<h3>CHAPTER X<SPAN name="chapter10"></SPAN></h3>
<h3>HIS INFAMY</h3>
<p>I</p>
<p>When Denry at a single stroke "wherreted" his mother and proved his
adventurous spirit by becoming the possessor of one of the first motor-cars ever owned in Bursley, his instinct naturally was to run up to
Councillor Cotterill's in it. Not that he loved Councillor Cotterill,
and therefore wished to make him a partaker in his joy; for he did not
love Councillor Cotterill. He had never been able to forgive Nellie's
father for those patronising airs years and years before at Llandudno,
airs indeed which had not even yet disappeared from Cotterill's attitude
towards Denry. Though they were Councillors on the same Town Council,
though Denry was getting richer and Cotterill was assuredly not getting
richer, the latter's face and tone always seemed to be saying to Denry:
"Well, you are not doing so badly for a beginner." So Denry did not care
to lose an opportunity of impressing Councillor Cotterill. Moreover,
Denry had other reasons for going up to the Cotterills. There existed a
sympathetic bond between him and Mrs Cotterill, despite her prim
taciturnity and her exasperating habit of sitting with her hands pressed
tight against her body and one over the other. Occasionally he teased
her—and she liked being teased. He had glimpses now and then of her
secret soul; he was perhaps the only person in Bursley thus privileged.
Then there was Nellie. Denry and Nellie were great friends. For the rest
of the world she had grown up, but not for Denry, who treated her as the
chocolate child; while she, if she called him anything, called him
respectfully "Mr."</p>
<p>The Cotterills had a fairly large old house with a good garden "up
Bycars Lane," above the new park and above all those red streets which
Mr Cotterill had helped to bring into being. Mr Cotterill built new
houses with terra-cotta facings for others, but preferred an old one in
stucco for himself. His abode had been saved from the parcelling out of
several Georgian estates. It was dignified. It had a double entrance
gate, and from this portal the drive started off for the house door, but
deliberately avoided reaching the house door until it had wandered in
curves over the entire garden. That was the Georgian touch! The modern
touch was shown in Councillor Cotterill's bay windows, bath-room and
garden squirter. There was stabling, in which were kept a Victorian
dogcart and a Georgian horse, used by the Councillor in his business. As
sure as ever his wife or daughter wanted the dogcart, it was either out
or just going out, or the Georgian horse was fatigued and needed repose.
The man who groomed the Georgian also ploughed the flowerbeds, broke the
windows in cleaning them, and put blacking on brown boots. Two indoor
servants had differing views as to the frontier between the kingdom of
his duties and the kingdom of theirs, in fact, it was the usual spacious
household of successful trade in a provincial town.</p>
<p>Denry got to Bycars Lane without a breakdown. This was in the days,
quite thirteen years ago, when automobilists made their wills and took
food supplies when setting forth. Hence Denry was pleased. The small but
useful fund of prudence in him, however, forbade him to run the car
along the unending sinuous drive. The May night was fine, and he left
the loved vehicle with his new furs in the shadow of a monkey-tree near
the gate.</p>
<p>As he was crunching towards the door, he had a beautiful idea: "I'll
take 'em all out for a spin. There'll just be room!" he said.</p>
<p>Now even to-day, when the very cabman drives his automobile, a man who
buys a motor cannot say to a friend: "I've bought a motor. Come for a
spin," in the same self-unconscious accents as he would say: "I've
bought a boat. Come for a sail," or "I've bought a house. Come and look
at it." Even to-day and in the centre of London there is still something
about a motor—well something.... Everybody who has bought a motor, and
everybody who has dreamed of buying a motor, will comprehend me. Useless
to feign that a motor is the most banal thing imaginable. It is not. It
remains the supreme symbol of swagger. If such is the effect of a motor
in these days and in Berkeley Square, what must it have been in that dim
past, and in that dim town three hours by the fastest express from
Euston? The imagination must be forced to the task of answering this
question. Then will it be understood that Denry was simply tingling with
pride.</p>
<p>"Master in?" he demanded of the servant, who was correctly starched, but
unkempt in detail.</p>
<p>"No, sir. He ain't been in for tea."</p>
<p>("I shall take the women out then," said Denry to himself.)</p>
<p>"Come in!. Come in!" cried a voice from the other side of the open door
of the drawing-room, Nellie's voice! The manners and state of a family
that has industrially risen combine the spectacular grandeur of the
caste to which it has climbed with the ease and freedom of the caste
which it has quitted.</p>
<p>"Such a surprise!" said the voice. Nellie appeared, rosy.</p>
<p>Denry threw his new motoring cap hastily on to the hall-stand. No! He
did not hope that Nellie would see it. He hoped that she would not see
it. Now that the moment was really come to declare himself the owner of
a motor-car, he grew timid and nervous. He would have liked to hide his
hat. But then Denry was quite different from our common humanity. He was
capable even of feeling awkward in a new suit of clothes. A singular
person.</p>
<p>"Hello!" she greeted him.</p>
<p>"Hello!" he greeted her.</p>
<p>Their hands touched.</p>
<p>"Father hasn't come yet," she added. He fancied she was not quite at
ease.</p>
<p>"Well," he said, "what's this surprise."</p>
<p>She motioned him into the drawing-room.</p>
<p>The surprise was a wonderful woman, brilliant in black—not black silk,
but a softer, delicate stuff. She reclined in an easy-chair with
surpassing grace and self-possession. A black Egyptian shawl, spangled
with silver, was slipping off her shoulders. Her hair was dressed—that
is to say, it was <i>dressed</i>; it was obviously and thrillingly a
work of elaborate art. He could see her two feet and one of her ankles.
The boots, the open-work stocking—such boots, such an open-work
stocking, had never been seen in Bursley, not even at a ball! She was in
mourning, and wore scarcely any jewellery, but there was a gleaming tint
of gold here and there among the black, which resulted in a marvellous
effect of richness.</p>
<p>The least experienced would have said, and said rightly: "This must be a
woman of wealth and fashion." It was the detail that finished the
demonstration. The detail was incredible. There might have been ten
million stitches in the dress. Ten sempstresses might have worked on the
dress for ten years. An examination of it under a microscope could but
have deepened one's amazement at it.</p>
<p>She was something new in the Five Towns, something quite new.</p>
<p>Denry was not equal to the situation. He seldom was equal to a small
situation. And although he had latterly acquired a considerable amount
of social <i>savoir</i>, he was constantly mislaying it, so that he
could not put his hand on it at the moment when he most required it, as
now.</p>
<p>"Well, Denry!" said the wondrous creature in black, softly.</p>
<p>And he collected himself as though for a plunge, and said:</p>
<p>"Well, Ruth!"</p>
<p>This was the woman whom he had once loved, kissed, and engaged himself
to marry. He was relieved that she had begun with Christian names,
because he could not recall her surname. He could not even remember
whether he had ever heard it. All he knew was that, after leaving
Bursley to join her father in Birmingham, she had married somebody with
a double name, somebody well off, somebody older than herself; somebody
apparently of high social standing; and that this somebody had died.</p>
<p>She made no fuss. There was no implication in her demeanour that she
expected to be wept over as a lone widow, or that because she and he had
on a time been betrothed, therefore they could never speak naturally to
each other again. She just talked as if nothing had ever happened to
her, and as if about twenty-four hours had elapsed since she had last
seen him. He felt that she must have picked up this most useful
diplomatic calmness in her contacts with her late husband's class. It
was a valuable lesson to him: "Always behave as if nothing had happened--no matter what has happened."</p>
<p>To himself he was saying:</p>
<p>"I'm glad I came up in my motor."</p>
<p>He seemed to need something in self-defence against the sudden attack of
all this wealth and all this superior social tact, and the motor-car
served excellently.</p>
<p>"I've been hearing a great deal about you lately," said she with a soft
smile, unobtrusively rearranging a fold of her skirt.</p>
<p>"Well," he replied, "I'm sorry I can't say the same of you."</p>
<p>Slightly perilous perhaps, but still he thought it rather neat.</p>
<p>"Oh!" she said. "You see I've been so much out of England. We were just
talking about holidays. I was saying to Mrs Cotterill they certainly
ought to go to Switzerland this year for a change."</p>
<p>"Yes, Mrs Capron-Smith was just saying—" Mrs Cotterill put in.</p>
<p>(So that was her name.)</p>
<p>"It would be something too lovely!" said Nellie in ecstasy.</p>
<p>Switzerland! Astonishing how with a single word she had marked the gulf
between Bursley people and herself. The Cotterills had never been out of
England. Not merely that, but the Cotterills had never dreamt of going
out of England. Denry had once been to Dieppe, and had come back as
though from Timbuctoo with a traveller's renown. And she talked of
Switzerland easily!</p>
<p>"I suppose it is very jolly," he said.</p>
<p>"Yes," she said, "it's splendid in summer. But, of course, <i>the</i>
time is winter, for the sports.
Naturally, when you aren't free to take a bit of a holiday in winter,
you must be content with summer, and very splendid it is. I'm sure you'd
enjoy it frightfully, Nell."</p>
<p>"I'm sure I should—frightfully!" Nellie agreed. "I shall speak to
father. I shall make him—"</p>
<p>"Now, Nellie—" her mother warned her.</p>
<p>"Yes, I shall, mother," Nellie insisted.</p>
<p>"There <i>is</i> your father!" observed Mrs Cotterill, after listening.</p>
<p>Footsteps crossed the hall, and died away into the dining-room.</p>
<p>"I wonder why on earth father doesn't come in here. He must have heard
us talking," said Nellie, like a tyrant crossed in some trifle.</p>
<p>A bell rang, and then the servant came into the drawing-room and
remarked: "If you please, mum," at Mrs Cotterill, and Mrs Cotterill
disappeared, closing the door after her.</p>
<p>"What are they up to, between them?" Nellie demanded, and she, too,
departed, with wrinkled brow, leaving Denry and Ruth together. It could
be perceived on Nellie's brow that her father was going "to catch it."</p>
<p>"I haven't seen Mr Cotterill yet," said Mrs Capron-Smith.</p>
<p>"When did you come?" Denry asked.</p>
<p>"Only this afternoon."</p>
<p>She continued to talk.</p>
<p>As he looked at her, listening and responding intelligently now and
then, he saw that Mrs Capron-Smith was in truth the woman that Ruth had
so cleverly imitated ten years before. The imitation had deceived him
then; he had accepted it for genuine. It would not have deceived him
now—he knew that. Oh yes! This was the real article that could hold its
own anywhere.... Switzerland! And not simply Switzerland, but a
refinement on Switzerland! Switzerland in winter! He divined that in her
opinion Switzerland in summer was not worth doing—in the way of
correctness. But in winter...</p>
<p>II</p>
<p>Nellie had announced a surprise for Denry as he entered the house, but
Nellie's surprise for Denry, startling and successful though it proved,
was as naught to the surprise which Mr Cotterill had in hand for Nellie,
her mother, Denry, the town of Bursley, and various persons up and down
the country.</p>
<p>Mrs Cotterill came hysterically in upon the duologue between Denry and
Ruth in the drawing-room. From the activity of her hands, which, instead
of being decently folded one over the other, were waving round her head
in the strangest way, it was clear that Mrs Cotterill was indeed under
the stress of a very unusual emotion.</p>
<p>"It's those creditors—at last! I knew it would be! It's all those
creditors! They won't let him alone, and now they've <i>done</i> it."</p>
<p>So Mrs Cotterill! She dropped into a chair. She had no longer any sense
of shame, of what was due to her dignity. She seemed to have forgotten
that certain matters are not proper to be discussed in drawing-rooms.
She had left the room Mrs Councillor Cotterill; she returned to it
nobody in particular, the personification of defeat. The change had
operated in five minutes.</p>
<p>Mrs Capron-Smith and Denry glanced at each other, and even Mrs Capron-Smith was at a loss for a moment. Then Ruth approached Mrs Cotterill and
took her hand. Perhaps Mrs Capron-Smith was not so astonished after all.
She and Nellie's mother had always been "very friendly." And in the Five
Towns "very friendly" means a lot.</p>
<p>"Perhaps if you were to leave us," Ruth suggested, twisting her head to
glance at Denry.</p>
<p>It was exactly what he desired to do. There could be no doubt that Ruth
was supremely a woman of the world. Her tact was faultless.</p>
<p>He left them, saying to himself: "Well, here's a go!"</p>
<p>In the hall, through an open door, he saw Councillor Cotterill standing
against the dining-room mantelpiece.</p>
<p>When Cotterill caught sight of Denry he straightened himself into a
certain uneasy perkiness.</p>
<p>"Young man," he said in a counterfeit of his old patronising tone, "come
in here. You may as well hear about it. You're a friend of ours. Come in
and shut the door."</p>
<p>Nellie was not in view.</p>
<p>Denry went in and shut the door.</p>
<p>"Sit down," said Cotterill.</p>
<p>And it was just as if he had said: "Now, you're a fairly bright sort of
youth, and you haven't done so badly in life; and as a reward I mean to
admit you to the privilege of hearing about our ill-luck, which for some
mysterious reason reflects more credit on me than your good luck
reflects on you, young man."</p>
<p>And he stroked his straggling grey beard.</p>
<p>"I'm going to file my petition to-morrow," said he, and gave a short
laugh.</p>
<p>"Really!" said Denry, who could think of nothing else to say. His name
was not Capron-Smith.</p>
<p>"Yes; they won't leave me any alternative," said Mr Cotterill.</p>
<p>Then he gave a brief history of his late commercial career to the young
man. And he seemed to figure it as a sort of tug-of-war between his
creditors and his debtors, he himself being the rope. He seemed to imply
that he had always done his sincere best to attain the greatest good of
the greatest number, but that those wrong-headed creditors had
consistently thwarted him.</p>
<p>However, he bore them no grudge. It was the fortune of the tug-of-war.
He pretended, with shabby magnificence of spirit, that a bankruptcy at
the age of near sixty, in a community where one has cut a figure, is a
mere passing episode.</p>
<p>"Are you surprised?" he asked foolishly, with a sheepish smile.</p>
<p>Denry took vengeance for all the patronage that he had received during a
decade.</p>
<p>"No!" he said. "Are you?"</p>
<p>Instead of kicking Denry out of the house for an impudent young
jackanapes, Mr Cotterill simply resumed his sheepish smile.</p>
<p>Denry had been surprised for a moment, but he had quickly recovered.
Cotterill's downfall was one of those events which any person of acute
intelligence can foretell after they have happened. Cotterill had run
the risks of the speculative builder, built and mortgaged, built and
mortgaged, sold at a profit, sold without profit, sold at a loss, and
failed to sell; given bills, second mortgages, and third mortgages; and
because he was a builder and could do nothing but build, he had
continued to build in defiance of Bursley's lack of enthusiasm for his
erections. If rich gold deposits had been discovered in Bursley
Municipal Park, Cotterill would have owned a mining camp and amassed
immense wealth; but unfortunately gold deposits were not discovered in
the Park. Nobody knew his position; nobody ever does know the position
of a speculative builder. He did not know it himself. There had been
rumours, but they had been contradicted in an adequate way. His recent
refusal of the mayoral chain, due to lack of spare coin, had been
attributed to prudence. His domestic existence had always been conducted
on the same moderately lavish scale. He had always paid the baker, the
butcher, the tailor, the dressmaker.</p>
<p>And now he was to file his petition in bankruptcy, and to-morrow the
entire town would have "been seeing it coming" for years.</p>
<p>"What shall you do?" Denry inquired in amicable curiosity.</p>
<p>"Well," said Cotterill, "that's the point. I've got a brother a builder
in Toronto, you know. He's doing very well; building <i>is</i> building
over there. I wrote to him a bit since, and he replied by the next mail--by the next mail—that what he wanted was just a man like me to
overlook things. He's getting an old man now, is John. So, you see,
there's an opening waiting for me."</p>
<p>As if to say, "The righteous are never forsaken."</p>
<p>"I tell you all this as you're a friend of the family like," he added.</p>
<p>Then, after an expanse of vagueness, he began hopefully, cheerfully,
undauntedly:</p>
<p>"Even <i>now</i> if I could get hold of a couple of thousand I could
pull through handsome—and there's plenty of security for it."</p>
<p>"Bit late now, isn't it?"</p>
<p>"Not it. If only some one who really knows the town, and has faith in
the property market, would come down with a couple of thousand—well, he
might double it in five years."</p>
<p>"Really!"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Cotterill. "Look at Clare Street."</p>
<p>Clare Street was one of his terra-cotta masterpieces.</p>
<p>"You, now," said Cotterill, insinuating. "I don't expect anyone can
teach <i>you</i> much about the value o' property in this town. You know
as well as I do. If you happened to have a couple of thousand loose—by
gosh! it's a chance in a million."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Denry. "I should say that was just about what it was."</p>
<p>"I put it before you," Cotterill proceeded, gathering way, and missing
the flavour of Denry's remark. "Because you're a friend of the family.
You're so often here. Why, it's pretty near ten years...."</p>
<p>Denry sighed: "I expect I come and see you all about once a fortnight
fairly regular. That makes two hundred and fifty times in ten years.
