“I am coming at once, Mr. Ferdinand. I swear it. Go upstairs and swear I swear it.”
“Yes, sir.”
Mr. Ferdinand departed, rather with the demeanour of an archbishop who has been inveigled into pledging himself, on his archiepiscopal oath, to commit some horrid crime. The Prophet turned, almost violently, towards his guests.
“I must go,” he cried. “I must indeed. Pray forgive me. You see how I am circumstanced. Permit me to show you to the door.”
“You swear, sir, to carry out all our directions and to dot down—”
“I do. I swear solemnly to dot down—if you will only—this way. Take care of the mat.”
“We trust you, Mr. Vivian,” said Madame, with majestic pathos. “A wife, a mother trusts you.Placens uxus! Mater familiaris.”
“I pledge my honour. This is the—no, no, not that way, not that way!”
The worthy couple, by mistake, no doubt, were proceeding towards the grand staircase, having missed the way to the hall door, and as the Prophet, following them up with almost unimaginable activity, drew near enough to drum the right direction into their backs, Lady Enid became visible on the landing above. Mr. Sagittarius perceived her.
“Why, it’s Miss Minerv—” he began.
“This way, this way!” cried the Prophet, wheeling them round and driving them, but always like a thorough gentleman, towards the square.
“Then she leads a double life, too!” said Mr. Sagittarius, solemnly, fixing his strained eyes upon the Prophet.
“She? Who?” said Madame, sharply.
She had not seen Lady Enid.
“All of us, my love, all of us,” returned her husband, as the Prophet succeeded in shepherding them on to the pavement.
“Good-bye,” he cried.
With almost inconceivable rapidity he shut the door. As he did so two vague echoes seemed to faint on his ear. One was male, a dreamlike—“First post, Thursday!” The other was female, a fairylike—“Jactum alea sunt.”
“Mr. Ferdinand,” said the Prophet the same evening, after he had dressed for dinner, “what has become of the telescope?”
He spoke in a low voice, not unlike that of a confirmed conspirator, and glanced rather furtively around him, as if afraid of being overheard.
“I have removed it, sir, according to your orders,” replied Mr. Ferdinand, also displaying some uneasiness.
“Yes, yes. Where have you placed it?”
“Well, sir, I understood you to say I might throw it in Piccadilly, if I so wished.”
The Prophet suddenly displayed relief.
“I see. You have done so.”
“Well, no, sir.”
The Prophet’s face fell.
“Then where is it?”
“Well, sir, for the moment I have set it in the butler’s pantry.”
“Indeed!”
“I thought it might be of use there, sir,” continued Mr. Ferdinand, in some confusion, which, however, was not noticed by the Prophet. “Of great use to—to Gustavus and me in—in our duties, sir.”
“Quite so, quite so,” returned the Prophet, abstractedly.
“Did you wish it to be taken to the drawing-room again, sir?”
The Prophet started.
“Certainly not,” he said. “On no account. As you very rightly say—a butler’s pantry is the place for a telescope. It can be of great service there.”
His fervour surprised Mr. Ferdinand, who began to wonder whether, by any chance, his master knew of the Lord Chancellor’s agreeable-looking second-cook. After pausing a moment respectfully, Mr. Ferdinand was about to decamp when the Prophet checked him with a gesture.
“One moment, Mr. Ferdinand!”
“Sir?”
“One moment!”
Mr. Ferdinand stood still. The Prophet cleared his throat, arranged his tie, and then said, with an air of very elaborate nonchalance,—
“At what time do you generally go to bed, Mr. Ferdinand, when you don’t sit up?”
“Sometimes at one time, sir, and sometimes at another.”
“That’s rather ambiguous.”
“I beg pardon, sir.”
“What is your usual hour for being quite—that is, entirely in bed.”
“Entirely in bed, sir?”
Mr. Ferdinand’s fine bass voice vibrated with surprise.
“Yes. Not partially in bed, but really and truly in bed?”
“Well, sir,” returned Mr. Ferdinand, with decided dignity, “when I am in bed, sir, I am.”
“And when’s that?”
“By twelve, sir.”
“I thought as much,” cried the Prophet, with slightly theatrical solicitude. “You sit up too late, Mr. Ferdinand.”
“I hope, sir, that I—”
“That’s what makes you so pale, Mr. Ferdinand, and delicate.”
“Delicate, sir!” cried Mr. Ferdinand, who had in fact been hopelessly robust from the cradle, totally incapable of acquiring even the most universal complaints, and, moreover, miraculously exempt from that well-recognised affliction of the members of his profession so widely known as “butler’s feet.”
“Yes,” said the Prophet, emphatically. “You should be in bed, thoroughly in bed, by a quarter to eleven. And Gustavus too! He is young, and the young can’t be too careful. Begin to-night, Mr. Ferdinand. I speak for your health’s sake, believe me.”
So saying the Prophet hurried away, leaving Mr. Ferdinand almost as firmly rooted to the Turkey carpet with surprise as if he had been woven into the pattern at birth, and never unpicked in later years.
At ten that evening the Prophet, having escaped early from his dinner on some extravagant plea of sudden illness or second gaiety, stood in the small and sober passage of the celebrated Tintack Club and inquired anxiously for Mr. Robert Green.
“Yes, sir. Mr. Green is upstairs in the smoke-room,” said the functionary whom the club grew under glass for the benefit of the members and their friends.
“Sam, show this gentleman to Mr. Green.”
Sam, who was a red-faced child in buttons, with a man’s walk and the back of one who knew as much as most people, obeyed this command, and ushered the Prophet into a room with a sealing-wax red paper, in which Robert Green was sitting alone, smoking a large cigar and glancing at the “stony-broke edition” of an evening paper. He greeted the Prophet with his usual unaffected cordiality, offered him every drink that had yet been invented, and, on his refusal of them all, handed him a cigar and a matchbox, and whistled “Ta-ra-ra-boom-de-av” at him in the most friendly manner possible.
