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<h2> CHAPTER XXXV </h2>
<p>His search being vain, Mutimer hastened from one police-station to
another, leaving descriptions of his sister at each. When he came home
again Adela had just arrived. She was suffering too much from the reaction
which followed upon her excitement to give him more than the briefest
account of what she had heard and said; but Mutimer cared little for
details. He drew an easy-chair near to the fire and begged her to rest. As
she lay back for a moment with closed eyes, he took her faint hand and put
it to his lips. He had never done so before; when she glanced at him he
averted his face in embarrassment.</p>
<p>He would have persuaded her to go to bed, but she declared that sleep was
impossible; she had much rather sit up with him till news came of Alice,
as it surely must do in course of the night. For Mutimer there was no
resting; he circled continually about the neighbouring streets, returning
to the house every quarter of an hour, always to find Adela in the same
position. Her heart would not fall to its normal beat, and the vision of
those harsh faces would not pass from her mind.</p>
<p>At two o’clock they heard that Alice was found. She had been discovered
several miles from home, lying unconscious in the street, and was now in a
hospital. Mutimer set off at once; he returned with the report that she
was between life and death. It was impossible to remove her.</p>
<p>Adela slept a little between six and eight; her husband took even shorter
rest. When she came down to the sitting-room, he was reading the morning
paper. As she entered he uttered a cry of astonishment and rage.</p>
<p>‘Look here!’ he exclaimed to her. ‘Read that!’</p>
<p>He pointed to an account of the Irish Dairy Company frauds, in which it
was stated that the secretary, known as Delancey, appeared also to have
borne the name of Rodman.</p>
<p>They gazed at each other.</p>
<p>‘Then it was Rodman wrote that letter!’ Mutimer cried. ‘I’ll swear to it.
He did it to injure me at the last moment. Why haven’t they got him yet?
The police are useless. But they’ve got Hilary, I see—yes, they’ve
got Hilary. He was caught at Dover. Ha, ha! He denies everything—says
he didn’t even know of the secretary’s decamping. The lying scoundrel!
Says he was going to Paris on private business. But they’ve got him! And
see here again: “The same Rodman is at present wanted by the police on a
charge of bigamy.” Wanted! If they weren’t incompetent fools they’d have
had him already. Ten to one he’s out of England.’</p>
<p>It was a day of tumult for Mutimer. At the hospital he found no
encouragement, but he could only leave Alice in the hands of the doctors.
From the hospital he went to his mother’s house; he had not yet had time
to let her know of anything. But his main business lay in Clerkenwell and
in various parts of the East End, wherever he could see his
fellow-agitators. In hot haste he wrote an announcement of a meeting on
Clerkenwell Green for Sunday afternoon, and had thousands of copies
printed on slips; by evening these were scattered throughout his
‘parishes.’ He found that the calumny affecting him was already widely
known; several members of his committee met him with black looks. Here and
there an ironical question was put to him about his sister’s health. With
the knowledge that Alice might be dying or dead, he could scarcely find
words of reply. His mood changed from fear and indignation to a grim fury;
within a few hours he made many resolute enemies by his reckless vehemence
and vituperation.</p>
<p>The evening papers brought him a piece of intelligence which would have
rejoiced him but for something with which it was coupled. Delancey, <i>alias</i>
Rodman, <i>alias</i> Williamson, was arrested; he had been caught in
Hamburg. The telegram added that he talked freely and had implicated a
number of persons—among them a certain Socialist agitator, name not
given. As Mutimer read this he fell for a moment into blank despair. He
returned at once to Holloway, all but resolved to throw up the game—to
abandon the effort to defend himself, and wait for what might result from
the judicial investigations. Adela resisted this to the uttermost. She
understood that such appearance of fear would be fatal to him. With a
knowledge of Demos which owed much to her last night’s experience, she
urged to him that behind his back calumny would thrive unchecked, would
grow in a day to proportions altogether irresistible. She succeeded in
restoring his courage, though at the same time there revived in Mutimer
the savage spirit which could only result in harm to himself.</p>
<p>‘This is how they repay a man who works for them!’ he cried repeatedly.
