<div><span class='pageno' title='49' id='Page_49'></span><h1>CHAPTER IV</h1></div>
<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>Q</span><span class='sc'>uixtus</span> was still bowing his head over the
dishonoured grave of “Quixtus and Son”
when the second thunderbolt fell. The
public disgrace drove a temperamentally hermit-like
nature into more rigid seclusion. He resigned his
presidency of the Anthropological Society. The
Council met and unanimously refused to accept
his resignation. They wrote in such terms that he
could not do otherwise than yield. But he gave up
his attendance at their meetings. To a man, his
friends among the learned professed their sympathy.
It hurt rather than healed. Those who wrote received
courteous and formal replies. Those who knocked
at his door were refused admittance. Even Clementina,
repenting of her harshness and pitying the lonely and
helpless man, pinned on a shameless thing that had
once resembled a hat, and went up by omnibus to
Russell Square, only to find the door closed against
her. The woman thus scorned became the fury which,
according to the poet, is unknown in Hades. She
expressed her opinion of Quixtus pretty freely. But
Quixtus shrank from her as he shrank from every one,
as he even shrank from his own servants. These he
dismissed, with the exception of Mrs. Pennycook,
his housekeeper, who, since the death of his wife had
held a high position of trust in his household, and a
vague female of humble and heterogeneous appearance
who lived out, and had the air of apologising for inability
to squeeze through the wall when he passed by. In
view of he knew not what changes in his immediate
financial circumstances, economy, he said, was desirable.
He also shut up the greater part of the big house,
finding a dim sort of pleasure in such retrenchment.
He lived in his museum at the back, ate his meals
in the little dark room at the head of the kitchen
stairs, and changed his luxurious bedroom for a murky,
cheerless little chamber adjoining the museum. When
a man takes misery for a bride he may be forgiven
for exaggeration in his early transports.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Only on Tuesday nights did he throw open dining-room
and drawing-room, where he received Huckaby,
Vandermeer, and Billiter as in the past. To them
his smile and his old self were given. Indeed he found
a newer sympathy with them. He, even as they,
had been the victim of outrageous fortune. He, too,
had suffered from the treachery of man and the insolence
of office. The three found an extra guerdon
in their great-coat pockets.</p>
<p class='pindent'>There were times, however, when the museum
grew wearisome through familiarity, when he found
no novelty in the Quaternary skull from Silesia, or
the engraved reindeers on the neolithic axe-heads,
or the necklet of the lady of the bronze age; when
he craved things nearer to his own time which could
give him some message of modernity. On such occasions
he would either walk abroad, or if the weather
were foul, take a childish pleasure in exploring the
sealed chambers of the house. For, shut up a room,
exclude from it the light of day, cover the furniture
with dust-sheets till you get the semblance of a morgue
of strange beasts, forget it for a while, and, on re-entering
it, you will have all the elements of mystery which
gradually and agreeably give place to little pleasant
shocks of discovery of the familiar. The neglected
pictures that have hung on the walls, the huddled
knick-knacks on a table, the heap of books on the
floor, all have messages of gentle reproach. A newspaper
of years ago, wrapped round a cushion, once
opened by eager hands and containing in its headlines
world-shaking news (now so stale and forgotten)
is a pathetic object. In drawers are garments out
of date, preserved heaven knows why, keepsakes
worked by fair hands, unused but negligently treasured,
faded curtains which will never be rehung—a thousand
old stimulating things, down to ends of sealing-wax
and carefully rolled bits of twine. And some drawers
are empty, and from them rises the odour of lavender
poignant with memories of the things that are no
more.</p>
<p class='pindent'>It was a large, old-fashioned house which had been
his father’s before him, in which he had been born;
and it was full of memories. In the recess of a dark
cupboard in one of the attics he found a glass jar,
which had escaped the vigilance or commanded the
respect of generations of housemaids, covered with
a parchment on which was written in his mother’s
hand, “Damson Jam.” His mother had died a quarter
of a century ago.</p>
<p class='pindent'>An old hair-trunk in the corner of the box-room,
such a hair trunk as the boldest man during Quixtus’s
lifetime would have shrunk from having attached
to him on his travels, contained correspondence of
his grandfather’s and old daguerreotypes and photographs
of stiff, staring, faded people long since gone
to a (let us hope) more becomingly attired world.