Yes...."</p>
<p>"A couple of thou'," said Cotterill, reflectively.</p>
<p>"Two hundred and fifty into two thousand—eight. Eight pounds a visit. A
shade thick, Cotterill, a shade thick. You might be half a dozen
fashionable physicians rolled into one."</p>
<p>Never before had he called the Councillor "Cotterill" unadorned. Me
Cotterill flushed and rose.</p>
<p>Denry does not appear to advantage in this interview. He failed in
magnanimity. The only excuse that can be offered for him is that Mr
Cotterill had called him "young man" once or twice too often in the
course of ten years. It is subtle.</p>
<p>III</p>
<p>"No," whispered Ruth, in all her wraps. "Don't bring it up to the door.
I'll walk down with you to the gate, and get in there."</p>
<p>He nodded.</p>
<p>They were off, together. Ruth, it had appeared, was actually staying at
the Five Towns Hotel at Knype, which at that epoch was the only hotel in
the Five Towns seriously pretending to be "first-class" in the full-page
advertisement sense. The fact that Ruth was staying at the Five Towns
Hotel impressed Denry anew. Assuredly she did things in the grand
manner. She had meant to walk down by the Park to Bursley Station and
catch the last loop-line train to Knype, and when Denry suddenly
disclosed the existence of his motor-car, and proposed to see her to her
hotel in it, she in her turn had been impressed. The astonishment in her
tone as she exclaimed: "Have you got a <i>motor</i>?" was the least in
the world na�ve.</p>
<p>Thus they departed together from the stricken house, Ruth saying
brightly to Nellie, who had reappeared in a painful state of
demoralisation, that she should return on the morrow.</p>
<p>And Denry went down the obscure drive with a final vision of the poor
child, Nellie, as she stood at the door to speed them. It was
extraordinary how that child had remained a child. He knew that she must
be more than half-way through her twenties, and yet she persisted in
being the merest girl. A delightful little thing; but no <i>savoir
vivre</i>, no equality to a situation, no spectacular pride. Just a
nice, bright girl, strangely girlish.... The Cotterills had managed that
bad evening badly. They had shown no dignity, no reserve, no discretion;
and old Cotterill had been simply fatuous in his suggestion. As for Mrs
Cotterill, she was completely overcome, and it was due solely to Ruth's
calm, managing influence that Nellie, nervous and whimpering, had wound
herself up to come and shut the front door after the guests.</p>
<p>It was all very sad.</p>
<p>When he had successfully started the car, and they were sliding down the
Moorthorne hill together, side by side, their shoulders touching, Denry
threw off the nightmarish effect of the bankrupt household. After all,
there was no reason why he should be depressed. He was not a bankrupt.
He was steadily adding riches to riches. He acquired wealth mechanically
now. Owing to the habits of his mother, he never came within miles of
living up to his income. And Ruth—she, too, was wealthy. He felt that
she must be wealthy in the strict significance of the term. And she
completed wealth by experience of the world. She was his equal. She
understood things in general. She had lived, travelled, suffered,
reflected—in short, she was a completed article of manufacture. She was
no little, clinging, raw girl. Further, she was less hard than of yore.
Her voice and gestures had a different quality. The world had softened
her. And it occurred to him suddenly that her sole fault—extravagance—
had no importance now that she was wealthy.</p>
<p>He told her all that Mr Cotterill had said about Canada. And she told
him all that Mrs Cotterill had said about Canada. And they agreed that
Mr Cotterill had got his deserts, and that, in its own interest, Canada
was the only thing for the Cotterill family; and the sooner the better.
People must accept the consequences of bankruptcy. Nothing could be
done.</p>
<p>"I think it's a pity Nellie should have to go," said Denry.</p>
<p>"Oh! <i>Do</i> you?" replied Ruth.</p>
<p>"Yes; going out to a strange country like that. She's not what you may
call the Canadian kind of girl. If she could only get something to do
here. ...If something could be found for her."</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't agree with you at <i>all</i>," said Ruth. "Do you really
think she ought to leave her parents just <i>now</i>? Her place is with
her parents. And besides, between you and me, she'll have a much better
chance of marrying there than in <i>this</i> town—after all this. Of
course I shall be very sorry to lose her—and Mrs Cotterill, too.
But...."</p>
<p>"I expect you're right," Denry concurred.</p>
<p>And they sped on luxuriously through the lamp-lit night of the Five
Towns. And Denry pointed out his house as they passed it. And they both
thought much of the security of their positions in the world, and of
their incomes, and of the honeyed deference of their bankers; and also
of the mistake of being a failure.... You could do nothing with a
failure.</p>
<p>IV</p>
<p>On a frosty morning in early winter you might have seen them together in
a different vehicle—a first-class compartment of the express from Knype
to Liverpool. They had the compartment to themselves, and they were
installed therein with every circumstance of luxury. Both were enwrapped
in furs, and a fur rug united their knees in its shelter. Magazines and
newspapers were scattered about to the value of a labourer's hire for a
whole day; and when Denry's eye met the guard's it said "shilling." In
short, nobody could possibly be more superb than they were on that
morning in that compartment.</p>
<p>The journey was the result of peculiar events.</p>
<p>Mr Cotterill had made himself a bankrupt, and cast away the robe of a
Town Councillor. He had submitted to the inquisitiveness of the Official
Receiver, and to the harsh prying of those rampant baying beasts, his
creditors. He had laid bare his books, his correspondence, his lack of
method, his domestic extravagance, and the distressing fact that he had
continued to trade long after he knew himself to be insolvent. He had
for several months, in the interests of the said beasts, carried on his
own business as manager at a nominal salary. And gradually everything
that was his had been sold. And during the final weeks the Cotterill
family had been obliged to quit their dismantled house and exist in
lodgings. It had been arranged that they should go to Canada by way of
Liverpool, and on the day before the journey of Denry and Ruth to
Liverpool they had departed from the borough of Bursley (which Mr
Cotterill had so extensively faced with terra-cotta) unhonoured and
unsung. Even Denry, though he had visited them in their lodgings to say
good-bye, had not seen them off at the station; but Ruth Capron-Smith
had seen them off at the station. She had interrupted a sojourn to
Southport in order to come to Bursley, and despatch them therefrom with
due friendliness. Certain matters had to be attended to after their
departure, and Ruth had promised to attend to them.</p>
<p>Now immediately after seeing them off Ruth had met Denry in the street.</p>
<p>"Do you know," she said brusquely, "those people are actually going
steerage? I'd no idea of it. Mr and Mrs Cotterill kept it from me, and I
should not have heard of it only from something Nellie said. That's why
they've gone to-day. The boat doesn't sail till to-morrow afternoon."</p>
<p>"Steerage?" and Denry whistled.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Ruth. "Nothing but pride, of course. Old Cotterill wanted to
have every penny he could scrape, so as to be able to make the least
tiny bit of a show when he gets to Toronto, and so—steerage! Just think
of Mrs Cotterill and Nellie in the steerage. If I'd known of it I should
have altered that, I can tell you, and pretty quickly too; and now it's
too late."</p>
<p>"No, it isn't," Denry contradicted her flatly.</p>
<p>"But they've gone."</p>
<p>"I could telegraph to Liverpool for saloon berths—there's bound to be
plenty at this time of year—and I could run over to Liverpool to-morrow
and catch 'em on the boat, and make 'em change."</p>
<p>She asked him whether he really thought he could, and he assured her.</p>
<p>"Second-cabin berths would be better," said she.</p>
<p>"Why?"</p>
<p>"Well, because of dressing for dinner, and so on. They haven't got the
clothes, you know."</p>
<p>"Of course," said Denry.</p>
<p>"Listen," she said, with an enchanting smile. "Let's halve the cost, you
and I. And let's go to Liverpool together, and—er—make the little
gift, and arrange things. I'm leaving for Southport to-morrow, and
Liverpool's on my way."</p>
<p>Denry was delighted by the suggestion, and telegraphed to Liverpool with
success.</p>
<p>Thus they found themselves on that morning in the Liverpool express
together. The work of benevolence in which they were engaged had a
powerful influence on their mood, which grew both intimate and tender.
Ruth made no concealment of her regard for Denry; and as he gazed across
the compartment at her, exquisitely mature (she was slightly older than
himself), dressed to a marvel, perfect in every detail of manner,
knowing all that was to be known about life, and secure in a handsome
fortune—as he gazed, Denry reflected, joyously, victoriously:</p>
<p>"I've got the dibs, of course. But she's got 'em too—perhaps more.