“Bob,” said the Prophet, taking a very long time to light the cigar, “what, in your opinion, is the exact meaning of the term honour?”
Mr. Green’s cheerful, though slightly belated, face assumed an expression of genial betwaddlement.
“Oh, well, Hen,” he said, “exact meaning you know’s not so easy. But—hang it, we all understand the thing, eh, without sticking it down in words. What?”
“I don’t, Bob,” rejoined the Prophet, in the tone of a man at odds with several consciences. “In what direction does honour lie?”
“It don’t lie at all, old chap,” said Mr. Green, with the decided manner which had made him so universally esteemed in yeomanry circles.
The Prophet began to look very much distressed.
“Look here, Bob, I’ll put it in this way,” he said. “Would an honourable man feel bound to keep a promise?”
“Rather.”
“Yes, but would he feel bound to keep two promises?”
“Rather, if he’d made ‘em.”
“Suppose he had!”
“Go ahead, Hen, I’m supposing,” said Mr. Green, beginning to pucker his brows and stare very hard indeed in the endeavour to keep the supposition fixed firmly in his head.
“And, further, suppose that these two promises were diametrically opposed to one another.”
Mr. Green stuck out one leg, looked obliquely at the carpet, pressed his lips together and nodded.
“So that if he fulfilled them both he’d have to break them both—”
“Stop a sec! Gad, I’ve lost it! Start again, Hen!”
“No, I mean so that if he didn’t break one he would be forced to break the other. Have you got that?”
“Stop a bit! Don’t believe I have. Let’s see!”
He moved his lips silently, repeating the Prophet’s words.
“Yes. I’ve got that all right now,” he said, after three minutes of strenuous mental exertion.
“Well, what would you say of him?”
“That he was a damned fool.”
The Prophet looked very much upset.
“No, no, Bob, I meant to him. What would you say to him?”
“That he was a damned fool.”
The Prophet began to appear thoroughly broken down. However, he still stuck to his interpellation.
“Very well, Bob,” he said, with unutterable resignation—as of a toad beneath the harrow—“but, putting all that aside—”
“Give us a chance, Hen! I’ve got to shunt all that, have I?”
“Yes, at least all you would say of, and to, the man.”
“Oh, only that. Wait a bit! Yes, I’ve done that. Drive on now!”
“Putting all that aside, what should you advise the man to do?”
“Not to be such a damned fool again.”
“No, no! I mean about the two promises?”
“What about ‘em?”
“Which would his sense of honour compel him to keep?”
“I shouldn’t think such a damned fool’d got a sense of honour.”
The Prophet winced, but he stuck with feverish obstinacy to his point.
“Yes, Bob, he had.”
“I don’t believe it, Hen, ‘pon my word I don’t. You’ll always find that damned f—”
“Bob, I must beg you to take it from me. He had. Now which promise should he keep?”
“Who’d he made ‘em to?”
“Who?” said the Prophet, wavering.
“Yes.”
“One to—to a very near and dear relative, the other to—well, Bob to two comparative strangers.”
“What sort of strangers.”
“The sort of strangers who—who live beside a river, and who—who mix principally with—well, in fact, with architects and their wives.”
“Rum sort of strangers?”
“They are decidedly.”
“Oh, then, you know ‘em?”
“That’s not the point,” exclaimed the Prophet, hastily. “The point is which promise is to be kept.”
“I should say the one made to the relative. Wait a bit, though! Yes, I should say that.”
The Prophet breathed a sigh of relief. But some dreadful sense of honesty within him compelled him to add,—
“I forgot to say that he’d pledged his honour to the architects—that is, to the strangers who lived beside a river.”
“What—and not pledged it to the relative?”
“Well, no.”
“Then he ought to stick to the promise he’d pledged his honour over, of course. Nice for the relative! The man’s a damned fool, Hen. Do have a drink, old chap.”
Thus did Mr. Robert Green drive the Prophet to take the first decisive step that was to lead to so many complications,—the step towards Mr. Ferdinand’s pantry.
At precisely a quarter to eleven p.m. the Prophet stood upon his doorstep and, very gently indeed, inserted his latchkey into the door. A shaded lamp was burning in the deserted hall, where profound silence reigned. Clear was the night and starry. As the Prophet turned to close the door he perceived the busy crab, and the thought of his beloved grandmother, sinking now to rest on the second floor all unconscious of the propinquity of the scorpion, the contiguity of the serpent, filled his expressive eyes with tears. He shut the door, stood in the hall and listened. He heard a chair crack, the ticking of a clock. There was no other sound, and he felt certain that Mr. Ferdinand and Gustavus had heeded his anxious medical directions and gone entirely to bed betimes, leaving the butler’s pantry free for the nocturnal operations of the victim of Madame. For he recognised that she was the guiding spirit of the family that dwelt beside the Mouse. He might have escaped out of the snare of Mr. Sagittarius, but Madame was a fowler who would hold him fast till she had satisfied herself once and for all whether it were indeed possible to dwell in the central districts, within reach of the Army and Navy heaven in Victoria Street, and yet remain a prophet. Yes, he must now work for the information of her ambitious soul. He sighed deeply and went softly up the stairs. His chamber was on the same floor as Mrs. Merillia’s, and, as he neared her door, he rose instinctively upon his toes and, grasping the tails of his evening coat firmly with his left hand, to prevent any chance rustling of their satin lining, and bearing his George the Third silver candlestick steadily to control any clattering of its extinguisher, he moved on rather like a thief who was also a trained ballerina, holding his breath and pressing his lips together in a supreme agony of dumbness.
Unluckily he tripped in the raised pattern of the carpet, the candlestick uttered a silver note, his pent-in breath escaped with a loud gulp, and Mrs. Merillia’s delicate voice cried out from behind her shut door,—
“Hennessey! Hennessey!”