There was a miniature on ivory, villainously painted,
of a chubby red-cheeked child, and on the back was
written “My Son Mathew, aged two years and six
months.” Could the shrivelled, myriad-wrinkled,
palsied old man whom Ephraim had visited but a short
while since ever have remotely resembled this? The
hair-trunk also contained a pistol with a label “Carried
by my father at Waterloo.” That was the old gentleman
who had lived to a hundred and four. Why
had this relic of family honour remained hidden all
his life?</p>
<p class='pindent'>The more he searched into odd corners the more
did his discoveries stimulate his interest. Of his
own life he found records in unexpected places. A
bundle of school-reports. He opened it at random,
and his eye fell upon the Headmaster’s Report at the
foot of a sheet; “Studious but unpractical. It seems
impossible to arouse in him a sense of ambition, or
even of the responsibilities of life.” He smiled somewhat
wistfully and put the bundle in his pocket with
a view to the further acquisition of self-knowledge.
A set of Cambridge college bills tied with red tape,
a broken microscope, a case of geometrical drawing
instruments, a manuscript book of early poems,
mimetic echoes of Keats, Tennyson, Shelley, Swinburne,
who were all clamouring together in his brain,
his college blazer, much moth-eaten, his Heidelberg
student’s cap, ditto. . . . <span class='it'>Ah! qu’ils sont loin ces
jours si regrettés!</span> . . .</p>
<p class='pindent'>Of his wife, too, there were almost forgotten relics.
An oak chest opened unexpectedly disclosed a pair
of little pink satin slippers standing wistfully on the
top of the tissue paper that protected the dresses
beneath. The key was in the lock. He closed the
lid reverently, locked the chest, and put the key in
his pocket. They had had together five years of placid
happiness. She was a sweet, white-winged soul—
Angela. Her little boudoir on the second floor had
not been used since her death, and was much as she
had left it. Only the dust-sheets and the gloom
invested it in a more ghostly atmosphere than other
less sacred chambers. Her work-basket stood by the
window. He opened it and found it still contained
a reel of thread and a needle-case stuck full of rusty
needles. On the wall hung an enlarged portrait of
himself at the age of thirty—he was not quite so lantern-jawed
then, and his hair was thicker on the top. A
water-colour sketch of Angela hung over the oak
bureau, at which she used to write her dinner-notes
and puzzle her pretty head over household accounts.
He drew up the blind so as to see the picture more
clearly. Yes. It was like her. Dark-haired, fragile,
with liquid brown eyes. There was just that dimple
in her chin. . . . He remembered it so well; but,
strangely, it had played no part in his customary
mental picture of her. In the rediscovery of the dimple
he found a vague melancholy pleasure. . . . Idly
he drew down the slanting lids of the bureau, and
pulled out the long narrow drawers that supported
it underneath. The interior was empty. He recollected
now that he had cleared it of its contents when
settling Angela’s affairs after her death. He thrust
up the slanting lid, pushed back the long right-hand
drawer, pushed the left hand one. It stuck. He
tried to ease it in, but it was jammed. He pulled it
out with a jerk, and found that the cause of the jam
was a letter flat against the end of the drawer with
a corner turned over the edge. He took out the letter,
closed the drawers, and smiled sadly, glad to have
discovered a new relic of Angela in the bureau—probably
a gossiping note from a friend, perhaps one
from himself. He went to the light of the window.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>My adored heart’s dearest and most beloved angel</span>”—so
the letter began. He scanned the words bewildered.
Certainly in his wildest dreams he had never
imagined such a form of address. Besides, the
handwriting was not his. He turned the sheet rapidly
and glanced at the end; “<span class='it'>God! How I love you.</span>
<span class='sc'>Will.</span>”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Will? Will Hammersley. It was Will Hammersley’s
handwriting. What did it mean? He
paused for a few moments, breathing hard, looking
with blind eyes through the window over the square.
At last he read the letter. Then he thrust it, a crumpled
ball, into his pocket and reeled out of the room like
a drunken man, down the stairs of the lonely house,
and flung himself into a chair in his museum, where
he sat for hours staring before him, paralysed with an
awful dismay.</p>
<p class='pindent'>At five o’clock his housekeeper entered with the tea-things.
