanted to take a mule ride among the
Mountains of the Moon, Aristide would at once
have offered himself as guide. The man would
have paid him; but Aristide, by some quaint spiritual
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</SPAN></span>
juggling, would have persuaded him that the
ascent of Primrose Hill was equal to any lunar
achievement, seeing that, himself, Aristide Pujol,
was keeper of the Sun, Moon and Seven Stars; and
the gift to that man of Aristide’s dynamic personality
would have been well worth anything that he
would have found in the extinct volcano we know
to be the moon.</p>
<p>“The only thing I would suggest, if you would
allow me to do so,” said I, “is not to try to make
the fortune of Messrs. Dulau & Co. by some dazzling
but devastating <em>coup</em> of your own.”</p>
<p>He looked at me in his bright, shrewd way. “You
think it time I restrained my imagination?”</p>
<p>“Exactly.”</p>
<p>“I will read The Times and buy a family Bible,”
said Aristide.</p>
<p>A week after he had taken up his work in
the City, under my friend Blessington, I saw
the delighted and prosperous man again. It
was a Saturday and he came to lunch at my
house.</p>
<p>“<em>Tiens!</em>” said he, when he had recounted his success
in the office, “it is four years since I was in
England?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said I, with a jerk of memory. “Time
passes quickly.”</p>
<p>“It is three years since I lost little Jean.”</p>
<p>“Who is little Jean?” I asked.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</SPAN></span>
“Did I not tell you when I saw you last in
Paris?”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“It is strange. I have been thinking about him
and my heart has been aching for him all the time.
You must hear. It is most important.” He lit a
cigar and began.</p>
<p>It was then that he told me the story of which
I have already related in these
chronicles:<SPAN name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</SPAN>
how he was scouring France in a ramshackle automobile
as the peripatetic vendor of a patent corn cure
and found a babe of nine months lying abandoned
in the middle of that silent road through the
wilderness between Salon and Arles; how instead
of delivering it over to the authorities, he adopted
it and carried it about with him from town to town,
a motor accessory sometimes embarrassing, but always
divinely precious; how an evil day came upon
him at Aix-en-Provence when, the wheezing automobile
having uttered its last gasp, he found his
occupation gone; how, no longer being able to care
for <em>le petit</em> Jean, he left him with a letter and half
his fortune outside the door of a couple of English
maiden ladies who, staying in the same hotel, had
manifested great interest in the baby and himself;
and how, in the dead of the night, he had tramped
away from Aix-en-Provence in the rain, his pockets
light and his heart as heavy as lead.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</SPAN></span>
“And I have never heard of my little Jean
again,” said Aristide.</p>
<p>“Why didn’t you write?” I asked.</p>
<p>“I knew their names, Honeywood; Miss Janet
was the elder, Miss Anne the younger. But the
name of the place they lived at I have never been
able to remember. It was near London—they used
to come up by train to matinées and afternoon concerts.
But what it is called, <em>mon Dieu</em>, I have racked
my brain for it. <em>Sacré mille tonnerres!</em>” He leaped
to his feet in his unexpected, startling way, and
pounced on a Bradshaw’s Railway Guide lying on
my library table. “Imbecile, pig, triple ass that I
am! Why did I not think of this before? It is near
London. If I look through all the stations near
London on every line, I shall find it.”</p>
<p>“All right,” said I, “go ahead.”</p>
<p>I lit a cigarette and took up a novel. I had not
read very far when a sudden uproar from the
table caused me to turn round. Aristide
danced and flourished the Bradshaw over his
head.</p>
<p>“Chislehurst! Chislehurst! Ah, <em>mon ami</em>, now
I am happy. Now I have found my little Jean.
You will forgive me—but I must go now and embrace
him.”</p>
<p>He held out his hand.</p>
<p>“Where are you off to?” I demanded.</p>
<p>“The Chislehurst, where else?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</SPAN></span>
“My dear fellow,” said I, rising, “do you
seriously suppose that these two English maiden
ladies have taken on themselves the responsibility
of that foreign brat’s upbringing?”</p>
<p>“<em>Mon Dieu!</em>” said he taken aback for the moment,
hypothesis having entered his head. Then, with
a wide gesture, he flung the preposterous idea to
the winds. “Of course. They have hearts, these
English women. They have maternal instincts.
They have money.” He looked at Bradshaw again,
then at his watch. “I have just time to catch a
train. <em>Au revoir, mon vieux.</em>”</p>
<p>“But,” I objected, “why don’t you write? It’s
the natural thing to do.”</p>
<p>“Write? <em>Bah!</em> Did you ever hear of a Provençal
writing when he could talk?” He tapped his
lips, and in an instant, like a whirlwind, he passed
from my ken.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Aristide on his arrival at Chislehurst looked
about the pleasant, leafy place—it was a bright
October afternoon and the wooded hillside blazed
in russet and gold—and decided it was the perfect
environment for Miss Janet and Miss Anne,
to say nothing of little Jean. A neat red brick
house with a trim garden in front of it looked
just the kind of a house wherein Miss Janet and
Miss Anne would live. He rang the bell. A parlour-maid,
in spotless black and white, tutelary
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</SPAN></span>
nymph of Suburbia, the very parlour-maid who
would minister to Miss Janet and Miss Anne,
opened the door.</p>
<p>“Miss Honeywood?” he inquired.</p>
<p>“Not here, sir,” said the parlour-maid.</p>
<p>“Where is she? I mean, where are they?”</p>
<p>“No one of that name lives here,” said the parlour-maid.</p>
<p>“Who does live here?”</p>
<p>“Colonel Brabazon.”</p>
<p>“And where do the two Miss Honeywood live?”
he asked with his engaging smile.</p>
<p>But English suburban parlour-maids are on their
guard against smiles, no matter how engaging. She
prepared to shut the door.</p>
<p>“I don’t know.”</p>
<p>“How can I find out?”</p>
<p>“You might enquire among the tradespeople.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, mademoiselle, you are a most intelligent
young——”</p>
<p>The door shut in his face. Aristide frowned. She
was a pretty parlour-maid, and Aristide didn’t like
to be so haughtily treated by a pretty woman. But
his quest being little Jean and not the eternal feminine,
he took the maid’s advice and made enquiries
at the prim and respectable shops.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes,” said a comely young woman in a fragrant
bakers’ and confectioners’. “They were two
ladies, weren’t they? They lived at Hope Cottage.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</SPAN></span>
We used to supply them. They left Chislehurst
two years ago.”</p>
<p>“<em>Sacré nom d’un chien!</em>” said Aristide.</p>
<p>“Beg pardon?” asked the young woman.</p>
<p>“I am disappointed,” said Aristide. “Where
did they go to?”</p>
<p>“I’m sure I can’t tell you.”</p>
<p>“Do you remember whether they had a baby?”</p>
<p>“They were maiden ladies,” said the young
woman rebukingly.</p>
<p>“But anybody can keep a baby without being its
father or mother. I want to know what has become
of the baby.”</p>
<p>The young woman gazed through the window.</p>
<p>“You had better ask the policeman.”</p>
<p>“That’s an idea,” said Aristide, and, leaving her,
he caught up the passing constable.</p>
<p>The constable knew nothing of maiden ladies
with a baby, but he directed him to Hope Cottage.
He found a pretty half-timber house lying back
from the road, with a neat semi-circular gravelled
path leading to a porch covered thick with Virginia
creeper. Even more than the red brick residence
of Colonel Brabazon did it look, with its air
of dainty comfort, the fitting abode of Miss Janet
and Miss Anne. He rang the bell and interviewed
another trim parlour-maid. More susceptible to
smiles than the former, she summoned her master,
a kindly, middle-aged man, who came out into the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</SPAN></span>
porch. Yes, Honeywood was the name of the previous
tenants. Two ladies, he believed. He had
never seen them and knew nothing about a child.
Messrs. Tompkin & Briggs, the estate agents in the
High Street, could no doubt give him information.
Aristide thanked him and made his way to Messrs.
Tompkin & Briggs. A dreary spectacled youth in
resentful charge of the office—his principals, it being
Saturday afternoon, were golfing the happy
hours away—professed blank ignorance of everything.
Aristide fixed him with his glittering eye
and flickered his fingers and spoke richly. The
youth in a kind of mesmeric trance took down a
battered, dog’s eared book and turned over the
pages.</p>
<p>“Honeywood—Miss—Beverly Stoke—near St.
Albans—Herts. That’s it,” he said.</p>
<p>Aristide made a note of the address. “Is that
all you can tell me?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said the youth.</p>
<p>“I thank you very much, my young friend,” said
Aristide, raising his hat, “and here is something
to buy a smile with,” and, leaving a sixpence on the
table to shimmer before the youth’s stupefied eyes,
Aristide strutted out of the office.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>“You had much better have written,” said I, when
he came back and told me of his experiences. “The
post-office would have done all that for you.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</SPAN></span>
“You have no idea of business, <em>mon cher ami</em>”—(I—a
successful tea-broker of twenty-five years’
standing!—the impudence of the fellow!)—“If I
had written to-day, the letter would have reached
Chislehurst on Monday morning. It would be redirected
and reach Hertfordshire on Tuesday. I
should not get any news till Wednesday. I go
down to Beverly Stoke to-morrow, and then I find
at once Miss Janet and Miss Anne and my little
Jean! The secret of business men, and I am a business
man, the accredited representative of Dulau
et Compagnie—never forget that—the secret of
business is no delay.”</p>
<p>He darted across the room to Bradshaw.</p>
<p>“For God’s sake,” said I, “put that nightmare
of perpetual motion in your pocket and go mad over
it in the privacy of your own chamber.”</p>
<p>“Very good,” said he, tucking the brain-convulsing
volume under his arm. “I will put it on top of
The Times and the family Bible and I will say
‘Ha! now I am British. Now I am very respectable!’
What else can I do?”</p>
<p>“Rent a pew in a Baptist chapel,” said I.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>After a three-mile trudge from St. Albans Aristide,
following directions, found himself on a high
road running through the middle of a straggy common
decked here and there with great elms splendid
in autumn bravery, and populated chiefly by
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</SPAN></span>
geese, who when he halted in some perplexity—for
on each side, beyond the green, were indications
of a human settlement—advanced in waddling
flocks towards him and signified their disapproval
of his presence. A Sundayfied youth in a rainbow
tie rode past on a bicycle. Aristide took off his
hat. The youth nearly fell off the bicycle, but British
doggedness saved him from disaster.</p>
<p>“Beverly Stoke? Will you have the courtesy——”</p>
<p>“Here,” bawled the youth, with a circular twist
of his head, and, eager to escape from a madman,
he rode on furiously.</p>
<p>Aristide looked to left and right at the little
houses beyond the green—some white and thatched
and dilapidated, others horridly new and perky—but
all poor and insignificant. As his eyes became
accustomed to the scene they were aware of human
forms dotted sparsely about the common. He
struck across and accosted one, an elderly woman
with a prayer-book. “Miss Honeywood? A lady
from London?”</p>
<p>“That house over there—the third beyond the
poplar.”</p>
<p>“And little Jean—a beautiful child about four
years old?”</p>
<p>“That I don’t know, sir. I live at Wilmer’s End,
a good half mile from here.”</p>
<p>Aristide made for the third house past the poplar.
First there was a plank bridge across a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</SPAN></span>
grass-grown ditch; then a tiny patch of garden; then a
humble whitewashed cottage with a small leaded
casement window on each side of the front door.
Unlike Hope Cottage, it did not look at all the residence
of Miss Janet and Miss Anne. Its appearance,
indeed, was woe-begone. Aristide, however,
went up to the door; as there was neither knocker
nor bell, he rapped with his knuckles. The door
opened, and there, poorly dressed in blouse and
skirt, stood Miss Anne.</p>
<p>She regarded him for a moment in a bewildered
way, then, recognizing him, drew back into the
stone flagged passage with a sharp cry.</p>
<p>“You? You—Mr. Pujol?”</p>
<p>“<em>Oui, Mademoiselle, c’est moi.</em> It is I, Aristide
Pujol.”</p>
<p>She put her hands on her bosom. “It is rather
a shock seeing you—so unexpectedly. Will you
come in?”</p>
<p>She led the way into a tiny parlour, very clean,
very simple with its furniture of old oak and brass,
and bade him sit. She looked a little older than
when he had seen her at Aix-en-Provence. A few
lines had marred the comely face and there was
here and there a touch of grey in the reddish hair,
and, though still buxom, she had grown thinner.
Care had set its stamp upon her.</p>
<p>“Miss Honeywood,” said Aristide. “It is on account
of little Jean that I have come——”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</SPAN></span>
She turned on him swiftly. “Not to take him
away!”</p>
<p>“Then he is here!” He jumped to his feet and
wrung both her hands and kissed them to her great
embarrassment. “Ah, mademoiselle, I knew it. I
felt it. When such an inspiration comes to a man,
it is the <em>bon Dieu</em> who sends it. He is here, actually
here, in this house?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Miss Anne.</p>
<p>Aristide threw out his arms. “Let me see him.
<em>Ah, le cher petit!</em> I have been yearning after him
for three years. It was my heart that I ripped out
of my body that night and laid at your threshold.”</p>
<p>“Hush!” said Miss Anne, with an interrupting
gesture. “You must not talk so loud. He is asleep
in the next room. You mustn’t wake him. He is
very ill.”</p>
<p>“Ill? Dangerously ill?”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid so.”</p>
<p>“<em>Mon Dieu</em>,” said he, sitting down again in the
oak settle. To Aristide the emotion of the moment
was absorbing, overwhelming. His attitude betokened
deepest misery and dejection.</p>
<p>“And I expected to see him full of joy and
health!”</p>
<p>“It is not my fault, Mr. Pujol,” said Miss Anne.</p>
<p>He started. “But no. How could it be? You
loved him when you first set eyes on him at Aix-en-Provence.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</SPAN></span>
Miss Anne began to cry. “God knows,” said
she, “what I should do without him. The dear
mite is all that is left to me.”</p>
<p>“All? But there is your sister, the dear Miss
Janet.”</p>
<p>Miss Anne’s eyes were hidden in her handkerchief.
“My poor sister died last year, Mr. Pujol.”</p>
<p>“I am very sorry. I did not know,” said Aristide
gently.</p>
<p>There was a short silence. “It was a great sorrow
to you,” he said.</p>
<p>“It was God’s will,” said Anne. Then, after another
pause, during which she dried her eyes, she
strove to smile. “Tell me about yourself. How
do you come to be here?”</p>
<p>Aristide replied in a hesitating way. He was in
the presence of grief and sickness and trouble; the
Provençal braggadocio dropped from him and he
became the simple and childish creature that he was.
He accounted very truthfully, very convincingly,
for his queer life; for his abandonment of little
Jean, for his silence, for his sudden and unexpected
appearance. During the ingenuous <em>apologia pro
vita sua</em> Miss Anne regarded him with her honest
candour.</p>
<p>“Janet and I both understood,” she said. “Janet
was gifted with a divine comprehension and pity. The
landlady at the hotel, I remember, said some unkind
things about you; but we didn’t believe them. We
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</SPAN></span>
felt that you were a good man—no one but a good
man could have written that letter—we cried over
it—and when she tried to poison our minds we said
to each other: ‘What does it matter? Here God in
his mercy has given us a child.’ But, Mr. Pujol,
why didn’t you take us into your confidence?”</p>
<p>“My dear Miss Anne,” said Aristide, “we of the
South do things impulsively, by lightning flashes.
An idea comes suddenly. <em>Vlan!</em> we carry it out in
two seconds. We are not less human than the
Northerner, who reflects two months.”</p>
<p>“That is almost what dear, wise Janet told me,”
said Miss Anne.</p>
<p>“Then you know in your heart,” said Aristide,
after a while, “that if I had not been only a football
at the feet of fortune, I should never have deserted
little Jean?”</p>
<p>“I do, Mr. Pujol. My sister and I have been
footballs, too.” She added with a change of tone:
“You tell me you saw our dear home at Chislehurst?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Aristide.</p>
<p>“And you see this. There is a difference.”</p>
<p>“What has happened?” asked Aristide.</p>
<p>She told him the commonplace pathetic story.
Their father had left them shares in the company
of which he had been managing director. For
many years they had enjoyed a comfortable income.
Then the company had become bankrupt and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</SPAN></span>
only a miserable ninety pounds a year had been
saved from the wreckage. The cottage at Beverly
Stoke belonging to them—it had been their mother’s—they
had migrated thither with their fallen fortunes
and little Jean. And then Janet had died.
She was delicate and unaccustomed to privation
and discomfort—and the cottage had its disadvantages.
She, Anne herself, was as strong as a horse
and had never been ill in her life, but others were
not quite so hardy. “However”—she smiled—“one
has to make the best of things.”</p>
<p>“<em>Parbleu</em>,” said Aristide.</p>
<p>Miss Anne went on to talk of Jean, a miraculous
infant of infinite graces and accomplishments. Up
to now he had been the sturdiest and merriest
fellow.</p>
<p>“At nine months old he saw that life was a big
joke,” said Aristide. “How he used to laugh.”</p>
<p>“There’s not much laugh left in him, poor darling,”
she sighed. And she told how he had caught
a chill which had gone to his lungs and how the
night before last she thought she had lost him.</p>
<p>She sat up and listened. “Will you excuse me
for a moment?”</p>
<p>She went out and presently returned, standing
at the doorway. “He is still asleep. Would you
like to see him? Only”—she put her fingers on her
lips—“you must be very, very quiet.”</p>
<p>He followed her into the next room and looked
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</SPAN></span>
about him shyly, recognizing that it was Miss
Anne’s own bedroom; and there, lying in a little
cot beside the big bed, he saw the sleeping child,
his brown face flushed with fever. He had a curly
shock of black hair and well formed features. An
old woolly lamb nose to nose with him shared his
pillow. Aristide drew from his pocket a Teddy
bear, and, having asked Miss Anne’s permission
with a glance, laid it down gently on the
coverlid.</p>
<p>His eyes were wet when they returned to the
parlour. So were Miss Anne’s. The Teddy bear
was proof of the simplicity of his faith in her.</p>
<p>After a while, conscious of hunger, he rose to
take leave. He must be getting back to St. Albans.
But might he be permitted to come back later in
the afternoon? Miss Anne reddened. It outraged
her sense of hospitality to send a guest away from
her house on a three-mile walk for food. And
yet——</p>
<p>“Mr. Pujol,” she said bravely, “I would ask you
to stay to luncheon if I had anything to offer you.