‘The ungrateful brutes! Let me once clear myself, and I’ll throw it up,
bid them find someone else to fight their battles for them. It’s always
been the same: history shows it What have I got for myself out of it all,
I’d like to know? Haven’t I given them every penny I had? Let them do
their worst! Let them bark and bray till they are hoarse!’</p>
<p>He would have kept away from Clerkenwell that evening, but even this Adela
would not let him do. She insisted that he must be seen and heard, that
the force of innocence would prevail even with his enemies. The couple of
hours he passed with her were spent in ceaseless encouragement on her
side, in violent tirades on his. He paced the room like a caged lion, at
one moment execrating Rodman, the next railing against the mob to whose
interests he had devoted himself. Now and then his voice softened, and he
spoke of Alice.</p>
<p>‘The scoundrel set even her against me! If she lives, perhaps she’ll
believe I’m guilty; how can my word stand against her husband’s? Why, he
isn’t her husband at all! It’s a good thing if she dies—the best
thing that could happen. What will become of her? What are we to call her?
She’s neither married nor single. Can we keep it from her, do you think?
No, that won’t do; she must be free to marry an honest man. You’ll try and
make friends with her, Adela—if ever you’ve the chance? She’ll have
to live with us, of course unless she’d rather live with mother. We
mustn’t tell her for a long time, till she’s strong enough to bear it.’</p>
<p>He with difficulty ate a few mouthfuls and went off to Clerkenwell. In the
erstwhile dancing-saloon it was a night of tempest. Mutimer had never
before addressed an unfriendly audience. After the first few interruptions
he lost his temper, and with it his cause, as far as these present hearers
were concerned. When he left them, it was amid the mutterings of a storm
which was not quite—only not quite—ready to burst in fury.</p>
<p>‘Who knows you won’t take yer ‘ook before to-morrow?’ cried a voice as he
neared the door.</p>
<p>‘Wait and see!’ Mutimer shouted in reply, with a savage laugh. ‘I’ve a
word or two to say yet to blackguards like you.’</p>
<p>He could count on some twenty pairs of fists in the room, if it came to
that point; but he was allowed to depart unmolested.</p>
<p>On the way home he called at the hospital. There was no change in Alice’s
condition.</p>
<p>The next day he remained at home till it was time to start for Clerkenwell
Green. He was all but worn out, and there was nothing of any use to be
done before the meeting assembled. Adela went for him to the hospital and
brought back still the same report. He ate fairly well of his midday
dinner, seeming somewhat calmer. Adela, foreseeing his main danger, begged
him to address the people without anger, assured him that a dignified
self-possession would go much farther than any amount of blustering. He
was induced to promise that he would follow her advice.</p>
<p>He purposed walking to the Green; the exercise would perhaps keep his
nerves in order. When it was time to start, he took Adela’s hand, and for
a second time kissed it. She made an effort over herself and held her lips
to him. The ‘good-bye’ was exchanged, with a word of strengthening from
Adela; but still he did not go. He was endeavouring to speak.</p>
<p>‘I don’t think I’ve thanked you half enough,’ he said at length, ‘for what
you did on Friday night.’</p>
<p>‘Yes, more than enough,’ was the reply.</p>
<p>‘You make little of it, but it’s a thing very few women would have done.
And it was hard for you, because you’re a lady.’</p>
<p>‘No less a woman,’ murmured Adela, her head bowed.</p>
<p>‘And a good woman—I believe with all my heart. I want to ask you to
forgive me—for things I once said to you. I was a brute. Perhaps if
I had been brought up in the same kind of way that you were—that’s
the difference between us, you see. But try if you can to forget it. I’ll
never think anything but good of you as long as I live.’</p>
<p>She could not reply, for a great sob was choking her. She pressed his
band; the tears broke from her eyes as she turned away.</p>
<p>It being Sunday afternoon, visitors were admitted to the hospital in which
Alice lay. Mutimer had allowed himself time to pass five minutes by his
sister’s bedside on the way to Clerkenwell. Alice was still unconscious;
she lay motionless, but her lips muttered unintelligible words. He bent
over her and spoke, but she did not regard him. It was perhaps the keenest
pain Mutimer had ever known to look into those eyes and meet no answering
intelligence. By close listening he believed he heard her utter the name
of her husband. It was useless to stay; he kissed her and left the ward.</p>
<p>On his arrival at Clerkenwell Green—a large triangular space which
merits the name of Green as much as the Strand—he found a
considerable gathering already assembled about the cart from which he was
to speak. The inner circle consisted of his friends—some fifty who
remained staunch in their faith. Prominent among them was the man
Redgrave, he who had presented the address when Mutimer took leave of his
New Wanley workpeople. He had come to London at the same time as his
leader, and had done much to recommend Mutimer’s scheme in the East End.