He did not want tea. At seven she came
again into the large dark room lit only by the red
glow of the fire.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The gentlemen are here, sir.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>It was a Tuesday evening. He had forgotten.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He stumbled to his feet.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“All right,” he said.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Then he shivered, feeling a deadly sickness of soul.
No, he could not meet his fellow creatures to-night.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Give them my compliments and apologies, and
say I am unwell and unable to dine with them this
evening. See that they have all they want, as
usual.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Very good, sir—but yourself? I’m sorry you are
ill, sir. What can I bring you?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Nothing,” said Quixtus harshly. “Nothing. And
please don’t trouble me any more.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pennycook regarded him in some astonishment,
not having heard him speak in such a tone before.
Probably no one else had, since he had learned to
speak.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“If you’re not better in the morning, sir, I might
fetch the doctor.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He turned in his chair. “Go. I tell you. Go.
Leave me alone.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Later he rose and switched on the light and, mechanically
descending to the hall, like a sleep-walker,
deposited his usual largesse in the pockets of the three
seedy, familiar overcoats. Then he went up to his
museum again. The effort, however, had cleared his
mind. He reflected. He had not been very well
of late. There were such things as hallucinations,
to which men broken down by mental strain were
subject. Let him read the letter through once more.
He took the crumpled paper from his pocket, smoothed
it out and read. No. There was no delusion. The
whole story was there—the treachery, the faithlessness,
the guilty passion that gloried in its repeated consummation.
His wife Angela, his friend Will Hammersley—the
only woman and the only man he had ever loved.
A sudden memory smote him. He had entrusted her
to Hammersley’s keeping times out of number.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“My God!” said he, beating his forehead with
a clenched fist. “My God!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>And so fell the second thunderbolt.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Towards midnight there came a heavy knocking
at his door. Startled by the unusual sound he cried:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What’s that? Who’s there?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The door opened and Eustace Huckaby lurched
solemnly into the room. His ruffled hair stood up
on end like a cockatoo’s crest, and his watery eyes
glistened. He pulled his straggling beard.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Sorry ole’ man to hear you’re seedy. Came to
know—how—getting on.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Quixtus rose, a new sternness on his face, and
confronted the intruder.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Huckaby, you’re drunk.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Huckaby laughed and waved a protesting hand,
thereby nearly losing his balance.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No,” said he. “Rid’klous. I’m not drunk.
Other fellows are—drunk ash owls—tha’s why—couldn’t
come see you. They’re not qui’ sort of
men been acushtomed to assochate with—I’m—University
man—like you, Quishtus—sometime Fellow
Corpus Christi College, Cambridge—I first gave motto
for club—didn’t I? <span class='it'>Procul, O procul este profani</span>—tha’s
Latin. Other two lobsters don’t know word of
Latin—ignorant as lobsters—lobsters—tha’s wha’ I
call ’em.” He lurched heavily into a chair. “Awful
thirsty. Got a drink, old f’la?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No,” said Quixtus. “I haven’t. And if I had,
I wouldn’t give it to you.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The reprobate pondered darkly over the announcement.
Then he hiccoughed, and his face brightened.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Look here, dear old frien’——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Quixtus interrupted him.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Do you mean to tell me those other men are drunk
too?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“As owls—you go down—see ’em.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He threw back his head and broke out into sudden
shrill laughter. Then, checking himself, he said with
an awful gravity;</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I beg your pardon, Quishtus. Their conduc’s
disgrace—humanity.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You three have dined in this house once a week
for years, and no one has left it the worse for liquor.
And now, the first time I leave you to yourselves—I
was really not able to join you to-night—you take
advantage of my absence, and——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Huckaby staggered to his feet and tried to lay
his hand on Quixtus’s shoulder. Having recovered
himself, he put it on top of a case of prehistoric
implements.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Tha’s just what I want—explain to you. They’re
lobsters, dear ole’ friend—just lobsters—all claw and
belly and no heart. I’m a University man like you.
Corpush Christi College, Cambridge—They’re not
friends of yours. They’re lobsters. Ruddy lobsters.
