<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>The Storm of London</h1>
<h2>By</h2>
<h2>F. Dickberry</h2>
<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
<p class='c007'>The Earl of Somerville was coming out of the
Agricultural Hall and just stepping into his
brougham, when a few drops of rain began to
fall and a distant clap of thunder was heard.
But it would no doubt be over in a few minutes;
only a passing shower which would dispel the
clouds, clear the leaden atmosphere, and in no
way interfere with the midnight picnic to which
Lord Somerville was going.</p>
<p>The day had been oppressively hot, and although
it was only the second of May, one might have
easily believed it to be the month of July. It
was fortunate, for several entertainments were
organised in that early period of the London
Season—theatricals and bazaars, private and
public, were announced for every day of the
first weeks in May, for the benefit of soldiers’
widows, East-End sufferers and West-End
vanities. In fact, never had Londoners’ hearts
beaten more passionately for the sorrows and
miseries of their fellow-creatures than at the
present moment; and it would have been a pity
had the charitable efforts of Society leaders been
chilled by cutting east winds or drenching downpours
of rain. The picnic to which the Earl
was going, was to be held in Richmond Park, by
torchlight, between midnight and the early hours
of the morning. All Society was to be there.
The Duchess of Southdown was to take a
prominent part in the entertainment. Object
lessons in rat catching were to be the chief
attraction, as fashionable women had been chosen
to take the parts of the rats, and to be chased,
hunted, and finally caught by smart men of
Society. Great fun was expected from this novel
game, and the Upper Ten looked forward to that
picnic with excitement. Before this nocturnal
episode, there was to be a Tournament at
Islington’s Agricultural Hall. “London, by Day
and by Night,” was to be represented, in all its
graphic aspects, by amateur artists of the Upper
Ten, who were always ready to give their services
for such a good cause as the S.P.G. But then
Society is invariably ready to enter the lists where
combatants fight for a noble cause, and it is
never seen to shirk ridicule or notoriety, but on
the contrary to expose the inefficiencies of its
members to the gaping eyes of an ignorant
public.</p>
<p>“By God!” exclaimed Lord Somerville as he
leaned back on the cushions of his brougham, “I
never realised the brutal ferocity of London life
until I saw its nocturnal Bacchanals synthesised
within so many square feet.”</p>
<p>He passed in review, in his mind’s eye, what
he had seen:—Lady Carlton in the leading part of
the wildest of street rovers, cigarette in her mouth,
reeling from one side of the pavement to the
other, nudging this one, thrusting her cigarette
under the nose of another, pulling the beard of
a stolid policeman, vociferating at the cab drivers.
Lord Somerville had seen a good deal of what these
women were trying to impersonate, but he never
remembered having blushed so deeply, nor of
having been so conscious of shame, as he felt
that night. But this was only the beginning of
the show. The last tableau was most striking.
The front of the houses, represented by painted
scenery, suddenly rolled off as by enchantment,
and there, in view of a breathless public, were
to be seen the interiors of gambling houses,
massage establishments, night clubs—you can
guess the rest! This final scene was all
pantomimic, and although not one word was
spoken, still, the despair of the man who sees his
gold raked away on the green baize, the heartrending
bargains of human flesh for a few
hours of oblivion, were vivid pictures which left
very few shreds of illusions in the minds of a
dumbfounded audience. Then came the grand
finale of hurry and skurry between the police and
the gamblers and night revellers of all sorts;
and this was a triumph of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mise-en-scène</span></i> and
animation. To make it still more realistic, the
Countess of Lundy had elected to appear in a
night wrap, as two constables made a raid on
the so-called massage establishment. But what a
night wrap! The Earl smiled as he recalled
the masterpiece in which Doucet of Paris had
surpassed himself, revealing with subtle suggestiveness
the lissome shape of arms and legs,
and full curves of the breast through a foam of
white lace and chiffon. As he sat in the darkness
of his brougham, he closed his eyes and saw
the Countess as she had stood in front of the
footlights, unblushingly courting the approval
of her public; and he still heard in his ears the
furious applause of London Society gathered
that night in Islington Hall. What had most
struck this leader of fashion was the total
ignorance in which one class of well-fed, well-protected
human beings lived of all miseries that
unshielded thousands have to bear. He thought
of the many women on whom he daily called,
dined with, joked with; how many possessed
that ferocious glance of the pleasure-seeker, the
audacious stare of the flesh hunter; but he had
never noticed in any of these fearless women of his
world the slightest slackening of tyranny, nor
had he ever noticed, for one moment even, the
pathetic humility of the hunted-down street
angler, which is after all her one redeeming
feature in that erotic tragedy.</p>
<p>Evidently the performance had been a decided
success, and would doubtless be a pecuniary
triumph. The Bishop of Sunbury, seated near the
Earl at the show, had largely expatiated on the
good of rummaging into the puddle of London
sewers, as he called it in his clerical language. It
was by diving deep into the mud that one could
drag out one’s erring brothers and sisters, and by
bringing London face to face with its social problems
one was able to grapple with the enemy—sin.