Therefore she must like me for myself alone. This brilliant creature has
been everywhere and seen everything, and she comes back to the Five
Towns and comes back to <i>me</i>."</p>
<p>It was his proudest moment. And in it he saw his future far more
glorious than he had dreamt.</p>
<p>"When shall you be out of mourning?" he inquired.</p>
<p>"In two months," said she.</p>
<p>This was not a proposal and acceptance, but it was very nearly one. They
were silent, and happy.</p>
<p>Then she said:</p>
<p>"Do you ever have business at Southport?"</p>
<p>And he said, in a unique manner:</p>
<p>"I shall have."</p>
<p>Another silence. This time he felt he <i>would</i> marry her.</p>
<p>V</p>
<p>The White Star liner, <i>Titubic</i>, stuck out of the water like a row
of houses against the landing-stage. There was a large crowd on her
promenade-deck, and a still larger crowd on the landing-stage. Above the
promenade-deck officers paced on the navigating deck, and above that was
the airy bridge, and above that the funnels, smoking, and somewhere
still higher a flag or two fluttering in the icy breeze. And behind the
crowd on the landing-stage stretched a row of four-wheeled cabs and
rickety horses. The landing-stage swayed ever so slightly on the tide.
Only the ship was apparently solid, apparently cemented in foundations
of concrete.</p>
<p>On the starboard side of the promenade-deck, among a hundred other small
groups, was a group consisting of Mr and Mrs Cotterill and Ruth and
Denry. Nellie stood a few feet apart, Mrs Cotterill was crying. People
naturally thought she was crying because of the adieux; but she was not.
She wept because Denry and Ruth, by sheer force of will, had compelled
them to come out of the steerage and occupy beautiful and commodious
berths in the second cabin, where the manner of the stewards was quite
different. She wept because they had been caught in the steerage. She
wept because she was ashamed, and because people were too kind. She was
at once delighted and desolated. She wanted to outpour psalms of
gratitude, and also she wanted to curse.</p>
<p>Mr Cotterill said stiffly that he should repay—and that soon.</p>
<p>An immense bell sounded impatiently.</p>
<p>"We'd better be shunting," said Denry. "That's the second."</p>
<p>In exciting crises he sometimes employed such peculiar language as this.
And he was very excited. He had done a great deal of rushing about. The
upraising of the Cotterill family from the social Hades of the steerage
to the respectability of the second cabin had demanded all his energy,
and a lot of Ruth's.</p>
<p>Ruth kissed Mrs Cotterill and then Nellie. And Mrs Cotterill and Nellie
acquired rank and importance for the whole voyage by reason of being
kissed in public by a woman so elegant and aristocratic as Ruth Capron-Smith.</p>
<p>And Denry shook hands. He looked brightly at the parents, but he could
not look at Nellie; nor could she look at him; their handshaking was
perfunctory. For months their playful intimacy had been in abeyance.</p>
<p>"Good-bye."</p>
<p>"Good luck."</p>
<p>"Thanks. Good-bye."</p>
<p>"Good-bye."</p>
<p>The horrible bell continued to insist.</p>
<p>"All non-passengers ashore! All ashore!"</p>
<p>The numerous gangways were thronged with people obeying the call, and
handkerchiefs began to wave. And there was a regular vibrating tremor
through the ship.</p>
<p>Mr and Mrs Cotterill turned away.</p>
<p>Ruth and Denry approached the nearest gangway, and Denry stood aside,
and made a place for her to pass. And, as always, a number of women
pushed into the gangways immediately after her, and Denry had to wait,
being a perfect gentleman.</p>
<p>His eye caught Nellie's. She had not moved.</p>
<p>He felt then as he had never felt in his life. No, absolutely never. Her
sad, her tragic glance rendered him so uncomfortable, and yet so
deliciously uncomfortable, that the symptoms startled him. He wondered
what would happen to his legs. He was not sure that he had legs.</p>
<p>However, he demonstrated the existence of his legs by running up to
Nellie. Ruth was by this time swallowed in the crowd on the landing-stage. He looked at Nellie. Nellie looked at him. Her lips twitched.</p>
<p>"What am I doing here?" he asked of his soul.</p>
<p>She was not at all well dressed. She was indeed shabby—in a steerage
style. Her hat was awry; her gloves miserable. No girlish pride in her
distraught face. No determination to overcome Fate. No consciousness of
ability to meet a bad situation. Just those sad eyes and those twitching
lips.</p>
<p>"Look here," Denry whispered, "you must come ashore for a second. I've
something I want to give you, and I've left it in the cab."</p>
<p>"But there's no time. The bell's..."</p>
<p>"Bosh!" he exclaimed gruffly, extinguishing her timid, childish voice.
"You won't go for at least a quarter of an hour. All that's only a dodge
to get people off in plenty of time. Come on, I tell you."</p>
<p>And in a sort of hysteria he seized her thin, long hand and dragged her
along the deck to another gangway, down whose steep slope they stumbled
together. The crowd of sightseers and handkerchief-wavers jostled them.