But I am single handed, and, with Jean’s illness,
I haven’t given much thought to housekeeping. The
woman who does some of the rough work won’t
be back till six. I hate to let you go all those miles—I
am so distressed——”</p>
<p>“But, mademoiselle,” said Aristide. “You have
some bread. You have water. It has been a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</SPAN></span>
banquet many a day to me, and this time it would be
the most precious banquet of all.”</p>
<p>“I can do a little better than that,” faltered Miss
Anne. “I have plenty of eggs and there is bacon.”</p>
<p>“Eggs—bacon!” cried Aristide, his bright eyes
twinkling and his hands going up in the familiar
gesture. “That is superb. <em>Tiens!</em> you shall not do
the cooking. You shall rest. I will make you an
<em>omelette au lard</em>—<em>ah!</em>”—he kissed the tips of his
fingers—“such an omelette as you have not eaten
since you were in France—and even there I doubt
whether you have ever eaten an omelette like mine.”
His soul simmering with omelette, he darted towards
the door. “The kitchen—it is this way?”</p>
<p>“But, Mr. Pujol——!” Miss Anne laughed, protestingly.
Who could be angry with the vivid and
impulsive creature?</p>
<p>“It is the room opposite Jean’s—not so?”</p>
<p>She followed him into the clean little kitchen,
half amused, half flustered. Already he had hooked
off the top of the kitchen range. “Ah! a good fire.
And your frying-pan?” He dived into the scullery.</p>
<p>“Please don’t be in such a hurry,” she pleaded.
“You will have made the omelette before I’ve had
time to lay the cloth, and it will get cold. Besides,
I want to learn how to do it.”</p>
<p>“<em>Trés bien</em>,” said Aristide, laying down the frying-pan.
“You shall see how it is made—the omelette
of the universe.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</SPAN></span>
So he helped Miss Anne to lay the cloth on the
gate-legged oak table in the parlour and to set it
out with bread and butter and the end of a tinned
tongue and a couple of bottles of stout. After
which they went back to the little kitchen, where
in a kind of giggling awe she watched him shred
the bacon and break the eggs with his thin, skilful
fingers and perform his magic with the frying-pan
and turn out the great golden creation into the
dish.</p>
<p>“Now,” said he, pulling her in his enthusiasm,
“to table while it is hot.”</p>
<p>Miss Anne laughed. She lost her head ever so
little. The days had been drab and hopeless of
late and she was still young; so, if she felt excited
at this unhoped for inrush of life and colour, who
shall blame her? The light sparkled once more in
her eyes and the pink of her naturally florid complexion
shone on her cheek as they sat down to
table.</p>
<p>“It is I who help it,” said Aristide. “Taste
that.” He passed the plate and waited, with the
artist’s expectation for her approval.</p>
<p>“It’s delicious.”</p>
<p>It was indeed the perfection of omelette, all its
suave juiciness contained in film as fine as goldbeater’s
skin.</p>
<p>“Yes, it’s good.” He was delighted, childlike, at
the success of his cookery. His gaiety kept the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</SPAN></span>
careworn woman in rare laughter during the meal.
She lost all consciousness that he was a strange
man plunged down suddenly in the midst of her
old maidish existence—and a strange man, too, who
had once behaved in a most outrageous fashion.
But that was ever the way of Aristide. The moment
you yielded to his attraction he made you feel
that you had known him for years. His fascination
possessed you.</p>
<p>“Miss Anne,” said he, smoking a cigarette, at
her urgent invitation, “is there a poor woman in
Beverly Stoke with whom I could lodge?”</p>
<p>She gasped. “You lodge in Beverly Stoke?”</p>
<p>“Why yes,” said Aristide, as if it were the most
natural thing in the world. “I am engaged in the
city from ten to five every day. I can’t come here
and go back to London every night, and I can’t
stay a whole week without my little Jean. And I
have my duty to Jean. I stand to him in the relation
of a father. I must help you to nurse him
and make him better. I must give him soup and
apples and ice cream and——”</p>
<p>“You would kill the darling in five minutes,” interrupted
Miss Anne.</p>
<p>He waved his forefinger in the air. “No, no, I
have nursed the sick in my time. My dear friend,”
said he, with a change of tone, “when did you go to
bed last?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” she answered in some confusion.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</SPAN></span>
“The district nurse has helped me—and the doctor
has been very good. Jean has turned the corner
now. Please don’t worry. And as for your coming
to live down here, it’s absurd.”</p>
<p>“Of course, if you formally forbid me to do so,
mademoiselle, and if you don’t want to see me——”</p>
<p>“How can you say a thing like that? Haven’t I
shown you to-day that you are welcome?”</p>
<p>“Dear Miss Anne,” said he, “forgive me. But
what is that great vast town of London to me who
know nobody there? Here in this tiny spot is concentrated
all I care for in the world. Why
shouldn’t I live in it?”</p>
<p>“You would be so dreadfully uncomfortable,”
said Miss Anne, weakly.</p>
<p>“Bah!” cried Aristide. “You talk of discomfort
to an old client of <em>L’Hôtel de la Belle Étoile</em>?”</p>
<p>“The Hotel of the Beautiful Star? Where is
that?” asked the innocent lady.</p>
<p>“Wherever you like,” said Aristide. “Your bed
is dry leaves and your bed-curtains, if you demand
luxury, are a hedge, and your ceiling, if you are
fortunate, is ornamented with stars.”</p>
<p>She looked at him wide-eyed, in great concern.</p>
<p>“Do you mean that you have ever been homeless?”</p>
<p>He laughed. “I think I’ve been everything imaginable,
except married.”</p>
<p>“Hush!” she said. “Listen!” Her keen ear had
caught a child’s cry. “It’s Jean. I must go.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</SPAN></span>
She hurried out. Aristide prepared to light another
cigarette. But a second before the application
of the flaring match an idea struck him. He
blew out the match, replaced the cigarette in his
case, and with a dexterity that revealed the professional
of years ago, began to clear the table. He
took the things noiselessly into the kitchen, shut the
door, and master of the kitchen and scullery washed
up. Then, the most care-free creature in the world,
he stole down the stone passage into the wilderness
of Beverly Stoke.</p>
<p>An hour afterwards he knocked at the front door,
Anne Honeywood admitted him.</p>
<p>“I have arranged with the good Mrs. Buttershaw.
She lives a hundred yards down the road.
I bring my baggage to-morrow evening.”</p>
<p>Anne regarded him in a humorous, helpless way.
“I can’t prevent you,” she said, “but I can give you
a piece of advice.”</p>
<p>“What is it?”</p>
<p>“Don’t wash up for Mrs. Buttershaw.”</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>So it came to pass that Aristide Pujol took up
his residence at Beverly Stoke, trudging every
morning three miles to catch his business train at
St. Albans, and trudging back every evening three
miles to Beverly Stoke. Every morning he ran
into the cottage for a sight of little Jean and every
evening after a digestion-racking meal prepared by
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</SPAN></span>
Mrs. Buttershaw he went to the cottage armed with
toys and weird and injudicious food for little Jean
and demanded an account of the precious infant’s
doings during the day. Gradually Jean recovered
of his congestion, being a sturdy urchin, and, to
Aristide’s delight, resumed the normal life of childhood.</p>
<p>“<em>Moi, je suis papa</em>,” said Aristide. “He has got
to speak French, and he had better begin at once.
It is absurd that anyone born between Salon and
Arles should not speak French and Provençal; we’ll
leave Provençal till later. <em>Moi, je suis papa, Jean.</em>
Say <em>papa</em>.”</p>
<p>“I don’t quite see how he can call you that, Mr.
Pujol,” said Anne, with the suspicion of a flush on
her cheek.</p>
<p>“And why not? Has the poor child any other
papa in the whole wide world? And at four years
old not to have a father is heart-breaking. Do you
want us to bring him up an orphan? No. You
shan’t be an orphan, <em>mon brave</em>,” he continued,
bending over the child and putting his little hands
against his bearded face, “you couldn’t bear such a
calamity, could you? And so you will call me
<em>papa</em>.”</p>
<p>“<em>Papa</em>,” said Jean, with a grin.</p>
<p>“There, he has settled it,” said Aristide. “<em>Moi
je suis papa.</em> And you, mademoiselle?”</p>
<p>“I am Auntie Anne,” she replied demurely.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</SPAN></span>
Saturday afternoons and Sundays were Aristide’s
days of delight. He could devote himself entirely
to Jean. The thrill of the weeks when he had
paraded the child in the market places of France
while he sold his corn cure again ran through his
veins. The two rows of cottages separated by the
common, which was the whole of Beverly Stoke,
became too small a theatre for his parental pride.
He bewailed the loss of his automobile that had
perished of senile decay at Aix-en-Provence. If he
only had it now he could exhibit Jean to the astonished
eyes of St. Albans, Watford—nay London
itself!</p>
<p>“I wish I could take him to Dulau & Company,”
said he.</p>
<p>“Good Heavens!” cried Miss Anne in alarm, for
Aristide was capable of everything. “What in the
world would you do with him there?”</p>
<p>“What would I do with him?” replied Aristide,
picking the child up in his arms—the three were
strolling on the common—“<em>Parbleu!</em> I would use
him to strike the staff of Dulau & Company green
with envy. Do you think the united efforts of the
whole lot of them, from the good Mr. Blessington
to the office boy, could produce a hero like this?
You are a hero, Jean, aren’t you?”</p>
<p>“Yes, papa,” said Jean.</p>
<p>“He knows it,” shouted Aristide with a delighted
gesture which nearly cast Jean to the circumambient
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</SPAN></span>
geese. “Miss Anne, we have the most wonderful
child in the universe.”</p>
<p>This, as far as Anne was concerned, was a
proposition which for the past three years
she had regarded as incontrovertible. She
smiled at Aristide, who smiled at her, and
Jean, seeing them happy, smiled largely at them
both.</p>
<p>In a very short time Aristide, who could magically
manufacture boats and cocks and pigs and
giraffes out of bits of paper, who could bark like
a dog and quack like a goose, who could turn himself
into a horse or a bear at a minute’s notice,
whose pockets were a perennial mine of infantile
ecstasy, established himself in Jean’s mind as a kind
of tame, necessary and beloved jinn. Being a loyal
little soul, the child retained his affection for Auntie
Anne, but he was swept off his little feet by his
mirific parent. The time came when, if he was
not dressed in his tiny woollen jersey and knee
breeches and had not his nose glued against the
parlour window in readiness to scramble to the
front door for Aristide’s morning kiss, he would
have thought that chaos had come again. And
Anne, humouring the child, hastened to get him
washed and dressed in time; until at last, so greatly
was she affected by his obsession, she got into the
foolish habit of watching the clock and saying to
herself: “In another minute he will be here,” or:
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</SPAN></span>
“He is a minute late. What can have happened
to him?”</p>
<p>So Aristide, in his childlike way, found remarkable
happiness in Beverly Stoke. A very wet summer
had been followed by a dry and mellow autumn.
Aristide waxed enthusiastic over the English climate
and rejoiced in the mild country air. He was
also happy under my friend Blessington, who spoke
of him to me in glowing terms. At the back of all
Aristide’s eccentricities was the Provençal peasant’s
shrewdness. He realized that, for the first time in
his life, he had taken up a sound and serious avocation.
Also, he was no longer irresponsible. He
had found little Jean. Jean’s future was in his
hands. Jean was to be an architect—God knows
why—but Aristide settled it, definitely, off-hand.
He would have to be educated. “And, my dear
friend,” said he, when we were discussing Jean—and
for months I heard nothing but Jean, Jean,
Jean, so that I loathed the brat, until I met the
brown-skinned, black-eyed, merry little wretch and
fell, like everybody else, fatuously in love with him—“my
dear friend,” said he, “an architect, to be
the architect that I mean him to be, must have universal
knowledge. He must know the first word
of the classic, the last word of the modern. He
must be steeped in poetry, his brain must vibrate
with science. He must be what you call in England
a gentleman. He must go to one of your great
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</SPAN></span>
public schools—Eton, Winchester, Rugby, Harrow—you
see I know them all—he must go to Cambridge
or Oxford. Ah, I tell you, he is to be a big
man. I, Aristide Pujol, did not pick him up on
that deserted road, in the Arabia Petrea of Provence,
between Salon and Arles, for nothing. He was
wrapped, as I have told you, in an old blanket—and
<em>ma foi</em> it smelt bad—and I dressed him in my
pyjamas and made a Neapolitan cap for him out of
one of my socks. The <em>bon Dieu</em> sent him, and I
shall arrange just as the <em>bon Dieu</em> intended. Poor
Miss Anne Honeywood with her ninety pounds a
year, what can she do? Pouf! It is for me to look
after the future of little Jean.”</p>
<p>By means of such discourse he convinced Miss
Anne that Jean was predestined to greatness and
that Providence had appointed him, Aristide, as
the child’s agent in advance. Very much bewildered
by his riotous flow of language and
very reluctant to sacrifice her woman’s pride, she
agreed to allow him to contribute towards Jean’s
upbringing.</p>
<p>“Dear Miss Anne,” said he, “it is my right. It is
Jean’s right. You would love to put him on top
of the pinnacle of fame, would you not?”</p>
<p>“Of course,” said Miss Anne.</p>
<p>“<em>Eh bien!</em> we will work together. You will give
him what can be given by a beautiful and exquisite
woman, and I will do all that can be done by the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</SPAN></span>
accredited agent of Dulau et Compagnie, Wine
Shippers of Bordeaux.”</p>
<p>So, I repeat, Aristide was entirely happy. His
waking dreams were of the four-year-old child.