At least, so thought the Bishop, and he endeavoured
to persuade the Earl, which was a more difficult
task than he believed. The prelate, holding Lord
Somerville by one of his waistcoat buttons, had tried
to make him appreciate Society’s unselfishness.
“My dear Lord Somerville, we hear all about the
frivolity of our privileged classes; much is said
against them—too much, I fear, is written against
the callousness of fashionable women; but I assure
you, it is unjust. Many of these sisters of ours, who
have to-night moved the public to enthusiasm, have
themselves their burden to bear, and many have wept
bitter tears over some lost one in Africa. Well, to
quote one of them: as you know, the Countess
of Lundy—who personified the matron of one of
these disgraceful establishments—has last week
lost her cherished brother (poor fellow, he died of
wounds); but there you see her at her post of duty.”</p>
<p>“More shame on her,” had murmured the Earl,
but the Bishop did not hear, or would not, and
had walked away.</p>
<p>“By God!”—and the Earl brought down his fist
on his knee—“these women have made me see to
what depth a woman can sink. And I am going
to another of these exhibitions—I am heartily sick
of it all.” As he was putting down a window to
tell his coachman to turn back to Selby House, the
brougham suddenly stopped, and a torrent of rain
came through the open window.</p>
<p>“By Jove, Marshall, it is pouring.”</p>
<p>“My lord, I cannot get along. We’ve reached
Barnes, but the wind and rain is that strong, the
’orses won’t face it.”</p>
<p>“Turn back by all means. The picnic could
not take place in such a storm.” And he closed
the window, laughing heartily at Society’s disappointment.</p>
<p>“Well, they are defrauded of their new game,
and I am spared another display of female degradation.”</p>
<p>Whether it was owing to the violence of the
storm, or to the morbidness into which the last
performance had thrown him, is difficult to tell,
but Lord Somerville was in a despondent mood
and on the brink of mental collapse, and as they
are wont in such cases, visions of his past life kept
passing to and fro before his half-closed eyes. He
was going home! In any case it was better than
this infernal comedy of fun and pleasure which
invariably ended in gloom and disgust. His home
was loneliness made noisy. He lived alone in that
palatial mansion in Mayfair; but solitary his life
had not been, since his father had left him heir to
all sorts of properties, privileges and prejudices.
His house had ever since been invaded by men
and women of all descriptions. Some were
morning callers, some afternoon ones; these were
the dowagers and respectable members of the
Upper Ten who accepted his invitations to a cup
of tea, and made it a pretext to submit to his
inspection some human goods for sale. The others
were night visitors, and easily dealt with, for their
business was direct and personal. Men found him
unsatisfactory, for he objected to being made use
of, was inaccessible to flattery, and steadily rebuked
all attempts at familiarity. He never showed
himself ungallant towards the fair sex, but on the
contrary was liberal and even grateful for all he
received; in fact he was thoroughly just and
business-like in the market-place of life, and
treated his visitors well, whether they were guests
from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., or carousers from 10 p.m.
to 8 a.m. One thing he strongly disliked, that was
any man or woman peeping at a corner of his
heart. He often thought he had none, for it had
never yet been in request in all his business
transactions with Society. Although he had
paddled in all the filthy sewers of London and
foreign capitals, he somehow had a knack of
brushing himself clean of all outward grime; but
what he never had been able to get rid of was a
nasty flavour which clung to his lips, and which no
woman’s kiss could ever take away, nor any
Havana cigar dispel. That mephitic taste of life
was always on his lips, and to-night it was more
deadly bitter than ever. Perhaps the flavour
became more noxious as before his mind’s eye
passed the vision of Gwendolen Towerbridge,
the famous Society beauty. Not only did he
thoroughly dislike the girl, but his pride was
sorely wounded at having been caught by her.
Yes, he was engaged—what the world called
engaged—to her. How did it happen? Ah! Few
men could really tell how they had been captured.
A supper, the top of a coach when returning late
from the races; sometimes even less than that: a
glass of champagne too many, or a bodice cut too
low. These certainly were not important primal
causes, but they often were found to be at the
fountain-head of many family disasters. The
women he had known were divided into two
classes: the one that had run the social race, won
the prize, and who certainly looked the worse for
the course, mentally sweating, and in dire need of a
vigorous sponge down; and the other that started
for the post, all aglow with the desire to win at any
cost and whatever the means, foul or fair, for a
little cheating was encouraged, and often practised,
on the Turf.</p>
<p>How many more seasons would he have to
stand there and watch the ebb and flow of the
feminine tide? He had for such a long time felt
on his brow the breath of the mare as she galloped
past him; and he had too often heard the feverish
snort of the winner as she came back, led by her
master’s groom. He knew no others. Perhaps
a country lass, purely brought up by Christian
parents, would modestly wait on a stile until she
was won; but that girl would have no <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">repartie</span></i>,
and would look mystified at a problem play. No
doubt, in the suburbs there existed women whose
sole ambition was to help a life companion in
the search of true happiness, who padded the
monotonous life of some City clerk who regularly
came back by the 6.15 train, bringing home <em>Tit-Bits</em>
for the evening recreation, and <em>Home Chat</em> for
household requirements. Bah! that woman never
could analyse the psychology of cookery, and
besides, she was not a lady. He was an epicure in
the culinary art, and thirsted for something he had
not yet met with: a lady who would be a perfect
woman. Then came the war; and he longed to
escape the routine of London life and Gwendolen’s
incessant requests for presents: he started for
South Africa, hoping to lose there the nasty taste
that was forever on his lips. Gwendolen soon
followed, escorted by some of her friends and their
numerous trunks. New frocks were shaken out,
bonnets were twisted back into their original
shapes, and an improvised season was inaugurated
in one of the South African towns, to the utter
disgust of her <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fiancé</span></i>, who, having been wounded,
had the misfortune of seeing her parade daily
round his bed. The sights he witnessed sickened
him unto death; the amalgam of frivolity and
callousness seemed to him more irrelevant in that
new country, and the physical excitement and
interest of danger having worn itself off, he very
soon realised that the old game of war must
necessarily be played out in a civilisation that
boasts of commercial supremacy, and whose
scientific discoveries are daily endeavouring to
bring nations nearer to one another. He returned
to England on sick leave, more embittered than
heretofore with Gwendolen, London, and himself.
He frequently sat at twilight in his large library
at Selby House, wondering whether this was all a
fellow could do with his life, and whether the
other side was not more entertaining than this
rotten old stage? To-night, as he drove in his
carriage, listening to the crashing of the thunder,
every event of his life came back to him in strong
relief and vivid colours, and the prospect of joining
in holy matrimony with Gwendolen seemed more
than he could bear. Perhaps the taste of death
that he so nearly met with in Africa came to him
at this hour of night, when all the elements were
at war against man; and he came to the conclusion
that he was not obliged to submit to life’s platitudes
any longer. A gentleman should always
quit a card table when he has been cheated. Life
had cheated him, and he resolved to leave life.
The other side of Acheron could not be a worse
fraud than this; besides, he knew all about this
world, there was nothing that could astonish him
any more, nor keep his attention riveted for more
than five minutes. Why not try the experiment?
If it were complete oblivion, so much the better,
he did not object to a long sleep out of which he
would never wake. If it were, as so many declared,
eternal punishment—well, the retribution
could never, in all its black horror, be any worse
than the gnawing heartache of the life in which we
were chained.</p>
<p>The brougham rolled on, and very soon Lord
Somerville knew he was in the heart of London.
The streets were flooded, passengers were rushing
along, in vain trying to get into omnibuses or
hansoms; shouting, whistling, rent the damp atmosphere,
competing with claps of thunder which
at times alarmed the inhabitants, especially when
the electric lights suddenly went out and
Londoners were plunged for a few minutes into
utter darkness. Lord Somerville could not remember
having ever witnessed such a thunderstorm
in town; still, he welcomed its magnitude
with joy, for it was the proper accompaniment to
his frenzy against an inadequate state of Society.