They could see nothing but heads and shoulders, and the great side of
the ship rising above. Denry turned her back on the ship.</p>
<p>"This way." He still held her hand.</p>
<p>He struggled to the cab-rank.</p>
<p>"Which one is it?" she asked.</p>
<p>"Any one. Never mind which. Jump in." And to the first driver whose eye
met his, he said: "Lime Street Station."</p>
<p>The gangways were being drawn away. A hoarse boom filled the air, and
then a cheer.</p>
<p>"But I shall miss the boat," the dazed girl protested.</p>
<p>"Jump in."</p>
<p>He pushed her in.</p>
<p>"But I shall miss the..."</p>
<p>"I know you will," he replied, as if angrily. "Do you suppose I was
going to let you go by that steamer? Not much."</p>
<p>"But mother and father..."</p>
<p>"I'll telegraph. They'll get it on landing."</p>
<p>"And where's Ruth?"</p>
<p>"<i>Be hanged to Ruth!</i>" he shouted furiously.</p>
<p>As the cab rattled over the cobbles the <i>Titubic</i> slipped away from
the landing-stage. The irretrievable had happened.</p>
<p>Nellie burst into tears.</p>
<p>"Look here," Denry said savagely. "If you don't dry up, I shall have to
cry myself."</p>
<p>"What are you going to do with me?" she whimpered.</p>
<p>"Well, what do <i>you</i> think? I'm going to marry you, of course."</p>
<p>His aggrieved tone might have been supposed to imply that people had
tried to thwart him, but that he had no intention of being thwarted, nor
of asking permissions, nor of conducting himself as anything but a
fierce tyrant.</p>
<p>As for Nellie, she seemed to surrender.</p>
<p>Then he kissed her—also angrily. He kissed her several times—yes, even
in Lord Street itself—less and less angrily.</p>
<p>"Where are you taking me to?" she inquired humbly, as a captive.</p>
<p>"I shall take you to my mother's," he said.</p>
<p>"Will she like it?"</p>
<p>"She'll either like it or lump it," said Denry. "It'll take a
fortnight."</p>
<p>"What?"</p>
<p>"The notice, and things."</p>
<p>In the train, in the midst of a great submissive silence, she murmured:</p>
<p>"It'll be simply awful for father and mother."</p>
<p>"That can't be helped," said he. "And they'll be far too sea-sick to
bother their heads about you."</p>
<p>"You can't think how you've staggered me," said she.</p>
<p>"You can't think how I've staggered myself," said he.</p>
<p>"When did you decide to..."</p>
<p>"When I was standing at the gangway, and you looked at me," he answered.</p>
<p>"But..."</p>
<p>"It's no use butting," he said. "I'm like that.... That's me, that is."</p>
<p>It was the bare truth that he had staggered himself. But he had
staggered himself into a miraculous, ecstatic happiness. She had no
money, no clothes, no style, no experience, no particular gifts. But she
was she. And when he looked at her, calmed, he knew that he had done
well for himself. He knew that if he had not yielded to that terrific
impulse he would have done badly for himself. Mrs Machin had what she
called a ticklish night of it.</p>
<p>VI</p>
<p>The next day he received a note from Ruth, dated Southport, inquiring
how he came to lose her on the landing-stage, and expressing concern. It
took him three days to reply, and even then the reply was a bad one. He
had behaved infamously to Ruth; so much could not be denied. Within
three hours of practically proposing to her, he had run off with a
simple girl, who was not fit to hold a candle to her. And he did not
care. That was the worst of it; he did not care.</p>
<p>Of course the facts reached her. The facts reached everybody; for the
singular reappearance of Nellie in the streets of Bursley immediately
after her departure for Canada had to be explained. Moreover, the
infamous Denry was rather proud of the facts. And the town inevitably
said: "Machin all over, that! Snatching the girl off the blooming
lugger. Machin all over." And Denry agreed privately that it was Machin
all over.</p>
<p>"What other chap," he demanded of the air, "would have thought of it? Or
had the pluck?..."</p>
<p>It was mere malice on the part of destiny that caused Denry to run
across Mrs Capron-Smith at Euston some weeks later. Happily they both
had immense nerve.</p>
<p>"Dear me," said she. "What are <i>you</i> doing here?"</p>
<p>"Only honeymooning," he said.</p>
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