His muscular height made those about him look puny. He was red in the face
with the excitement of abusing Mutimer’s enemies, and looked as if nothing
would please him better than to second words with arguments more cogent.
He and those about him hailed the agitator’s appearance with three ringing
cheers. A little later came a supporter whom Richard had not expected to
see—Mr. Westlake. Only this morning intelligence of what was going
on had reached his ears. At once he had scouted the accusations as
incredible; he deemed it a duty to present himself on Mutimer’s side.
Outside this small cluster was an indefinable mob, a portion of it
bitterly hostile, a part indifferent; among the latter a large element of
mere drifting blackguardism, the raff of a city, anticipating with
pleasure an uproar which would give them unwonted opportunities of
violence and pillage. These gentle men would with equal zeal declare for
Mutimer or his opponents, as the fortune of the day directed them.</p>
<p>The core of the hostile party consisted of those who followed the banner
of Comrade Roodhouse, the ralliers to the ‘Tocsin.’ For them it was a
great occasion. The previous evening had seen a clamorous assembly in the
room behind the Hoxton coffee-shop. Comrade Roodhouse professed to have
full details of the scandal which had just come to light. According to
him, there was no doubt whatever that Mutimer had known from the first the
character of the bogus Company, and had wittingly used the money of the
East-Enders to aid in floating a concern which would benefit himself and a
few others. Roodhouse disclosed the identity of Mr. Robert Delancey, and
explained the relations existing between Rodman and Mutimer, ignoring the
fact that a lawsuit had of late turned their friendship to mutual
animosity. It was an opportunity not to be missed for paying back the hard
things Mutimer had constantly said of the ‘Tocsin’ party. Comrade
Roodhouse was busy in the crowd, sowing calumnies and fermenting wrath. In
the crowd were our old acquaintances Messrs. Cowes and Cullen, each
haranguing as many as could be got to form a circle and listen, indulging
themselves in measureless vituperation, crying shame on traitors to the
noble cause. Here, too, was Daniel Dabbs, mainly interested in the
occasion as an admirable provocative of thirst. He was much disposed to
believe Mutimer guilty, but understood that it was none of his business to
openly take part with either side. He stood well on the limits of the
throng; it was not impossible that the debate might end in the cracking of
crowns, in which case Mr. Dabbs, as a respectable licensed victualler
whose weekly profits had long since made him smile at the follies of his
youth, would certainly incur no needless risk to his own valuable scalp.</p>
<p>The throng thickened; it was impossible that the speakers should be
audible to the whole assembly. Hastily it was decided to arrange two
centres. Whilst Mutimer was speaking at the lower end of the Green,
Redgrave would lift up his voice in the opposite part, and make it
understood that Mutimer would repeat his address there as soon as he had
satisfied the hearers below. The meeting was announced for three o’clock,
but it was half an hour later before Mutimer stood up on the cart and
extended his hand in appeal for silence. It at first seemed as if he could
not succeed in making his voice heard at all. A cluster of Roodhouse’s
followers, under the pretence of demanding quiet, made incessant tumult.