The glad anticipation of the working day in Great
Tower St., E. C., was the evening welcome from
the simple but capable gentlewoman and the sense
of home and intimacy in her little parlour no bigger
than the never-entered and nerve-destroying salon
of his parents at Aigues Mortes, but smiling with
the grace of old oak and faded chintz. At Aigues
Mortes the salon was a comfortless, tasteless convention,
set apart for the celebrations of baptisms
and marriages and deaths, a pride and a terror to
the inhabitants. But here everything seemed to be
as much a warm bit of Anne Honeywood as the
tortoise-shell comb in her hair and the square of
Brussels lace that rose and fell on the bosom of
her old evening frock. For, you see, since she expected
a visitor in the evenings, Anne had taken
to dressing for her sketch of a dinner. For all
her struggle with poverty she had retained the
charm that four years before had made her
touch upon Jean seem a consecration to the
impressionable man. And now that he entered
more deeply into her life and thoughts, he found
himself in fragrant places that were very strange
to him. He discovered, too, with some surprise,
that a man who has been at fierce grips with
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</SPAN></span>
Fortune all his life from ten to forty is ever so little
tired in spirit and is glad to rest. In the tranquility
of Anne Honeywood’s presence his soul was
singularly at peace. He also wondered why Anne
Honeywood seemed to grow younger, and, in her
gentle fashion, more laughter-loving, every day.</p>
<p>The Saint Martin’s summer lasted to the beginning
of December, and then it came to an end, and
with it the idyll of Aristide and Anne Honeywood.</p>
<p>One Saturday afternoon, when the rain was falling
dismally, she received him with an embarrassment
she could scarcely conceal. The usual heightened
colour no longer gave youth to her cheek; an
anxious frown knitted her candid brows; and there
was no laughter in her eyes. He looked at her
questioningly. Was anything the matter with Jean?
But Jean answered the question for himself by running
down the passage and springing like a puppy
into Aristide’s arms. Anne turned her face away,
as if the sight pained her, and, pleading a headache
and the desire to lie down, she left the two together.
Returning after a couple of hours with the tea-tray,
she found them on the floor breathlessly absorbed
in the erection of card pagodas. She bit her lip
and swallowed a sob. Aristide jumped up and took
the tray. Was not the headache better? He was
so grieved. Jean must be very quiet and drink up
his milk quietly like a hero because Auntie was
suffering. Tea was a very subdued affair. Then
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</SPAN></span>
Anne carried off Jean to bed, refusing Aristide’s
helpful ministrations. It was his Saturday and
Sunday joy to bath Jean amid a score of crawly
tin insects which he had provided for the child’s
ablutionary entertainment, and it formed the climax
of Jean’s blissful day. But this afternoon Anne
tore the twain asunder. Aristide looked mournfully
over the rain-swept common through the leaded
panes, and speculated on the enigma of woman. A
man, feeling ill, would have been only too glad for
somebody to do his work; but a woman, just because
she was ill, declined assistance. Surely
women were an intellect-baffling sex.</p>
<p>She came back, having put Jean to bed.</p>
<p>“My dear friend,” she said, with a blurt of bravery,
“I have something very hard to say, but I must
say it. You must go away from Beverly Stoke.”</p>
<p>“Ah!” cried Aristide, “is it I, then, that give you
a headache?”</p>
<p>“It’s not your fault,” she said gently. “You have
been everything that a loyal gentleman could be—and
it’s because you’re a loyal gentleman that you
must go.”</p>
<p>“I don’t understand,” said he, puzzled. “I must
go away because I give you a headache, although
it is not my fault.”</p>
<p>“It’s nothing to do with headaches,” she explained.
“Don’t you see? People around here are
talking.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</SPAN></span>
“About you and me?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Miss Anne, faintly.</p>
<p>“<em>Saprelotte!</em>” cried Aristide, with a fine flourish,
“let them talk!”</p>
<p>“Against Jean and myself?”</p>
<p>The reproach brought him to his feet. “No,”
said he. “No. Sooner than they should talk, I
would go out and strangle every one of them. But
it is infamous. What do they say?”</p>
<p>“How can I tell you? What would they say in
your own country?”</p>
<p>“France is France and England is England.”</p>
<p>“And a little cackling village is the same all the
world over. No, my dear friend—for you are my
dear friend—you must go back to London, for the
sake of my good name and Jean’s.”</p>
<p>“But let us leave the cackling village.”</p>
<p>“There are geese on every common,” said Anne.</p>
<p>“<em>Nom de Dieu!</em>” muttered Aristide, walking about
the tiny parlour. “<em>Nom de Dieu de nom de Dieu!</em>”
He stood in front of her and flung out his arms
wide. “But without Jean and you life will have
no meaning for me. I shall die. I shall fade away.
I shall perish. Tell me, dear Miss Anne, what they
are saying, the miserable peasants with souls of
mud.”</p>
<p>But Anne could tell him no more. It had been
hateful and degrading to tell him so much. She
shivered through all her purity. After a barren
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</SPAN></span>
discussion she held out her hand, large and generous
like herself.</p>
<p>“Good-bye”—she hesitated for the fraction of a
second—“Good-bye, Aristide. I promise you shall
provide for Jean’s future. I will bring him up to
London now and then to see you. We will find
some way out of the difficulty. But you see, don’t
you, that you must leave Beverly Stoke?”</p>
<p>Aristide went back to his comfortless lodgings
aflame with bewilderment, indignation and despair.