The Prophet bit his lip and went at once into her room.
Mrs. Merillia looked simply charming in bed, with her long and elegant head shaded by a beautiful muslin helmet trimmed with lace, and a delicious embroidered wrapper round her shoulders. The Prophet stood beside her, shading the candle-flame with his hand.
“Well, grannie, dear,” he said, “what is it? You ought to be asleep.”
“I never sleep before twelve. Have you had a pleasant dinner?”
“Very. Stanyer Phelps, the American, was there and very witty. And we had a marvelloussupreme de volaille. Everybody asked after you.”
Mrs. Merillia nodded, like an accustomed queen who receives her due. She knew very well that she was the most popular old woman in London, knew it too well to think about it.
“Well, good-night, grannie.”
The Prophet bent to kiss her, his heart filled with compunction at the thought of the promise he was about to break. It seemed to him almost more than sacrilegious to make of this dear and honoured ornament of old age a vehicle for the satisfaction of the vulgar ambitions and disagreeable curiosity of the couple who dwelt beside the Mouse.
“Good-night, my dear boy.”
She kissed him, then added,—
“You like Lady Enid, don’t you?”
“Very much.”
“So does Robert Green. He thinks her such a thoroughly sensible girl.”
“Bob! Does he?” said the Prophet, concealing a slight smile.
“Yes. If you want her to get on with you, Hennessey, you should come up to tea when she is here.”
“I couldn’t to-day, grannie.”
“You were really busy?”
“Very busy indeed.”
“I suppose you only saw her for a moment on the stairs?”
“That was all.”
It was true, for Lady Enid had scarcely stayed to speak to the Prophet, having hurried out in the hope of discovering who were the “two parties” he had been entertaining on the ground floor.
Mrs. Merillia dropped the subject.
“Good-night, Hennessey,” she said. “Go to bed at once. You look quite tired. I am so thankful you have given up that horrible astronomy.”
The Prophet did not reply, but, as he went out of the room, he knew, for the first time, what criminals with consciences feel like when they are engaged in following their dread profession.
As he walked across the landing he heard a clock strike eleven. He started, hastened into his room, tore off his coat, replaced it with a quilted smoking-jacket, sprang lightly to his table, seized a planisphere, or star-map, which he had succeeded in obtaining that night from a small working astronomer’s shop in the Edgeware Road, and, mindful of the terms of his oath and the decided opinion of Robert Green, scurried hastily, but very gingerly, down the stairs. This time Mrs. Merillia did not hear him. She had indeed become absorbed in a new romance, written by a very rising young Montenegrin who was just then making some stir in the literary circles of the elect.
Very surreptitiously the Prophet tripped across the hall and reached the stout door which gave access to the servants’ quarters. But here he paused. Although he had lived in Mrs. Merillia’s most comfortable home for at least fifteen years, he had actually never once penetrated beyond this door. It had never occurred to him to do so. Often he had approached it. Quite recently, when Mrs. Fancy Quinglet had broken into tears on the refusal of Sir Tiglath Butt to burst according to her prediction, he had handed her to this very portal. But he had never passed through it, nor did he know what lay beyond. No doubt there was a kitchen, very probably the mysterious region of watery activities commonly known as a scullery, quite certainly a butler’s pantry. But where each separate sanctum lay, and what should be the physiognomy of each one the Prophet had not the vaguest idea. As he turned the handle of the door he felt like Sir Henry Stanley, when that intrepid explorer first set foot among the leafy habitations of the dwarfs.
As the door opened the Prophet found himself in a large apartment whose walls were decorated with the efforts of those great painters who feed the sentimental imaginations of the masses in the beautiful Christmas numbers of our artistic day. Enchanting little girls and exceedingly human dogs observed his entrance from every hand, while such penetrating and suggestive legends as “Don’t bite!” “Mustn’t!” “Naughty!” “Would ‘ums?” and the like, filled his mind with the lofty thoughts so suitable to the Christmas season. Over the mantelpiece was aCook’s Almanac for the Home, decorated in bright colours, aButler’s own book, bound in claret-coloured linen, and a large framed photograph of Francatelli, that immortalchefwhose memory is kept green in so many kitchens, and whose recipes are still followed as are followed the footprints of the great ones in the Everlasting Sands of Time. One corner of the room Gustavus had made his own, and here might be seen his tasteful what-not and his little library—neatly arranged unabridged farthing editions of Drummond’sAscent of Man, Mill’sLiberty, Crampton’sOrigin of Self-Respect, Barlow’sA Philosophical Examination into the Art and Practice of Tipping and Receiving Tips, and other volumes suitable for an intellectual footman’s reading. An eight-day clock, which was carefully and lovingly wound up by the prudent Mrs. Fancy Quinglet every morning and evening, snored peacefully in a recess by the hearth, and, from a crevice near the window, the bright, intelligent eyes of a couple of well-developed black-beetles—mother and son—contentedly surveyed the cheerful scene.