But ultimately the majority, those who were merely curious, and such of
the angry East-Enders as really wanted to hear what Mutimer had to say for
himself, imposed silence. Richard began his speech.</p>
<p>He had kept Adela’s warning in mind, and determined to be calmly dignified
in his refutal of the charges brought against him. For five minutes he
impressed his hearers. He had never spoken better. In the beginning he
briefly referred to the facts of his life, spoke of the use he had made of
wealth when he possessed it, demanded if it was likely that he should join
with swindlers to rob the very class to which he himself was proud to
belong, and for which he had toiled unceasingly. He spoke of Rodman, and
denied that he had ever known of this man’s connection with the Company—a
man who was his worst enemy. He it was, this Rodman, who doubtless had
written the letter which first directed suspicion in the wrong quarter; it
was an act such as Rodman would be capable of, for the sake of gratifying
his enmity. And how had that enmity arisen? He told the story of the
lawsuit; showed how, in that matter, he had stood up for common honesty,
though at the time Rodman was his friend. Then he passed to the subject of
his stewardship. Why had he put that trust money into a concern without
sufficient investigation? He could make but one straightforward answer: he
had believed that the Company was sound, and he bought shares because the
dividends promised to be large, and it was his first desire to do the very
best he could for those who had laid their hard-earned savings in his
hands.</p>
<p>For some minutes he had had increasing difficulty in holding his voice
above the noise of interruptions, hostile or friendly. It now became
impossible for him to proceed. A man who was lifted on to the shoulders of
two others began to make a counter-speech, roaring so that those around
could not but attend to him. He declared himself one of those whom Mutimer
had robbed; all his savings for seven months were gone; he was now out of
work, and his family would soon be starving. Richard’s blood boiled as he
heard these words.</p>
<p>‘You lie!’ he bellowed in return; ‘I know you. You are the fellow who said
last night that I should run away, and never come at all to this meeting.
I called you a blackguard then, and I call you a liar now. You have put in
my hand six threepences, and no more. The money you might have saved you
constantly got drunk upon. Your money is waiting for you: you have only to
come and apply for it. And I say the same to all the rest. I am ready to
pay all the money back, and pay it too with interest.’</p>
<p>‘Of course you are!’ vociferated the other. ‘You can’t steal it, so you
offer to give it back. We know that game.’</p>
<p>It was the commencement of utter confusion. A hundred voices were trying
to make themselves heard. The great crowd swayed this way and that.
Mutimer looked on a tempest of savage faces—a sight which might have
daunted any man in his position. Fists were shaken at him, curses were
roared at him from every direction. It was clear that the feeling of the
mob was hopelessly against him; his explanations were ridiculed. A second
man was reared on others’ shoulders; but instead of speaking from the
place where he was, he demanded to be borne forward and helped to a
standing on the cart. This was effected after a brief struggle with
Mutimer’s supporters. Then all at once there was a cessation of the hubbub
that the new speaker might be heard.</p>
<p>‘Look at this man!’ he cried, pointing at Mutimer, who had drawn as far
aside as the cart would let him. ‘He’s been a-tellin’ you what he did when
somebody died an’ left him a fortune. There’s just one thing he’s forgot,
an’ shall I tell you what that is? When he was a workin’ man like
ourselves, mates, he was a-goin’ to marry a pore girl, a workin’ girl.
When he gets his money, what does he do? Why, he pitches her over, if you
please, an’ marries a fine lady, as took him because he was rich—that’s
the way <i>ladies</i> always chooses their husbands, y’understand.’</p>
<p>He was interrupted by a terrific yell, but by dint of vigorous pantomime
secured a hearing again.</p>
<p>‘But wait a bit, maties; I haven’t done yet. He pitches over the pore
girl, but he does worse afterwards. He sets a tale a-goin’ as she’d
disgraced herself, as she wasn’t fit to be a honest man’s wife. An’ it was
all a damned lie, as lots of us knows. Now what d’ye think o’ that! This
is a friend o’ the People, this is! This is the man as ‘as your interests
at ‘art, mates! If he’ll do a thing like that, won’t he rob you of your
savin’s?’</p>
<p>As soon as he knew what the man was about to speak of, Mutimer felt the
blood rush back upon his heart. It was as when a criminal hears delivered
against him a damning item of evidence. He knew that he was pale, that
every feature declared his consciousness of guilt. In vain he tried to
face the mob and smile contemptuously. His eyes fell; he stood without the
power of speech.</p>
<p>The yell was repeated, and prolonged, owing to another cause than the
accusation just heard. When the accuser was borne forwards to the cart, a
rumour spread among those more remote that an attack was being made on
Mutimer and his friends. The rumour reached that part of the Green where
Redgrave was then haranguing. At once the listeners faced about in the
direction of the supposed conflict. Redgrave himself leaped down, and
called upon all supporters of Mutimer to follow him. It was the crash
between two crowds which led to the prolonging of the yell.</p>
<p>The meeting was over, the riot had begun.</p>
<p>Picture them, the indignant champions of honesty, the avengers of virtue
defamed! Demos was roused, was tired of listening to mere articulate
speech; it was time for a good wild-beast roar, for a taste of bloodshed.
Scarcely a face in all the mob but distorted itself to express as much
savagery as can be got out of the human countenance. Mutimer, seeing what
had come, sprang down from the cart. He was at once carried yards away in
an irresistible rush. Impossible for him and his friends to endeavour to
hold their ground: they were too vastly outnumbered; the most they could
do was to hold together and use every opportunity of retreat, standing in
the meanwhile on the defensive. There was no adequate body of police on
the Green; the riot would take its course unimpeded by the hired servants
of the capitalist State. Redgrave little by little fought his way to
within sight of Mutimer; he brought with him a small but determined
contingent. On all sides was the thud of blows, the indignant shouting of
the few who desired to preserve order mingled with the clamour of those
who combated. Demos was having his way; civilisation was blotted out, and
club law proclaimed.</p>
<p>Mutimer lost his hat in jumping from the cart; in five minutes his
waistcoat and shirt were rent open, whether by friends in guarding him, or
by foes in assailing, it was impossible to say. But his bodyguard held
together with wonderful firmness, only now and then an enemy got near
enough to dash a fist in his face. If he fell into the hands of the mob he
was done for; Mutimer knew that, and was ready to fight for his life. But
the direction taken by the main current of the crowd favoured him. In
about twenty minutes he was swept away from the Green, and into a street.
There were now fewer foes about him; he saw an opportunity, and together
with Redgrave burst away. There was no shame in taking to flight where the
odds against him were so overwhelming. But pursuers were close behind him;
their cry gave a lead to the chase. He looked for some by-way as he rushed
along the pavement. But an unexpected refuge offered itself. He was
passing a little group of women, when a voice from among them cried loudly—‘In
here! In here!’ He saw that a house-door was open, saw a hand beckon
wildly, and at once sprang for the retreat. A woman entered immediately
behind him and slammed the door, but he did not see that a stick which the
foremost of his pursuers had flung at him came with a terrible blow full
upon his preserver’s face.</p>
<p>For a moment he could only lean against the wall of the passage,
recovering his breath. Where he stood it was almost dark, for the evening
was drawing in. The woman who had rescued him was standing near, but he
could not distinguish her face. He heard the mob assembling in the narrow
street, their shouts, their trampling, and speedily there began a great
noise at the door. A beating with sticks and fists, a thundering at the
knocker.</p>
<p>‘Are you the landlady?’ Mutimer asked, turning to his silent companion.</p>
<p>‘No,’ was the reply. ‘She is outside, I must put up the chain. They might
get her latchkey from her.’</p>
<p>At the first syllable he started; the voice was so familiar to him. The
words were spoken with an entire absence of womanish consternation; the
voice trembled a little, but for all that there was calm courage in its
sound. When she had made the door secure and turned again towards him, he
looked into her face as closely as he could.</p>
<p>‘Is it Emma?’</p>
<p>‘Yes.’</p>
<p>Both were silent. Mutimer forgot all about his danger; that at this moment
he should meet Emma Vine, that it should be she who saved him, impressed
him with awe which was stronger than all the multitude of sensations just
now battling within him. For it was her name that had roused the rabble
finally against him. For his wrong to her he knew that he would have
suffered justly; yet her hand it was that barred the door against his
brutal pursuers. A sudden weakness shook his limbs; he had again to lean
upon the wall for support, and, scarcely conscious of what he did, he
sobbed three or four times.</p>
<p>‘Are you hurt?’ Emma asked.</p>
<p>‘No, I’m not hurt, no.’</p>
<p>Two children had come down the stairs, and were clinging to Emma, crying
with fright. For the noise at the door was growing terrific.</p>
<p>‘Who is there in the house?’ Mutimer asked.</p>
<p>‘No one, I think. The landlady and two other women who live here are
outside. My sister is away somewhere.’</p>
<p>‘Can I get off by the back?’</p>
<p>‘No. There’s a little yard, but the walls are far too high.’</p>
<p>‘They’ll break the door through. If they do, the devils are as likely to
kill you as me. I must go upstairs to a window and speak to them. I may do
something yet. Sooner than put you in danger I’ll go out and let them do
their worst Listen to them! That’s the People, that is! I deserve killing,
fool that I am, if only for the lying good I’ve said of them. Let me go up
into your room, if it has a window in the front.’</p>
<p>He led up the stairs, and Emma showed him the door of her room—the
same in which she had received the visit of Daniel Dabbs. He looked about
it, saw the poverty of it. Then he looked at Emma.</p>
<p>‘Good God! Who has hit you?’</p>
<p>There was a great cut on her cheek, the blood was running down upon her
dress.</p>
<p>‘Somebody threw a stick,’ she answered, trying to smile. ‘I don’t feel it;
I’ll tie a handkerchief on it.’</p>
<p>Again a fit of sobbing seized him; he felt as weak as a child.</p>
<p>‘The cowardly roughs! Give me the handkerchief—I’ll tie it. Emma!’</p>
<p>‘Think of your own safety,’ she replied hurriedly. ‘I tell you I don’t
feel any pain. Do you think you can get them to listen to you?’</p>
<p>‘I’ll try. There’s nothing else for it. You stand at the back of the room;
they may throw something at me.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, then, don’t open the window! They can’t break the door. Some help
will come.’</p>
<p>‘They <i>will</i> break the door. You’d be as safe among wild beasts as
among those fellows if they get into the house.’</p>
<p>He threw up the sash, though Emma would not go from his side. In the
street below was a multitude which made but one ravening monster; all its
eyes were directed to the upper storeys of this house. Mutimer looked to
the right and to the left. In the latter quarter he saw the signs of a
struggle Straining his eyes through the dusk, he perceived a mounted
police-officer forcing his way through the throng; on either side were
visible the helmets of constables. He drew a deep sigh of relief, for the
efforts of the mob against the house door could scarcely succeed unless
they used more formidable weapons for assault, and that would now be all
but impossible.</p>
<p>He drew his bead back into the room and looked at Emma with a laugh of
satisfaction.</p>
<p>‘The police are making way! There’s nothing to fear now.’</p>
<p>‘Come away from the window, then,’ Emma urged. ‘It is useless to show
yourself.’</p>
<p>‘Let them see me, the blackguards! They’re so tight packed they haven’t a
band among them to aim anything.’</p>
<p>As he spoke, he again leaned forward from the window-sill, and stretched
his arms towards the approaching rescuers. That same instant a heavy
fragment of stone, hurled with deadly force and precision, struck him upon
the temple. The violence of the blow flung him back into the room; he
dropped to his knees, threw out a hand as if to save himself, then sank
face foremost upon the floor. Not a sound had escaped his lips.</p>
<p>Emma, with a low cry of horror, bent to him and put her arm about his
body. Raising his head, she saw that, though his eyes were staring, they
had no power of sight; on his lips were flecks of blood. She laid her
cheeks to his lips, but could discern no breath; she tore apart the
clothing from his breast, but her hand could not find his heart. Then she
rushed for a pillow, placed it beneath his head, and began to bathe his
face. Not all the great love which leaped like flame in her bosom could
call the dead to life.</p>
<p>The yells which had greeted Mutimer’s appearance at the window were
followed by a steady roar, mingled with scornful laughter at his speedy
retreat; only a few saw or suspected that he had been gravely hit by the
missile. Then the tumult began to change its character; attention was
drawn from the house to the advancing police, behind whom came a band of
Mutimer’s adherents, led by Redgrave. The latter were cheering; the
hostile rabble met their cheers with defiant challenges. The police had
now almost more than they could do to prevent a furious collision between
the two bodies; but their numbers kept increasing, as detachments arrived
one after another, and at length the house itself was firmly guarded,
whilst the rioters on both sides were being put to flight. It was not a
long street; the police cleared it completely and allowed no one to enter
at either end.</p>
<p>It was all but dark when at length the door of Emma’s room was opened and
six or seven women appeared, searching for Mutimer. The landlady was
foremost; she carried a lamp. It showed the dead man at full length on the
floor, and Emma kneeling beside him, holding his hand. Near her were the
two children, crying miserably. Emma appeared to have lost her voice; when
the light flashed upon her eyes she covered them with one hand, with the
other pointed downwards. The women broke into cries of fright and
lamentation. They clustered around the prostrate form, examined it,
demanded explanations. One at length sped down to the street and shortly
returned with two policemen. A messenger was despatched for a doctor.</p>
<p>Emma did not move; she was not weeping, but paid no attention to any words
addressed to her. The room was thronged with curious neighbours, there was
a hubbub of talk. When at length the medical man arrived, he cleared the
chamber of all except Emma. After a brief examination of the body he said
to her:</p>
<p>‘You are his wife?’</p>
<p>She, still kneeling, looked up into his face with pained astonishment.</p>
<p>‘His wife? Oh no! I am a stranger.’</p>
<p>The doctor showed surprise.</p>
<p>‘He was killed in your presence?’</p>
<p>‘He is dead—really dead?’ she asked under her breath. And, as she
spoke, she laid her hand upon his arm.</p>
<p>‘He must have been killed instantaneously. Did the stone fall in the room?