He fell upon Mrs. Buttershaw, a slatternly and sour-visaged
woman, and hurled at her a tornado of questions.
She responded with the glee of a hag, and
Aristide learned the amazing fact that in the matter
of sheer uncharitableness, unkindness and foulness
of thought Beverly Stoke, with its population
of three hundred hinds, could have brought down
upon it the righteous indignation of Sodom, Gomorrah,
Babylon, Paris, and London. For a fortnight
or so Anne Honeywood’s life in the village
had been that of a pariah dog.</p>
<p>“And now you’ve spoke of it yourself,” said
Mrs. Buttershaw, her hands on her hips, “I’m glad.
I’m a respectable woman, I am, and go to church
regularly, and I don’t want to be mixed up in such
goings on. And I never have held with foreigners,
anyway. And the sooner you find other lodgings,
the better.”</p>
<p>For the first and only time in his life words
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</SPAN></span>
failed Aristide Pujol. He stood in front of the virtuous
harridan, his lips working, his fingers convulsively
clutching the air.</p>
<p>“You—you—you—you naughty woman!” he
gasped, and, sweeping her away from the doorway
of his box of a sitting-room, he rushed up to his
tinier bedroom and in furious haste packed his portmanteau.</p>
<p>“I would rather die than sleep another night beneath
your slanderous roof,” he cried at the foot
of the stairs. “Here is more than your week’s
money.” He flung a couple of gold coins on the
floor and dashed out into the darkness and the rain.</p>
<p>He hammered at Anne Honeywood’s door. She
opened it in some alarm.</p>
<p>“You?—but——” she stammered.</p>
<p>“I have come,” said he, dumping his portmanteau
in the passage, “to take you and Jean away from
this abomination of a place. It is a Tophet reserved
for those who are not good enough for hell. In
hell there is dignity, <em>que diable!</em> Here there is none.
I know what you have suffered. I know how they
insult you. I know what they say. You cannot stay
one more night here. Pack up all your things.
Pack up all Jean’s things. I have my valise here.
I walk to St. Albans and I come back for you in an
automobile. You lock up the door. I tell the policeman
to guard the cottage. You come with me. We
take a train to London. You and Jean will stay at
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</SPAN></span>
a hotel. I will go to my good friend who saved
me from Madam Gougasse. After that we will
think.”</p>
<p>“That’s just like you,” she said, smiling in spite
of her trouble, “you act first and think afterwards.
Unfortunately I’m in the habit of doing the reverse.”</p>
<p>“But it’s I who am doing all the thinking for
you. I have thought till my brain is red hot.” He
laughed in his luminous and excited way, and, seizing
both her hands, kissed them one after the other.
“There!” said he, “be ready by the time I return.
Do not hesitate. Do not look back. Remember
Lot’s wife!” He flourished his hat and was gone
like a flash into the heavy rain and darkness of the
December evening. Anne cried after him, but he
too remembering Lot’s wife would not turn. He
marched on buoyantly, heedless of the wet and
the squirting mud from unseen puddles. It was
an adventure such as he loved. It was a knightly
errand, <em>parbleu!</em> Was he not delivering a beautiful
lady from the dragon of calumny? And in
an automobile, too! His imagination fondled the
idea.</p>
<p>At a garage in St. Albans he readily found a car
for hire. He was all for driving it himself—that is
how he had pictured the rescue—but the proprietor,
dull and unimaginative tradesman, declined firmly.
It was a hireling who drove the car to Beverly
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</SPAN></span>
Stoke. Anne, unhatted and uncloaked, admitted
him.</p>
<p>“You are not ready?”</p>
<p>“My dear friend, how can I——?”</p>
<p>“You are not coming?” His hands dropped to
his sides and his face was the incarnation of disappointment.</p>
<p>“Let us talk things over reasonably,” she urged,
opening the parlour door.</p>
<p>“But I have brought the automobile.”</p>
<p>“He can wait for five minutes, can’t he?”</p>
<p>“He can wait till Doomsday,” said Aristide.</p>
<p>“Take off your dripping coat. You must be wet
through. Oh, how impulsive you are!”</p>
<p>He took off his overcoat dejectedly and followed
her into the parlour, where she tried to point
out the impossibility of his scheme. How could
she abandon her home at a moment’s notice? Failing
to convince him, she said at last in some embarrassment,
but with gentle dignity: “Suppose we
did run away together in your romantic fashion,
would it not confirm the scandal in the eyes of this
wretched village?”</p>
<p>“You are right,” said Aristide. “I had not
thought of it.”</p>
<p>He knew himself to be a madman. It was not
thus that ladies were rescued from calumny. But
to leave her alone to face it for time indefinite was
unthinkable. And, meanwhile, what would become
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</SPAN></span>
of him severed from her and little Jean? He sighed
and looked around the little room where he had
been so happy, and at the sweet-faced woman whose
companionship had been so dear to him. And then
the true meaning of all the precious things that had
been his life for the past two months appeared before
him like a smiling valley hitherto hidden and
now revealed by dissolving mist. A great gladness
gathered round his heart. He leaned across the
table by which he was sitting and looked at her and
for the first time noticed that her eyes were red.</p>
<p>“You have been crying, dear Anne,” said he,
using her name boldly. “Why?”</p>
<p>A man ought not to put a question like that at
a woman’s head and bid her stand and deliver. How
is she to answer? Anne felt Aristide’s bright eyes
upon her and the colour mounted and mounted and
deepened on her cheeks and brow.</p>
<p>“I don’t like changes,” she said in a low voice.</p>
<p>Aristide slipped noiselessly to the side of her chair
and knelt on one knee and took her hand.</p>
<p>“Anne—my beloved Anne!” said he.</p>
<p>And Anne neither moved nor protested, but looked
away from him into the fire.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>And that is all that Aristide told me. There are
sacred and beautiful things in life that one man does
not tell to another. He did, however, mention that
they forgot all about the unfortunate chauffeur
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</SPAN></span>
sitting in the rain till about three hours afterwards,
when Aristide sped away to a St. Albans hotel in
joyous solitude.</p>
<p>The very next day he burst in upon me in a state
of bliss bordering on mania.</p>
<p>“But there is a tragic side to it,” he said when the
story was over. “For half the year I shall be exiled
to Bordeaux, Marseilles and Algiers as the representative
of Dulau et Compagnie.”</p>
<p>“The very best thing that could happen for your