I’m not drunk you know. I’m all right. I’m telling
you——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Quixtus took him by the arm. “I think you had
better go away, Huckaby.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No. Send other fellows away. I’m your frien’,”
said he, pointing a shaky forefinger. “I want to tell
you. I’m a University man and so are you, and I don’t
care how much you made out of it. You’re all
right, Quishtus. I’m your frien’. Other lobsters
said at dinner that if justice were done you’d be in
quod.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Quixtus took the gaunt sot by the shoulders and
shook him.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What the devil do you mean?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Don’t, don’t—don’t upset good dinner,” said
Huckaby wriggling away. “You won’t believe I’m
your friend. Van and Billiter say you were in with
Parable—Paramour—wha’s his name? all the time,
and it’s just your rosy luck that you weren’t doing
time too. Now I don’t care if you did stand in with
Parachute—‘tisn’t my business. But I’ll stan’ by
you. I, Eustace Huckaby, Master of Arts, sometime
Fellow of Corpush Christi College, Cambridge. There’sh
my hand.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He extended it, but Quixtus regarded it not.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The three of you have not contented yourselves
with getting drunk, but you’ve been slandering me
behind my back—foully slandering me.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He went to the door and flung it open.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I think it’s time, Huckaby, that we joined the
others.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Huckaby shambled down the stairs, murmuring of
lobsters and parables, and turning every now and then
to assure his host that adverse circumstances made
no difference to his imperishable affection; and so
they reached the dining-room. Huckaby had spoken
truly. Billiter was sprawling back in his chair, his
coat and waistcoat covered with cigar-ash; his bald
head was crowned by the truncated cone of a candle-shade
(a jest of Huckaby’s) which gave him an appearance
that would have been comic to a casual observer,
but to Quixtus was peculiarly obscene. His dazed
eyes were fixed stupidly on Vandermeer who, the
picture of woe, was weeping bitterly because he had
no one to love him. At the sight of Quixtus, Billiter
made an effort to rise, but fell back heavily on to his
seat, the candle-shade falling likewise. He muttered
hoarsely and incoherently that it was the confounded
gout again in his ankles. Then he expressed a desire
to slumber. Vandermeer raised a maudlin face.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No one to love me,” he whined, and tried to pour
from an empty decanter; it slipped from his hand
and broke a glass. “Not even a drop of consolation
left,” he said.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Disgrashful, isn’t it?” said Huckaby with a
hiccough.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Quixtus eyed them with disgust. Humanity was
revolting. He turned to Huckaby and said with a
shudder; “For God’s sake, take them away.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Huckaby summed them up with an unsteady but
practised eye. “Can’t walk. Ruddy lobsters. Must
have cabs.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Quixtus went to the street-door and whistled up
a couple of four-wheelers from the rank; and eventually,
by the aid of Huckaby and the cabmen whom
he had to bribe heavily to drive the wretches home,
they were deposited in some sort of sitting posture
each in a separate vehicle. As soon as the sound of
the departing wheels died away, Quixtus held out
Huckaby’s overcoat.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You’re sober enough to walk,” said he, helping
him on with it. “Good-night.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Huckaby turned on the doorstep.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Want you to remember—don’t care damn what
a frien’ has done—ever want help, come to me, sometime
Fellow of Corp——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Quixtus closed the street door in his face and heard
no more. These were his friends; these the men
who had lived on his bounty, who, for years, for what
they could get, had controlled their knavery, their
hypocrisy. These were the men for whom he had
striven, these sots, these dogs, these vulgar-hearted,
slandering knaves! His very soul was sick. He
paused at the dining-room door and for a moment
looked at the scene of the debauch. Wine and coffee
were spilled; glasses broken; a lighted stump of
cigar had burned a great brown hole in the tablecloth.
He grimly imagined the tipsy scene. If he had been
with them, there would have been smug faces, deprecating
hands upheld at the second round of the port,
talk on art, literature, religion, and what-not, and,
at parting, whispered blessings and fervent hand-shakes;
and all the time there would have been
slanderous venom in their hearts, and the raging
beast of drink within them cursing him for his repressing
presence.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The canting rogues,” he murmured as he went
back to his museum. “The canting rogues!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He thrust his hands, in a gesture of anger and
disgust, deep into his jacket-pockets. His knuckles
came against the crumpled letter. He turned faint
and clung to the newel-post on the landing for support.
The smaller treachery coming close before his eyes
had for the time eclipsed the greater.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“My God,” he said, “is all the world against
me?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Unfortunately there was a thunderbolt or two yet
to fall.</p>
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