Was it a stone?’</p>
<p>No one had searched for the missile. The doctor discovered it not far
away. Whilst he was weighing it in his hand there came a knock at the
door. It was Mr. Westlake who entered. He came and looked at the dead man,
then, introducing himself, spoke a few words with the doctor. Assured that
there was no shadow of hope, he withdrew, having looked closely at Emma,
who now stood a little apart, her hands held together before her.</p>
<p>The doctor departed a few moments later. He had examined the wound on the
girl’s face, and found that it was not serious. As he was going, Emma said
to him:</p>
<p>‘Will you tell them to keep away—all the people in the house?’</p>
<p>‘This is your own room?’</p>
<p>‘I live here with my sister.’</p>
<p>‘I will ask them to respect your wish. The body must stay here for the
present, though.’</p>
<p>‘Oh yes, yes, I know.’</p>
<p>‘Is your sister at home?’</p>
<p>‘She will be soon. Please tell them not to come here.’</p>
<p>She was alone again with the dead. It cost her great efforts of mind to
convince herself that Mutimer really had breathed his last; it seemed to
her but a moment since she heard him speak, heard him laugh; was not a
trace of the laugh even now discernible on his countenance? How was it
possible for life to vanish in this way? She constantly touched him, spoke
to him. It was incredible that he should not be able to hear her.</p>
<p>Her love for him was immeasurable. Bitterness she had long since overcome,
and she had thought that love, too, was gone with it. She had deceived
herself. Her heart, incredible as it may seem, had even known a kind of
hope—how else could she have borne the life which fate laid upon
her?—the hope that is one with love, that asks nothing of the
reason, nor yields to reason’s contumely. He had been smitten dead at the
moment that she loved him dearest.</p>
<p>Her sister Kate came in. She had been spending the day with friends in
another part of London. When just within the door she stopped and looked
at the body nervously.</p>
<p>‘Emma!’ she said. ‘Why don’t you come downstairs? Mrs. Lake’ll let us have
her back room, and tea’s waiting for you. I wonder how you <i>can</i> stay
here.’</p>
<p>‘I can’t come. I want to be alone, Kate. Tell them not to come up.’</p>
<p>‘But you can’t stay here all night, child!’</p>
<p>‘I can’t talk. I want to be alone. Perhaps I’ll come down before long.’</p>
<p>Kate withdrew and went to gossip with the people who were incessantly
coming and going in the lower part of the house. The opening and shutting
of the front door, the sound of voices, the hurrying feet upon the
staircase, were audible enough to Emma. She heard, too, the crowds that
kept passing along the street, their shouts, their laughter, the voices of
the policemen bidding them move on. It was all a nightmare, from which she
strove to awake.</p>
<p>At length she was able to weep. Gazing constantly at the dead face, she
linked it at last with some far-off memory of tenderness, and that brought
her tears. She held the cold hand against her heart and eased herself with
passionate sobbing, with low wails, with loving utterance of his name.