The Prophet, after a moment’s pause of contemplation, passed on through a swing door, covered with green baize, and down some stairs to the inner courts of this interesting region. This time he came to anchor in a room which, he thought, might well have been a butler’s pantry had it contained a large-sized telescope. It was in fact the parlour set apart for the use of the kitchen and scullery maids, and was brightly fitted up with a dresser, a cupboard for skewers, a rolling-pin, a basting machine, and other similar adjuncts. It gave on to the kitchen, in which the cat of the house was enjoying well-earned slumber in the attitude of a black ball. So far his exploring tour had quite fulfilled the rather vague expectations of the Prophet, but he now began to feel anxious. Time was passing on and he had sworn to be at the telescope by eleven sharp. He had, therefore, already slightly fractured his oath, and he had no desire to earn the anathema of all such men as Robert Green by breaking it into small pieces. Where was the butler’s pantry? He glanced eagerly round the kitchen, perceived a door, passed through it, and found himself confronted by a sink. He had gained the scullery, but not his goal. To the right of the sink was yet another door through which the Prophet, who carried the planisphere in one hand, the George the Third candlestick in the other, rather excitedly debouched into a good-sized passage. As he did so he heard the muffled alto voice of the eight-day clock proclaim that it was a quarter-past eleven. Feeling that he was now upon the point of breaking both the promises of the damned fool, the Prophet hastened along the passage, darted through the first outlet, and found himself abruptly face to back with what appeared at first glance to be an enormously broad and bow-legged dwarf, with a bald head and a black tail coat, which, in an attitude of savage curiosity, was gazing through a gigantic instrument, whose muzzle projected from an open window into a spacious area. So great was the Prophet’s surprise, so supreme the shock to his whole nervous system occasioned by this unexpected encounter, that he did not utter a cry. His amazement carried him into that terrible region which lies beyond the realms of speech. He simply stood quite still and gazed at the bow-legged dwarf, which, in its turn, continued to gaze savagely through the gigantic instrument into the area. Not for perhaps three or four minutes did the Prophet realise that this dwarf was merely an ingeniously shortened form of Mr. Ferdinand, who, with his legs very wide apart, and making two accurate right angles at their respective knee-joints, his head thrown well back, and his arms arranged in two perfect capital V’s, with the elbows pointing directly at the walls on either side of him, had been busily engaged for the last hour and a quarter in trying to focus firstly the Lord Chancellor’s house on the opposite side of the square, and secondly the pleasant-looking second-cook in it. That his chivalrous efforts had not yet been crowned with complete success will be understood when we say that he had seen during his first half-hour of contemplation nothing at all, during his second half-hour the left-hand top star of the Great Bear, and finally the fourth spike from the end of the iron railing which enclosed the square garden, at which he had been gazing closely for precisely fifteen minutes and a half when the Prophet darted into the pantry.
Having at length recovered from his shock of surprise sufficiently to realise that the enormous and immobile dwarf was Mr. Ferdinand, and that Mr. Ferdinand was not yet aware of his presence, the Prophet resolved to beat a rapid and noiseless retreat. He carried this resolve into execution by turning sharply round, knocking his head against a plate chest, firing the George the Third candlestick into the passage, and letting the planisphere go into the china jar of “Butler’s own special pomade” which Mr. Ferdinand kept always open for use upon the pantry table.
To say that Mr. Ferdinand ceased from looking through the telescope for the Lord Chancellor’s second-cook at this juncture would, perhaps, not convey quite a fair idea of the activity which he could on occasion display even at his somewhat advanced age. It might be more just to state that, without wasting any precious time in useless elongation, he described an exceedingly rapid circular movement, still preserving the shortened form of himself which had so deceived and startled his master, and brought his eye from the orifice of the telescope to a level with the Prophet’s knees exactly at the moment when the Prophet rebounded from the plate chest into the centre of the apartment.
“Oh, is it you, Mr. Ferdinand?” said the Prophet, controlling every symptom of anguish, with the exception of a rapid flutter of the eyelids. “I was looking for—for a bradawl.”
The Prophet’s choice of this useful little implement as the reason for his presence in Mr. Ferdinand’s special sanctum was prompted by the fact that, just as he was speaking, he happened to see a bradawl lying upon a neighbouring knife cupboard in the company of a corkscrew.
“And here, I see, is just what I want,” he added calmly.
So far he had displayed extraordinary composure, but at this point he made a slight mistake, for he picked up the corkscrew and sauntered quietly away with it into the darkness, leaving Mr. Ferdinand still in the attitude of a Toby jug, the planisphere still head downwards in the butler’s own special pomade, and the George the Third candlestick stretched at full length upon the passage floor.
“Hennessey Vivian, 1000 Berkeley Square, W.
“Please wire result of last night’s observations from eleven till three inclusive.—Sagittarius.”
“Jupiter Sagittarius, Sagittarius Lodge, Crampton St. Peter, N.
“Impossible wire result, will write at length after taking further observations to-night.—Vivian.”
“Certainly write at length, but meanwhile wire all important results in condensed form.—Sagittarius.”
“Results not sufficiently important to wire, letter without fail to-morrow.—Vivian.”
“Never mind unimportance, wire whatever results obtained.—Sagittarius.”
“On consideration think results too important to wire, will explain by letter.—Vivian.”
“Your second and third wires in direct contradiction; kindly reconcile opposing statements.—Sagittarius.”
“Cannot reconcile by wire, will do so by letter.—Vivian.”
“Then meanwhile request forecast of grandmother so far as gathered last night.—Sagittarius.”
“Quite impossible discuss grandmother by wire.—Vivian.”
“Not at all; couch in careful terms, shall understand; no need put grandmother’s name.—Sagittarius.”
“Quite impossible; grandmother too sacred for treatment by wire, long and full letter to-morrow.—Vivian.”
“Absurd! Call her Harry and wire her future as obtained last night; shall understand.—Sagittarius.”
“Cannot possibly consent call grandmother Harry; pray cease; succession of telegraph boys to house attracting general attention in square.—Vivian.”
“Must insist; then call her Susan and wire.—Sagittarius.”
“Cannot possibly consent to call her Susan; discussion of such matter by wire not decent; regret must absolutely decline.—Vivian.”
“Madame and self insulted by accusation not decent; demand explanation and apology.—Sagittarius.”
“Regret; no desire give pain to lady, but this must cease; grandmother and square seriously upset by procession of telegraph boys.—Vivian.”
“Cannot help square and grandmother; must have last night’s result to compare with own observation of grandmother with crab and scorpion.—Sagittarius.”
“Pray cease; would rather die than discuss grandmother with crab and scorpion by wire.—Vivian.”
“Rubbish! Call crab Susan, scorpion Jane, grandmother Harry, and wire; absolutely insist.—Sagittarius.”
“Absolutely decline discuss crab, scorpion and grandmother by wire; final.—Vivian.
“Scandalous! not behaviour of gentleman; Madame cut to heart; infamous.—Sagittarius.”
“Mater familiaris pallidibus ira.—Madame Sagittarius.”
“If receive no reply as to grandmother and crab, et cetera, shall start at once for Square.—Jupiter and Madame Sagittarius.”
“On no account trouble come up; going out immediately; important engagement.—Vivian.”
“Madame putting on boots.—Sagittarius.”
“Utterly useless put on boots; leaving house.—Vivian.”
“Madame boots on; tying bonnet.—Sagittarius.”
“Totally useless tie bonnet; absolutely forced leave house.—Vivian.”
“Madame in pelisse; shall come in wait till your return.—Sagittarius.”
“Regret pelisse; quite useless; out till late evening.—Vivian.”
“Shall stay till whatever hour; have on hat and bonnet now; starting.—Jupiter and Madame Sagittarius.”
“For Heaven’s sake don’t; will wire whatever you wish.—Vivian.”
“Don’t. Ankles perhaps catching; dangerous Capricornus.—Vivian.”
“Have you started?—Vivian.”
“Have not started, but at threshold of door; wire full explanation of crab with grandmother, et cetera, last night or shall start instanter.—Jupiter and Madame Sagittarius.”
“Truth is very little result last night; did not see crab with grandmother; deeply regret.—Vivian.”
“Then wire result of scorpion with grandmother.—Sagittarius.”
“Very sorry did not see scorpion with grandmother.—Vivian.”
“Impossible; believe stars out; clear sky; self and Madame distinctly observed crab and scorpion with grandmother for four hours.—Sagittarius.”
“On honour did not see crab, scorpion or grandmother.—Vivian.”
“Then has grandmother passed over?—Sagittarius.”
“Certainly not, but no result; pray cease discussion, grandmother and square distracted by incessant uproar of boys at door.—Vivian.”
“Leaving house; with you as soon as possible.—Jupiter and Madame Sagittarius.”
“Heaven’s sake don’t; tell truth; did not look through telescope at all last night.—Vivian.”
“What meaning of this swore oath broken; no gentleman; coming at once for explanation.—Jupiter and Madame Sagittarius.”
“Stop; sending boy messenger with full explanation; severe accident last night, injured head, so unable look for crab, grandmother and scorpion.—Vivian.”
“Astounded, upset, Madame says not conduct gentleman; might have seen crab, grandmother and scorpion with injured head; mere excuse—caput mortuus decrepitum cancer.—Sagittarius.”
“Pray excuse; look to-night without fail; Heaven’s sake cease writing; grandmother and whole square amazement, confusion; shall go mad if continues.—Vivian.”
“Very well, but insist on full letter; confidence in oath much shaken; wires most shifty; gross neglect of crab, grandmother and scorpion.—Sagittarius.”
“Homo miserum sed magnum est veritatus et praevalebetur.—Madame Sagittarius.”
“Assure the Lord Chancellor that the last boy has been and gone—gone away, that is, Mr. Ferdinand, and that I pledge my sacred word not to have another telegram to-day.”
“Yes, sir. His lordship desired that you should be informed that, according to the law regulating public abominations and intolerable street noises, you was liable to—”
“I know, I know.”
“And that, by the Act dealing with gross offences against the public order and scandalous crimes against the peace of metropolitan communities, you was amenable—”
“Exactly. Go to his lordship and swear—”
“I couldn’t do that so soon again, sir, really. I swore only as short ago as yesterday, sir, by your express order, but—”
“I mean asseverate to his lordship that the very last boy has knocked for the very last time.”
“It wasn’t so much the knocking, sir, his lordship complained of, as the boys coming to the door meeting the boys going away from it, and blocking up the pavement, sir, so that no one could get past and—”
“Yes, yes. Go and asseverate at once, Mr. Ferdinand.”
“Very well, sir. And Her Grace, the Duchess of Camberwell, who is passing from one fit to another, sir, from fright at the uproar and telegrams going to the wrong house, sir?”
“Implore Her Grace to have courage and to trust me as a gentleman when I promise solemnly that the knocking shall not be renewed.”
“Very well, sir.”
“Mr. Ferdinand!”
“Sir?”
“Have the knockers swathed in cotton-wool at once.”
“Yes, sir.”
“And—fix a bulletin on the door. Wait! I’ll write it.”
The Prophet hastened to his writing table and, with a hand that trembled violently, wrote on a card as follows:—
“Owner of this house seriously ill, pray do not knock ordeathshall certainly ensue.”
“There! Poor grannie will have peace now. Nail that up, Mr. Ferdinand, under the cotton-wool.”
“Very well, sir. Mrs. Merillia, sir, would be glad to speak to you for a moment. You remember I informed you?”
“I’ll go to her at once. But first bring me a glass of brandy, Mr. Ferdinand. I’m feeling extremely unwell.”
And the Prophet, who was paler far than ashes, and beaded from top to toe with perspiration, sank down feebly upon a chair and let his head drop on the blotting-pad that lay on his writing-table.
When he had swallowed an inch or two of cognac he got up, pulled himself together with both hands, and walked, like an elderly person afflicted with incipient locomotor ataxy, upstairs into the drawing-room where Mrs. Merillia was lying on a sofa, ministered to by Fancy Quinglet, who, at the moment of his entrance, was busily engaged in stuffing a large wad of cotton-wool into the right ear of her beloved mistress.
“Leave us please, Fancy,” said Mrs. Merillia, in a voice that sounded much older than usual. “And as your head is so bad, too, you had better lie down.”
“Thank you, ma’am. If I keep upright, ma’am, I feel my head will split asunder. I can’t speak different nor feel other.”
“Then don’t be upright.”
“No, ma’am. Them that feels other, let them declare it!” and Mrs. Fancy retired, holding both hands to her temples, and uttering very distinctly sundry stifled moans.
Mrs. Merillia motioned the Prophet to a chair, and, after lying quite still for about five minutes with her eyes tightly shut, said in a weak tone of voice,—
“How many more telegrams do you expect, Hennessey? You have had twenty-seven within the last three hours. Can you give me a rough general idea of the average number you anticipate will probably arrive every hour from now till the offices close?”
“Grannie, grannie, forgive me! I assure you—”
“Don’t be afraid to tell me, Hennessey. It is much better to know the worst, and fact it bravely. Will the present average be merely sustained, or do you expect the quantity to increase towards night? because if so—”
“Grannie, there will be no more. I swear to you solemnly that I will not have another telegram to-day. I will not upon my sacred honour. Nothing—not wild horses even—shall induce me.”
“Horses! Then were they racing tips, Hennessey? Yes, give me theeau de Cologneand fan me gently. Were they racing tips?”
“Oh, grannie, how could you suppose—”
At this moment Mr. Ferdinand entered softly and went up to Mrs. Merillia.
“Mr. Q. Elisha Hubsbee, ma’am. He is deeply distressed and asks for news . . .”
“The Central American Ambassador’s grandfather,” said Mrs. Merillia, reading the card which Mr. Ferdinand handed to her.
“Shocked to hear you are so ill that a knock will finish you. Guess you must be far gone. Earnest sympathy. Have you tried patent morphia molasses?
“Q. E. H.”
“Ah! how things get about! Tell Mr. Elisha Hubsbee the knocks have nearly killed us all, Mr. Ferdinand, but we are bearing up as well as can be expected. If necessary we will certainly try the molasses.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“It is two o’clock now, Hennessey. The Charing Cross office is open till midnight, I believe, so at the present rate you should only have about ninety more telegrams to-day. But if you have reason to expect—”
Mr. Ferdinand re-entered.
“Mrs. Hendrick Marshall has called, ma’am. She desired me to say she was passing the door and was much horrified to find that you are so near the point, ma’am.”
“What point, Mr. Ferdinand?”
“Of death, ma’am. She had no idea at all, ma’am.”
“Oh, thank Mrs. Hendrick Marshall, Mr. Ferdinand, and say we shall try to keep from the point for the present.
“Yes, ma’am.”
“—That the numbers will go up as the afternoon draws on, Hennessey—”
“Grannie, haven’t I sworn, and have you ever known me to tell you a—”
Suddenly the Prophet stopped short, thinking how that very night he would be forced by his oath to “Madame and self” to break his promise to his grandmother, how already it would have been broken had not Mr. Ferdinand on the previous night been in possession of the telescope.
“The Chancellor of the Exchequer, ma’am, desires his compliments, and he begs you to last out, if possible, till he has fetched Sir William Broadbent to see you. He is going there on his bike, ma’am, and had no conception you was dying till he knew it this moment, ma’am.”
“Thank the Chancellor, Mr. Ferdinand, and say that though we must all go out some day I have no desire for a dissolution at present, and shall do my best to prove myself worthy of my constitution.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
Mr. Ferdinand retired, brushing away a tear.
“It would not be feasible, I suppose, Hennessey, to station Gustavus permanently at the telegraph office with a small hamper, so that he might collect the wires in it as they arrive and convey them here, once an hour or so, entering by the area door. I thought perhaps that might obviate—”
Mr. Ferdinand once more appeared, looking very puffy about the eyes.
“If you please, ma’am, La—ady Julia Pos—ostlethwaite is below, and asks whe—ether you are truly going ma’am?”
“Going? Where to, Mr. Ferdinand?”
“The other pla—ace, ma’am. Her ladyship is crying something terrible, ma’am, and says, till she no—no—noticed the fact she had no—no—notion you was leaving us so soon, ma’am.”
Here Mr. Ferdinand uttered a very strange and heartrending sound that was rather like the bark of a dog with a bad cold in its head.
“It is really very odd so many people finding out so soon!” said Mrs. Merillia in some surprise. “Tell her ladyship, Mr. Ferdinand, that—”
But at this moment there was the sound of feet on the stairs, and Lady Enid Thistle hurried into the room, closely followed by Mr. Robert Green. Lady Enid went up at once to Mrs. Merillia.
“I am so shocked and distressed to see your news, dear Mrs. Merillia,” she cried affectionately. “But,” she added, with much inquisitiveness, “is it really true that if anyone tapped on the door you would certainly die? How can you be so sure of yourself.”
“What do you mean? Ah, Mr. Green, how d’you do? See my news!”
“Yes, written up on the front door. Everyone’s shocked.”
“Rather!” said Mr. Green, gazing at Mrs. Merillia with confused mournfulness. “One doesn’t see death on a front door every day, don’t you know, in big round hand too, and then one of those modern words.”
“Death on the front door in big round hand!” said Mrs. Merillia in the greatest perplexity.
“I put it there, grannie,” said the Prophet, humbly. “I wrote that if another boy knocked, death would certainly ensue.”
“Ensue. That’s it. I knew it was one of those modern words,” said Mr. Green.
“Another boy?” said Lady Enid. “Why should another boy knock?”
“Hennessey receives about nine telegrams an hour,” answered Mrs. Merillia.
“Really!”
Lady Enid looked at him with keen interest, while Mrs. Merillia continued,—
“You had better take death off the door now, Mr. Ferdinand. I feel more myself. Please thank her ladyship and tell her so.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Nine telegrams an hour!” repeated Lady Enid. “Mr. Vivian, would you mind just seeing me as far as Hill Street? Bob has to go to Tattersall’s.”
“Have I, Niddy?” asked Mr. Green, with evident surprise.
“Yes, to pick up a polo pony. Don’t you recollect?”
“A polo pony, was it? By Jove!”
“I will come with pleasure,” said the poor Prophet, who felt fit only to lie down quietly in his grave. “If you don’t mind being left, grannie?”
Mrs. Merillia was looking pleased.
“No, no. Go with Lady Enid, my dear boy. If any telegrams come shall I open—”
“No,” cried the Prophet, with sudden fierce energy. “For mercy’s sake—I mean, grannie, dear; that none will come. If they should”—his ordinary gentle eyes flamed almost furiously—“Mr. Ferdinand is to burn them unread—yes, to ashes. I will tell him.” And he escorted Lady Enid tumultuously downstairs, missing his footing at every second step.
In the square they parted from Mr. Green, who said,—
“Good-bye, Niddy, old girl. What do I want to pick up at Tattersall’s?”
“A polo pony, Bob,” she answered firmly.
“Oh, a polo pony. Thanks, Chin, chin, Hen. Polo pony is it?”
He strode off, whistling “She wore a wreath of roses” in a puzzled manner, but still preserving the accepted demeanour of a bulwark.
As soon as Mr. Green was out of sight Lady Enid said,—
“We aren’t going to Hill Street.”
“Aren’t we?” replied the Prophet, feebly.
“No. I must see Sir Tiglath Butt to-day. I want you to take me to his door.”
“Where is his door?”
“In Kensington Square. Do you mind hailing a four-wheeler. We can talk privately there. No one will hear us.”
The Prophet hailed a growler, wondering whether they would be able to hear each other. As they got in Lady Enid, after giving the direction, said to the cabman, who was a short person, with curling ebon whiskers, a broken-up expression and a broken-down manner:
“Drive slowly, please and I’ll give you an extra six-pence.”
“Lydy?”
“Drive slowly, and I’ll give you another six-pence.”
“How did yer think I was gawing to drive, lydy?”
“I wonder why cabmen are always so interested in one’s inmost thoughts,” said Lady Enid, as the horse fell down preparatory to starting.
“I wonder.”
“I hope he will go slowly.”
“He seems to be doing so.”
At this point the horse, after knocking on the front of the cab with his hind feet ten or a dozen times, got up, hung his head, and drew a large number of deep and dejected breaths.
“Am I gawing slowly enough, lydy?” asked the cabman, anxiously.
“Yes, but you can let him trot along now.”
“Right, lydy, I ain’t preventing of him.”
As eventually they scrambled slowly forward in the Kensington direction, Lady Enid remarked,—
“Why don’t you have them sent to Jellybrand’s?”
“Have what?” asked the Prophet.
“Your telegrams. The messages from your double life. I do.”
“But I assure you—”
“Mr. Vivian, it’s useless really. I find you hidden away in the inner room of Jellybrand’s with Mr. Sagittarius, closely guarded by Frederick Smith; fourpenny champagne—”
“Four bob—shilling, I mean.”
“Oh, was it?—Upon the table. After I’ve been poisoned, and we are leaving, Mr. Sagittarius calls after you such expressions as ‘Banks of the Mouse—hear from me—marrow—architects and the last day.’ You are obviously agitated by these expressions. We reach your house. I find you have been prophesying through a telescope. The name of Malkiel—a well-known prophet—is mentioned. You turn pale and glance at me imploringly, as if to solicit my silence. I am silent. The next day you announce that you are going to have two afternoon parties.”
“No, no, not afternoon! I never said afternoon!” interposed the Prophet, frantically, as the horse fell down again in order to earn the extra sixpence.
“Well, two parties in the afternoon. It’s the same thing. You say they are odd. You yourself acknowledge it. You tell me you have secrets.”
“Did I?”
“Yes. When I said I had guessed your secret you replied, ‘Which one?’”
“Oh!” murmured the Prophet, trying not to say “come in!” to the horse, which was again knocking with both feet upon the front of the cab.
“You go home. I call during the afternoon, and find that you are entertaining all your guests in your own little room and that your grandmother knows nothing of it and believes you to be working. As I am leaving I see the backs of two of your guests. One is a pelisse, the other a spotted collar. As I near them they mount into a purple omnibus on which is printed in huge letters,‘To the “Pork Butcher’s Rest’’—”
“No! No!” ejaculated the Prophet, pale with horror at this revelation.
“Rest, Crampton Vale, N. I lose them in the shadows. The next day I call and find your grandmother is dying from the noise made by boys bringing you private telegrams. And then you tell me, me—Minerva Partridge—that you have no double life! Yes, you can let him get up now, please.”
The cabman permitted the horse to do so and they again struggled funereally forward. The Prophet was still very pale.
“I suppose it is useless to—very well,” he said. “My life is double.”
“Ah!”
“But only lately, quite lately.”
“Never mind that. Oh! How glad I am that you have had the courage too! You will soon get into it, as I did. But you should have all your telegrams and so forth directed to Jellybrand’s.”
“It’s too late,” replied the Prophet, dejectedly. “Too late. I do wish that horse wouldn’t fall down so continually! It’s most monotonous.”
“The poor man naturally wants the extra sixpence. I think I shall give him a shilling. But now who is Mr. Sagittarius?”
“Who is he?”
“Yes. I’ve seen him several times at Jellybrand’s, and when I first met him I though he was an outside broker.”
“You! Was it on the pier at Margate?”
“Certainly not! Really, Mr. Vivian! even in my double life I occasionally draw the line.”
“I beg your pardon. I—the horse confuses me.”
“Well, he’s stopped knocking now and will be up in another minute. Who did you say Mr. Sagittarius was?”
“I didn’t say he was anybody, but he’s a man.”
“I’d guessed that.”
“And an acquaintance of mine.”
“Yes?”
“I’m afraid it’s going to rain.”
“It generally does in Knightsbridge. Yes?”
“Is Sir Tiglath likely to be in?”
“He knows I’m coming. Well, you haven’t told me who Mr. Sagittarius is.”
“Lady Enid,” said the Prophet, desperately, “I know very little of Mr. Sagittarius beyond the fact that he’s a man, which I’ve already informed you of.”
“Is he an outside broker?”
“No.”
“Then he’s Malkiel. You can’t deny it.”
“I can deny anything,” said the Prophet, who, already upset by the events of the day, was now goaded almost to desperation. “I can and—and must. There’s the horse down again!”
“I shall have to give the man one and sixpence. Are your going to keep your promise to Mrs. Merillia and Sir Tiglath?”
To this question the Prophet determined to give a direct answer, in order to draw Lady Enid away from the more dangerous subjects.
“No,” he said, with a spasm of pain.
“I knew you wouldn’t be able to.”
“Why?”
“Because when one’s once been really and truly silly it’s impossible not to repeat the act, absolutely impossible. You’ll never stop now. You’ll go on from one thing to another, as I do.”
“I cannot think that prophecy is silly,” said the Prophet, with some stiffness.
She looked at him with frank admiration.
“You’re worse than I am! It’s splendid!”
“Worse!”
“Why, yes. You’re foolish enough to think your silly acts sensible. I wish I could get to that. Then perhaps I could impose on Sir Tiglath more easily too.”
She considered this idea seriously, as they started on again, and gradually got free of the little crowd that had been sitting on the horse’s head.
“I must impose upon him,” she said. “And you’ve got to help me.”
“I!” cried the Prophet, feeling terribly unequal to everything. “I cannot possibly consent—”
“Yes, dear Mr. Vivian, you can. And if two thoroughly silly people can’t impose upon one sensible old man, it will be very strange indeed. And now I’m going to tell you what I hadn’t time to tell you yesterday.”
She leaned forward and tapped sharply on the rattling glass in front of the cab. The cabman, bending down, twisted his whiskers towards her.
“Don’t go too fast.”
“I can’t get ‘im to fall down agyne, lydy. ‘E’s too tired.”
“I daresay. But don’t let him walk quite so fast.”
She drew back.
“Mr. Vivian,” she said—and the Prophet thought she had never looked more sensible than now, as she began this revelation—“Mr. Vivian, among the silly people I have met in my dear double life, who do you think are the very silliest?”
“The anti-vaccinators?”
“No. Besides, they so often have small-pox and become quite sensible.”
“The atheists?”
“I used to think so, but not now. And most of those I knew are Roman Catholics at present.”
“The women who don’t desire to be slaves?”
“There aren’t any.”
“The tearers of Paderewski’s hair?”
“I so seldom meet them, because they all live out in the suburbs.”
“The tight-lacers?”
“They get red noses, poor things, and disappear. They’re not permanent enough to count as the very silliest.”
“I give it up.”
“The Spiritualists and the Christian Scientists. That’s why I love them best, and spend most of my double life with them. How you would get on with them! How much at ease you would be in their midst!”
“Really! But aren’t they in opposite camps?”
“Dear things! They often think so, I believe. But really they aren’t. Half the Christian Scientists begin as Spiritualists. And a great many Spiritualists were once Christian Scientists.”
“Which are you?”
“Both, of course.”
“Dear me!”
“As you will be when you’ve got thoroughly into your double life. Well, my greatest friend—in my double life, you understand—is a Mrs. Vane Bridgeman, a Christian Scientist and Spiritualist. She is very rich, and magnificently idiotic. She supports all foolish charities. She has almshouses for broken-down mediums on Sunnington Common in Kent. She has endowed a hospital for sick fortune-tellers. She gave five hundred pounds to the home for indigent thought-readers, and nearly as much to the ‘Palmists’ Seaside Retreat’ at Millaby Bay near Dover. I don’t know how many Christian Science Temples she hasn’t erected, or subscribed liberally to. She turns every table in her house. She won’t leave even one alone. Her early breakfasts for star-gazers are famous, and it’s impossible to dine with her without sitting next to a horoscope-caster, or being taken in—to dinner, of course—by a crystal diviner or a nose-prophet.”
“A nose-prophet! What’s that?”
“A person who tells your fortune by the shape of your nose.”
“Oh, I see.”
“Well, you understand now that there’s no sillier person in London than dear Mrs. Bridgeman?”
“Oh, quite.”
“She’s done a great deal for me, more than I can ever repay.”
“Indeed.”
“Yes, in introducing me to the real inner circles of idiotcy. Well, in return, I’ve sworn—”
“You too!”
“What do you mean?”
“Oh, nothing. I beg your pardon. Please go on.”
She looked at him curiously, and continued.
“I’ve sworn—that is, pledged my honour, you know—”
“I know! I know!”
“To introduce her to at least one thoroughly sensible person—a man, she prefers.”
“And you’ve chosen—?”
“Sir Tiglath, because he’s the only one I know. Once, I confess, I thought of you.”
“Of me!”
“Yes, but of course I didn’t really know you then.”
She looked at him with genuine regard. The Prophet scarcely knew whether to feel delighted or distressed.
“Now, you see, Mr. Vivian, if Sir Tiglath found out for certain that I was Miss Minerva, he might discover my double life, and if he did that, he is so sensible that I am sure he would never speak to me again, and I could not fulfil my vow to dear Mrs. Bridgeman.”
“I quite see.”
“Nor my other vow to myself.”
“Which one?”
“Oh, never mind.”
“I won’t.”
“He only said that about partridges in January, I find, because he happened to see one of my letters in Jellybrand’s window. He doesn’t associate that letter with me. So it ought to be all right, and I’ve arranged my campaign.”
“But what can I—?”
She smiled at him with some Scottish craft.
“Don’t bother. You’ve got to be my aide-de-camp, that’s all. Ah, here we are!”
For at this moment the horse, with a great effort succeeded in falling down, for the last time, before the astronomer’s door.