The wheels turned the corner of Piccadilly and
Park Lane, not without risk, for the obscurity was
dangerous, and in a few seconds the carriage
halted before his stately mansion; he opened the
door, jumped out, and went into the house without
turning round to give orders for next day to his
coachman. This seemed peculiar to the servant,
as he knew my lord to be very methodical in all
that concerned his household.</p>
<p>The Earl entered his library, and after lighting
a few electric lights, which were only now throwing
a dim and lurid light into the large room, he sank
down into a huge armchair. It was very quiet in
that room; double doors and double windows
shut out the noise of the splashing rain against
the window-panes, the thunder even was less
violent in this well-padded room, and the lightning
could not pierce through the shutters and the
thick brocaded draperies. After the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fracas</span></i> of the
streets, it seemed to him as if he had already
entered the Valley of Death as he sat in this silent
place. The picture of his late father was hanging
on the panel in front of him, and he looked at it
for a considerable time. What could that face
tell him at this critical hour, when for long years
of his time he had never found one convincing
argument with which to enlighten his son on all
the grave problems of existence? It was always
the same answers to the same inquiries: “My
boy, others have gone through life besides yourself,
and found it no worse than I have. Don’t think
too hard, leave that to those who have to use
their brains for a livelihood. You have a bed
ready made to lie on, do not complain that it is too
soft; but do not forget that you are a gentleman,
and that when you have passed a few turnpikes
of life—let us say, Eton, Oxford, the War or the
Foreign Office—you can do whatever you like, for
you are then innocuous; and no one, not even the
most Argus-eyed dowager, will consider you
dangerous, however wild your mode of life may
be. My advice to you is, never fall into the
clutches of any woman; to my mind the sex is
divided into two dangerous species: the one that
kill you before they bore you, the other that bore
you before they kill you. But in either way you
are a doomed man; though for myself I should
prefer being killed to being bored—and as you
know, I chose the former.”</p>
<p>Was this all that the aristocratic shape framed
in front of him could tell him? It was not
enough. He was too robust to be killed by the
London Hetaires, and too fastidious to allow
himself to be bored by the other species. He
listened, but no sound came from the outside; the
walls were too thick, the draperies too rich to allow
any <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fracas</span></i> to disturb the owner of that dwelling.
He was hermetically shut out from every outward
commotion, and might have lived in a vault.
Was not that an image of his privileged life? All
things had been so ordained and smoothed down
in his easy existence that he could see nothing
beyond his own direct surroundings, and could
never penetrate into another heart, nor allow anyone
to hear the throbs of his own heart. That
was called the privilege of the well-bred, and it
was all that generations before him had done for
his welfare: a double-windowed house and a well-padded
life, out of which he never could step.
There were barriers at every corner of the road in
which he had walked. Harrow, Oxford, the
Guards, Downing Street, watched him, reminding
him, by the way, that he could prance, kick, roll,
do anything he had a mind to, within his
boundary; and he heard that haunting whisper in
his wearied ears that, however low he sank—he
was a gentleman. But outside the boundary was
a world called life, with a real, throbbing, howling
humanity, a pushing and elbowing crowd with
which he evidently had nothing to do; out there
he had no business, for over there people
answered for themselves, were responsible for
their own actions, and he would no doubt fare
badly were he to push and elbow for his own sake,
independently of all the privileged institutions
that propped him up through life. He suddenly
remembered that next day there was a Levee, and
that he was to be there. No, he would not go,
he would escape for once, and for good and all,
these recurring functions of social London which
seemed to narrow the horizon of life. The best
was to make a suitable exit and bring down the
curtain on a Mayfair episode; it would puzzle,
interest, amuse half of London for the inside of a
week, and it would be over. He got up and went
to a large bureau that stood in the middle of the
room, and began to open drawer after drawer;
he brought out some business papers, laid
them carefully on the bureau, pulled out
bundles of letters, read a few, burnt a great
many. Amongst all the correspondence he
came across there was not one note from
Gwendolen; she did not write, she sent wires
about anything, for an appointment at Ranelagh,
a bracelet she had seen at Hancock’s, or
some more trifling matter; and even then, she
hardly sat down to pen these cursory remarks;
she sent her wires when at breakfast, close to the
dish of fried bacon, at lunch, at tea, on the corner
of the silver tray. He opened another drawer and
took out a revolver; it was loaded, and he examined
it minutely. How long had it been in that drawer
and when had he loaded it? He could not recall
when last he had seen the arm. He slowly lifted
it to his temple and pulled the trigger, as a violent
clap of thunder shook the house to its very
foundation, causing the electric lights to go
out. Lord Somerville fell heavily on the Turkish
carpet.</p>
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