Thus it happened that she did not hear when someone knocked lightly at the
door and entered. A shadow across the still features told her of another’s
presence. Starting back, she saw a lady from whose pale, beautiful face a
veil had just been raised. The stranger, who was regarding her with
tenderly compassionate eyes, said:</p>
<p>‘I am Mrs. Mutimer.’</p>
<p>Emma rose to her feet and drew a little apart. Her face fell.</p>
<p>‘They told me downstairs,’ Adela pursued, ‘that I should find Miss Vine in
the room. Is your name Emma Vine?’</p>
<p>Emma asked herself whether this lady, his wife, could know anything of her
story. It seemed so, from the tone of the question. She only replied:</p>
<p>‘Yes, it is.’</p>
<p>Then she again ventured to look up at the woman whose beauty had made her
life barren. There were no signs of tears on Adela’s face; to Emma she
seemed cold, though so grave and gentle. Adela gazed for a while at the
dead man. She, too, felt as though it were all a dream. The spectacle of
Emma’s passionate grief had kept her emotion within her heart, perhaps had
weakened it.</p>
<p>‘You have yourself been hurt,’ she said, turning again to the other.</p>
<p>Emma only shook her head. She suffered terribly from Adela’s presence.</p>
<p>‘I will go,’ she said in a whisper.</p>
<p>‘This is your room, I think?’</p>
<p>‘Yes.’</p>
<p>‘May I stay here?’</p>
<p>‘Of course—you must.’</p>
<p>Emma was moving towards the door.</p>
<p>‘You wish to go?’ Adela said, uttering the words involuntarily.</p>
<p>‘Yes, I must.’</p>
<p>Adela, left alone, stood gazing at the dead face. She did not kneel by her
husband, as Emma had done, but a terrible anguish came upon her as she
gazed; she buried her face in her hands. Her feeling was more of horror at
the crime that had been committed than of individual grief. Yet grief she
knew. The last words her husband had spoken to her were good and worthy;
in her memory they overcame all else. That parting when he left home had
seemed to her like the beginning of a new life for him. Could not his
faults be atoned for otherwise than by this ghastly end? She had no need
to direct her thoughts to the good that was in him. Even as she had taken
his part against his traducers, so she now was stirred in spirit against
his murderers. She felt a solemn gladness in remembering that she had
stood before that meeting in the Clerkenwell room and served him as far as
it was in a woman’s power to do. All her long sufferings were forgotten;
this supreme calamity of death outweighed them all. His enemies had
murdered him; would they not continue to assail his name? She resolved
that his memory should be her care. That had nothing to do with love;
simple justice demanded it. Justice and gratitude for the last words he
had spoken to her.</p>
<p>She had as yet scarcely noticed the room in which she was. At length she
surveyed it; its poverty brought tears in her eyes. There had been a fire,
but the last spark was dead. She began to feel cold.</p>
<p>Soon there was the sound of someone ascending the stairs, and Emma, after
knocking, again entered. She carried a tray with tea-things, which she
placed upon the table. Then, having glanced at the fireplace, she took
from a cupboard wood and paper and was beginning to make a fire when Adela
stopped her, saying:</p>
<p>‘You must not do that for me. I will light the fire myself, if you will
let me.’</p>
<p>Emma looked up in surprise.</p>
<p>‘It is kind of you to bring me the tea,’ Adela continued. ‘But let me do
the rest.’</p>
<p>‘If you wish to—yes,’ the other replied, without understanding the
thought which prompted Adela. She carefully held herself from glancing
towards the dead man, and moved away.</p>
<p>Adela approached her.</p>
<p>‘Have you a room for the night?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, thank you.’</p>
<p>‘Will you—will you take my hand before you leave me?’ She held it
forth; Emma, with eyes turned to the ground, gave her own.</p>
<p>‘Look at me,’ Adela said, under her breath.</p>
<p>Their eyes met, and at last Emma understood. In that grave, noble gaze was
far more than sympathy and tenderness; it was a look that besought pardon.</p>
<p>‘May I come to you in the night to see if you need anything?’ Emma asked.</p>
<p>‘I shall need nothing. Come only if you can’t sleep.’</p>
<p>Adela lit the fire and began her night’s watching.</p>
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