domestic happiness,” said I.</p>
<p>“What? With my heart”—he thumped his heart—“with
my heart hurting like the devil all the
time?”</p>
<p>“So long as your heart hurts,” said I, “you know
it isn’t dead.”</p>
<p>A short while afterwards they were married in
London. I was best man and Jean, specklessly attired,
was page of honour, and the vicar of her own
church at Chislehurst performed the ceremony. The
most myopic of creatures could have seen that Anne
was foolishly in love with her rascal husband. How
could she help it?</p>
<p>As soon as the newly wedded pair had received
the exhortation, Aristide, darting to the altar-rail,
caught Jean up in his arms, and, to the consternation
of the officiating clergy, the verger, and Anne’s
conventional friends, cried out exultingly:</p>
<p>“<em>Ah, mon petit.</em> It was a lucky day for both of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</SPAN></span>
us when I picked you up on the road between Salon
and Arles. Put your hands together as you do when
you’re saying your prayers, <em>mon brave</em>, and say,
‘God bless father and mother.’”</p>
<p>Jean obediently adopted the attitude of the infant
Samuel in the pictures.</p>
<p>“God bless father and mother,” said he, and the
childish treble rang out queerly in the large, almost
empty church.</p>
<p>There was a span of silence and then all the
women-folk fell on little Jean and that was the end
of that wedding.</p>
<p> </p>
<p class="center"><span class="smcap">The End</span>.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<div class="footnote"><p><SPAN name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></SPAN> The Adventures of the Foundling.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p> </p>
<div class="box2">
<p> </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>THE GLORY OF CLEMENTINA</h2>
<p class="center"><strong>BY</strong></p>
<h2>William J. Locke</h2>
<p class="center">Author of “The Belovèd Vagabond,” “Simon the
Jester,” etc.</p>
<p class="center">
<em>Cloth</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;"><em>12mo</em></span> <span style="margin-left: 3em;"><em>$1.30 net</em></span> <span style="margin-left: 3em;"><em>Postage 12 cents</em></span></p>
<p class="center">Illustrations by Arthur I. Keller</p>
<p>“Mr. Locke has succeeded in uniting with the firm carefulness
of his early work the rapid, fluent, vibrating style that
makes his later books so delightful; therefore it is easy to make
the deduction that ‘Clementina’ is the best piece of work he has
done.”—<em>New York Evening Sun</em></p>
<p>“Among the novels of the past five years no books have more
consistently produced an effect at once certain, satisfactory and
delightful than those of William J. Locke. This latest addition
to his shelf is full of life and laughter and the love not only of
man for woman but of man for man and for humanity. Mr.
Locke is a born story-teller and a master of the art of expression.”—<em>The Outlook</em></p>
<p>“The book contains a mass of good material, with original
characterization, and is written in a style piquant and clever.”—<em>The Literary Digest</em></p>
<p>“A story containing the essence of humanity, with an abundance of
sensible and sensitive, casual and unobtrusive commentary
upon life and man, and especially upon woman.”—<em>Boston Evening Transcript</em></p>
<p>“It contains even more of the popular qualities than are usually
associated with the writings of this noted author.”—<em>Boston Times</em></p>
<p>“Mr. Locke’s flights into the realms of fancy have been a
delight to many readers. He has a lightness of touch that is
entirely captivating, and his remarkable characterization of inconsequent
people gives them a reality that is very insistent.”—<em>Baltimore Evening Sun</em></p>
<p>“Never has he drawn so deeply from that well that is the
human heart; never so near those invisible heights which are
the soul; and, if we are not altogether mistaken, ‘The Glory of
Clementina’ will also prove to be that of its author.”—<em>Baltimore News</em></p>
<p>“A fascinating story with delicate, whimsical touches.”—<em>Albany Times-Union</em></p>
<p>“The book seems destined to live longer than any written
by the author to date, because it is so sane and so fundamentally true.”—<em>Philadelphia Enquirer</em></p>
<hr style="width: 100%; color: black; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: -1em;" />
<h1>JOHN LANE CO., NEW YORK</h1></div>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<div class="box2">
<p> </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>MANALIVE</h2>
<p class="center"><strong>BY</strong></p>
<h2>Gilbert K. Chesterton</h2>
<p class="center">Author of “The Innocence of Father Brown,”
“Heretics,” “Orthodoxy,” etc.</p>
<p class="center">
<em>Cloth</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;"><em>12mo</em></span> <span style="margin-left: 3em;"><em>$1.30 net</em></span> <span style="margin-left: 3em;"><em>Postage 12 cents</em></span></p>
<p class="center">Frontispiece and Jacket Illustration by Will Foster</p>
<p>“Mr. Chesterton has undertaken in this quaint narrative to
make burlesque the vehicle of a sermon and a philosophy. It
is all a part of the author’s war upon artificial attitudes which
enclose the living men like a shell and make for human purposes
a dead man of him. He speaks here in a parable—a parable of
his own kind, having about it a broad waggishness like that of
Mr. Punch and a distinct flavor of that sort of low comedy which
one finds in Dickens and Shakespeare. You are likely to find,
before you are done with the parable, that there has been forced
upon your attention a possible view of the life worth living.
‘Manalive’ is a ‘Peterpantheistic’ novel full of Chestertonisms.”—<em>New
York Times</em></p>
<p>“One of the oddest books Mr. Chesterton has yet given us.”—<em>New
York Evening Globe</em></p>
<p>“The fun of the book (and there is plenty of it) comes quite
as much from the extraordinary and improbable characters as
from the situations. Epigrams, witticisms, odd fancies, queer
conceits, singular whimsies, follow after one another in quick
succession.”—<em>Brooklyn Eagle</em></p>
<p>“One of the most humorous tales of modern fiction, combined
with a very tender and appealing love story.”—<em>Cleveland
Plain Dealer</em></p>
<p>“The book is certain to have a wide circulation, not only
because of the name of the author attached to it, but because
of its own intrinsic worth.”—<em>Buffalo Commercial</em></p>
<p>“There can be no doubt as to the iridescent brilliance of the
book. Page after page—full of caustic satire, humorous sally and
profound epigram—fairly bristles with merriment. The book is
a compact mass of scintillating wit.”—<em>Philadelphia Public Ledger</em></p>
<hr style="width: 100%; color: black; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: -1em;" />
<h1>JOHN LANE CO., NEW YORK</h1></div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />