<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"></SPAN></p>
<h2> 2. V. THE RESUMPTION TAKES PLACE </h2>
<p>Having returned to London he mechanically resumed his customary life; but
he was not really living there. The phantom of Avice, now grown to be warm
flesh and blood, held his mind afar. He thought of nothing but the isle,
and Avice the Second dwelling therein—inhaling its salt breath,
stroked by its singing rains and by the haunted atmosphere of Roman Venus
about and around the site of her perished temple there. The very defects
in the country girl became charms as viewed from town.</p>
<p>Nothing now pleased him so much as to spend that portion of the afternoon
which he devoted to out-door exercise, in haunting the purlieus of the
wharves along the Thames, where the stone of his native rock was unshipped
from the coasting-craft that had brought it thither. He would pass inside
the great gates of these landing-places on the right or left bank,
contemplate the white cubes and oblongs, imbibe their associations, call
up the genius loci whence they came, and almost forget that he was in
London.</p>
<p>One afternoon he was walking away from the mud-splashed entrance to one of
the wharves, when his attention was drawn to a female form on the opposite
side of the way, going towards the spot he had just left. She was somewhat
small, slight, and graceful; her attire alone would have been enough to
attract him, being simple and countrified to picturesqueness; but he was
more than attracted by her strong resemblance to Avice Caro the younger—Ann
Avice, as she had said she was called.</p>
<p>Before she had receded a hundred yards he felt certain that it was Avice
indeed; and his unifying mood of the afternoon was now so intense that the
lost and the found Avice seemed essentially the same person. Their
external likeness to each other—probably owing to the cousinship
between the elder and her husband—went far to nourish the fantasy.
He hastily turned, and rediscovered the girl among the pedestrians. She
kept on her way to the wharf, where, looking inquiringly around her for a
few seconds, with the manner of one unaccustomed to the locality, she
opened the gate and disappeared.</p>
<p>Pierston also went up to the gate and entered. She had crossed to the
landing-place, beyond which a lumpy craft lay moored. Drawing nearer, he
discovered her to be engaged in conversation with the skipper and an
elderly woman—both come straight from the oolitic isle, as was
apparent in a moment from their accent. Pierston felt no hesitation in
making himself known as a native, the ruptured engagement between Avice's
mother and himself twenty years before having been known to few or none
now living.</p>
<p>The present embodiment of Avice recognized him, and with the artless
candour of her race and years explained the situation, though that was
rather his duty as an intruder than hers.</p>
<p>'This is Cap'n Kibbs, sir, a distant relation of father's,' she said. 'And
this is Mrs. Kibbs. We've come up from the island wi'en just for a trip,
and are going to sail back wi'en Wednesday.'</p>
<p>'O, I see. And where are you staying?'</p>
<p>'Here—on board.'</p>
<p>'What, you live on board entirely?'</p>
<p>'Yes.'</p>
<p>'Lord, sir,' broke in Mrs. Kibbs, 'I should be afeard o' my life to tine
my eyes among these here kimberlins at night-time; and even by day, if so
be I venture into the streets, I nowhen forget how many turnings to the
right and to the left 'tis to get back to Job's vessel—do I, Job?'</p>
<p>The skipper nodded confirmation.</p>
<p>'You are safer ashore than afloat,' said Pierston, 'especially in the
Channel, with these winds and those heavy blocks of stone.'</p>
<p>'Well,' said Cap'n Kibbs, after privately clearing something from his
mouth, 'as to the winds, there idden much danger in them at this time o'
year. 'Tis the ocean-bound steamers that make the risk to craft like ours.
If you happen to be in their course, under you go—cut clane in two
pieces, and they never lying-to to haul in your carcases, and nobody to
tell the tale.'</p>
<p>Pierston turned to Avice, wanting to say much to her, yet not knowing what
to say. He lamely remarked at last: 'You go back the same way, Avice?'</p>
<p>'Yes, sir.'</p>
<p>'Well, take care of yourself afloat.'</p>
<p>'O yes.'</p>
<p>'I hope—I may see you again soon—and talk to you.'</p>
<p>'I hope so, sir.'</p>
<p>He could not get further, and after a while Pierston left them, and went
away thinking of Avice more than ever.</p>
<p>The next day he mentally timed them down the river, allowing for the pause
to take in ballast, and on the Wednesday pictured the sail down the open
sea. That night he thought of the little craft under the bows of the huge
steam-vessels, powerless to make itself seen or heard, and Avice, now
growing inexpressibly dear, sleeping in her little berth at the mercy of a
thousand chance catastrophes.</p>
<p>Honest perception had told him that this Avice, fairer than her mother in
face and form, was her inferior in soul and understanding. Yet the fervour
which the first could never kindle in him was, almost to his alarm,
burning up now. He began to have misgivings as to some queer trick that
his migratory Beloved was about to play him, or rather the capricious
Divinity behind that ideal lady.</p>
<p>A gigantic satire upon the mutations of his nymph during the past twenty
years seemed looming in the distance. A forsaking of the accomplished and
well-connected Mrs. Pine-Avon for the little laundress, under the traction
of some mystic magnet which had nothing to do with reason—surely
that was the form of the satire.</p>
<p>But it was recklessly pleasant to leave the suspicion unrecognized as yet,
and follow the lead.</p>
<p>In thinking how best to do this Pierston recollected that, as was
customary when the summer-time approached, Sylvania Castle had been
advertised for letting furnished. A solitary dreamer like himself, whose
wants all lay in an artistic and ideal direction, did not require such
gaunt accommodation as the aforesaid residence offered; but the spot was
all, and the expenses of a few months of tenancy therein he could well
afford. A letter to the agent was dispatched that night, and in a few days
Jocelyn found himself the temporary possessor of a place which he had
never seen the inside of since his childhood, and had then deemed the
abode of unpleasant ghosts.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />