The environment finally TRIUMPHS.
Winter had come, and on a bitter cold
winter’s night, Ernest Le Breton once more received
an unexpected telegram asking him to hurry down without
a moment’s delay on important business to the
‘Morning Intelligence’ office. The
telegram didn’t state at all what the business
was; it merely said it was urgent and immediate without
in any way specifying its nature. Ernest sallied
forth in some perturbation, for his memories of the
last occasion when the ‘Morning Intelligence’
required his aid on important business were far from
pleasant ones; but for Edie’s sake he felt he
must go, and so he went without a murmur.
‘Sit down, Le Breton,’
Mr. Lancaster said slowly when Ernest entered.
’The matter I want to see you about’s a
very peculiar one. I understand from some of
my friends that you’re a son of Sir Owen Le
Breton, the Indian general.’
‘Yes, I am,’ Ernest answered,
wondering within himself to what end this curious
preamble could possibly be leading up. If there’s
any one profession, he thought, which is absolutely
free from the slightest genealogical interest in the
persons of its professors, surely that particular
calling ought to be the profession of journalism.
’Well, so I hear, Le Breton.
Now, I believe I’m right in saying, am I not,
that it was your father who first subdued and organised
a certain refractory hill-tribe on the Tibetan frontier,
known as the Bodahls, wasn’t it?’
‘Quite right,’ Ernest
replied, with a glimmering idea slowly rising in his
mind as to what Mr. Lancaster was now driving at.
’Ah, that’s good, very
good indeed, certainly. Well, tell me, Le Breton,
do you yourself happen to know anything on earth about
these precious insignificant people?’
‘I know all about them,’
Ernest answered quickly. ’I’ve read
all my father’s papers and despatches, and seen
his maps and plans and reports in our house at home
from my boyhood upward. I know as much about
the Bodahls, in fact, as I know about Bayswater, or
Holborn, or Fleet Street.’
‘Capital, capital,’ the
editor said, fondling his big hands softly; ’that’ll
exactly suit us. And could you get at these plans
and papers now, this very evening, just to refresh
the gaps in your memory?’
‘I could have them all down
here,’ Ernest answered, ’at an hour’s
notice.’
‘Good,’ the editor said
again. ’I’ll send a boy for them with
a cab. Meanwhile, you’d better be perpending
this telegram from our Simla correspondent, just received.
It’s going to be the question of the moment,
and we should very much like you to give us a leader
of a full column about the matter.’
Ernest took the telegram and read
it over carefully. It ran in the usual very abbreviated
newspaper fashion: ’Russian agents revolted
Bodahls Tibetan frontier. Advices Peshawur state
Russian army marching on Merv. Bodahls attacked
Commissioner, declared independence British raj.’
‘Will you write us a leader?’ the editor
asked, simply.
Ernest drew a long breath. Three
guineas! Edie, Dot, an empty exchequer!
If he could only have five minutes to make his mind
up! But he couldn’t. After all, what
did it matter what he said about these poor unknown
Bodahls? If he didn’t write the leader,
somebody else who knew far less about the subject
than he did would be sure to do it. He wasn’t
responsible for that impalpable entity ’the
policy of the paper.’ Beside the great social
power of the ’Morning Intelligence,’ of
the united English people, what was he, Ernest Le
Breton, but a miserable solitary misplaced unit?
One way or the other, he could do very little indeed,
for good or for evil. After half a minute’s
internal struggle, he answered back the editor faintly,
‘Yes, I will.’ ‘For Edie,’
he muttered half audibly to himself; ‘I must
do it for dear Edie.’
’And you’ll allow me to
make whatever alterations I think necessary in the
article to suit the policy of the paper?’ the
editor asked once more, looking through him with his
sleepy keen grey eyes. ’You see, Le Breton,
I don’t want to annoy you, and I know your own
principles are rather peculiar; but of course all we
want you for is just to give us the correct statement
of facts about these outlandish people. All
that concerns our own attitude towards them as a nation
falls naturally under the head of editorial matter.
You must see yourself that it’s quite impossible
for us to let any one single contributor dictate from
his own standpoint the policy of the paper.’
Ernest bent his head slowly.
’You’re very kind to argue out the matter
with me so, Mr. Lancaster,’ he said, trembling
with excitement. ’Yes, I suppose I must
bury my scruples. I’ll write a leader about
these Bodahls, and let you deal with it afterwards
as you think proper.’
They showed him into the bare little
back room, and sent a boy up with a hastily written
note to Ronald for the maps and papers. There
Ernest sat for an hour or two, writing away for very
life, and putting on paper everything that he knew
about the poor Bodahls. By two o’clock,
the proofs had all come up to him, and he took his
hat in a shamefaced manner to sally out into the cold
street, where he hoped to hide his rising remorse
and agony under cover of the solitary night.
He knew too well what ‘the policy of the paper’
would be, to venture upon asking any questions about
it. As he left the office, a boy brought him
down a sealed envelope from Mr. Lancaster. With
his usual kindly thoughtfulness the editor had sent
him at once the customary cheque for three guineas.
Ernest folded it up with quivering fingers, and felt
the blood burn in his cheeks as he put it away in
his waistcoat pocket. That accursed money!
For it he had that night sold his dearest principles!
And yet, not for it, not for it, not for it—oh,
no, not for it, but for Dot and Edie!
The boy had a duplicate proof in his
other hand, and Ernest saw at once that it was his
own leader, as altered and corrected by Mr. Lancaster.
He asked the boy whether he might see it; and the boy,
knowing it was Ernest’s own writing, handed it
to him at once without further question. Ernest
did not dare to look at it then and there for fear
he should break down utterly before the boy; he put
it for the moment into his inner pocket, and buttoned
his thin overcoat tightly around him. It was
colder still in the frosty air of early morning, and
the contrast to the heated atmosphere of the printing
house struck him with ominous chill as he issued slowly
forth into the silent precincts of unpeopled Fleet
Street.
It was a terrible memorable night,
that awful Tuesday; the coldest night known for many
years in any English winter. Snow lay deep upon
the ground, and a few flakes were falling still from
the cloudy sky, for it was in the second week of January.
The wind was drifting it in gusty eddies down the
long streets, and driving the drifts before it like
whirling dust in an August storm. Not a cab was
to be seen anywhere, not even a stray hansom crawling
home from clubs or theatres; and Ernest set out with
a rueful countenance to walk as best he might alone
through the snow all the way to Holloway. It
is a long and dreary trudge at any time; it seemed
very long and dreary indeed to Ernest Le Breton, with
his delicate frame and weak chest, battling against
the fierce wind on a dark and snowy winter’s
night, and with the fever of a great anxiety and a
great remorse silently torturing his distracted bosom.
At each step he took through the snow, he almost fancied
himself a hunted Bodahl. Would British soldiers
drive those poor savage women and children to die
so of cold and hunger on their snowy hilltops?
Would English fathers and mothers, at home at their
ease, applaud the act with careless thoughtlessness
as a piece of our famous spirited foreign policy?
And would his own article, written with his own poor
thin cold fingers in that day’s ‘Morning
Intelligence,’ help to spur them on upon that
wicked and unnecessary war? What right had we
to conquer the Bodahls? What right had we to
hold them in subjection or to punish them for revolting?
And above all, what right had he, Ernest Le Breton,
upon whose head the hereditary guilt of the first
conquest ought properly to have weighed with such personal
heaviness—what right had he, of all men,
directly or indirectly, to aid or abet the English
people in their immoral and inhuman resolve?
Oh, God, his sin was worse than theirs; for they sinned,
thinking they did justly; but as for him, he sinned
against the light; he knew the better, and, bribed
by gold, he did the worse. At that moment, the
little slip of printed paper in his waistcoat pocket
seemed to burn through all the frosts of that awful
evening like a chain of molten steel into his very
marrow!
Trudging on slowly through the white
stainless snow, step by step,—snow that
cast a sheet of pure white even over the narrow lanes
behind the Farringdon Road,—cold at foot
and hot at heart, he reached at last the wide corner
by the Angel at Islington. The lights in the
windows were all out long ago, of course, but the
lamps outside were still flaring brightly, and a solitary
policeman was standing under one of them, trying to
warm his frozen hands by breathing rapidly on the
curved and distorted fingers. Ernest was very
tired of his tramp by that time, and emboldened by
companionship he stopped awhile to rest himself in
the snow and wind under the opposite lamplight.
Putting his back against the post, he drew the altered
proof of his article slowly out of his inner pocket.
It had a strange fascination for him, and yet he dreaded
to look at it. With an effort, he unfolded it
in his stiff fingers, and held the paper up to the
light, regardless of the fact that the policeman was
watching his proceedings with the interest naturally
due from a man of his profession to a suspicious-looking
character who was probably a convicted pickpocket.
The first sentence once more told him the worst.
There was no doubt at all about it. The three
guineas in his pocket were the price of blood!
‘The insult to British prestige
in the East,’ ran that terrible opening paragraph,
’implied in the brief telegram which we publish
this morning from our own Correspondent at Simla, calls
for a speedy and a severe retribution. It must
be washed out in blood.’ Blood, blood,
blood! The letters swam before his eyes.
It was this, then, that he, the disciple of peace-loving
Max Schurz, the hater of war and conquest, the foe
of unjust British domination over inferior races—it
was this that he had helped to make plausible with
his special knowledge and his ready pen! Oh,
heaven, what reparation could he make for this horrid
crime he had knowingly and wilfully committed?
What could he do to avoid the guilt of those poor
savages’ blood upon his devoted head? In
one moment he thought out a hundred scenes of massacre
and pillage—scenes such as he knew only
too well always precede and accompany the blessings
of British rule in distant dependencies. The
temptation had been strong—the money had
been sorely wanted—there was very little
food in the house; but how could he ever have yielded
to such a depth of premeditated wickedness! He
folded the piece of paper into his pocket once more,
and buried his face in his hands for a whole minute.
The policeman now began to suspect that he was not
so much a pickpocket as an escaped lunatic.
And so he was, no doubt. Of course
we who are practical men of the world know very well
that all this foolish feeling on Ernest Le Breton’s
part was very womanish and weak and overwrought; that
he ought to have done the work that was set before
him, asking no questions for conscience’ sake;
and that he might honestly have pocketed the three
guineas, letting his supposed duty to a few naked
brown people somewhere up in the Indian hill-country
take care of itself, as all the rest of us always
do. But some allowance must naturally be made
for his peculiar temperament and for his particular
state of health. Consumptive people are apt to
take a somewhat hectic view of life in every way;
they lack the common-sense ballast that makes most
of us able to value the lives of a few hundred poor
distant savages at their proper infinitesimal figure.
At any rate, Ernest Le Breton, as a matter of fact,
rightly or wrongly, did take this curious standpoint
about things in general; and did then and there turn
back through the deep snow, all his soul burning within
him, fired with dire remorse, and filled only with
one idea—how to prevent this wicked article
to which he had contributed so many facts and opinions
from getting printed in to-morrow’s paper.
True, it was not he who had put in the usual newspaper
platitudes about the might of England, and the insult
to the British flag, and the immediate necessity for
a stern retaliation; but all that vapouring wicked
talk (as he thought it) would go forth to the world
fortified by the value of his special facts and his
obviously intimate acquaintance with the whole past
history of the Bodahl people. So he turned back
and battled once more with the wind and snow as far
as Fleet Street; and then he rushed excitedly into
the ‘Morning Intelligence’ office, and
asked with the wildness of despair to see the editor.
Mr. Lancaster had gone home an hour
since, the porter said; but Mr. Wilks, the sub-editor,
was still there, superintending the printing of the
paper, and if Ernest liked, Mr. Wilks would see him
immediately.
Ernest nodded assent at once, and
was forthwith ushered up into Mr. Wilks’s private
sanctum. The sub-editor was a dry, grizzly-bearded
man, with a prevailing wolfish greyness of demeanour
about his whole person; and he shook Ernest’s
proffered hand solemnly, in the dreary fashion that
is always begotten of the systematic transposition
of night and day.
‘For heaven’s sake, Mr.
Wilks,’ Ernest cried imploringly, ’I want
to know whether you can possibly suppress or at least
alter my leader on the Bodahl insurrection!’
Mr. Wilks looked at him curiously,
as one might look at a person who had suddenly developed
violent symptoms of dangerous insanity. ‘Suppress
the Bodahl leader,’ he said slowly like one dreaming.
’Suppress the Bodahl leader! Impossible!
Why, it’s the largest type heading in the whole
of to-day’s paper, is this Bodahl business.
“Shocking Outrage upon a British Commissioner
on the Indian Frontier. Revolt of the Entire
Bodahl Tribe. Russian Intrigue in Central Asia.
Dangerous Position of the Viceroy at Simla.”
Oh, dear me, no; not to have a leader upon that,
my dear sir, would be simply suicidal!’
‘But can’t you cut out
my part of it, at least,’ Ernest said anxiously.
’Oh, Mr. Wilks, you don’t know what I’ve
suffered to-night on account of this dreadful unmerited
leader. It’s wicked, it’s unjust,
it’s abominable, and I can’t bear to think
that I have had anything to do with sending it out
into the world to inflame the passions of unthinking
people! Do please try to let my part of it be
left out, and only Mr. Lancaster’s, at least,
be printed.’
Mr. Wilks looked at him again with
the intensest suspicion.
‘A sub-editor,’ he answered
evasively, ’has nothing at all to do with the
politics of a paper. The editor alone manages
that department on his own responsibility. But
what on earth would you have me do? I can’t
stop the machines for half an hour, can I, just to
let you have the chance of doctoring your leader?
If you thought it wrong to write it, you ought never
to have written it; now it’s written it must
certainly stand.’
Ernest sank into a chair, and said
nothing; but he turned so deadly pale that Mr. Wilks
was fain to have recourse to a little brown flask
he kept stowed away in a corner of his desk, and to
administer a prompt dose of brandy and water.
‘There, there,’ he said,
in the kindest manner of which he was capable, ’what
are you going to do now? You can’t be going
out again in this state and in this weather, can you?’
‘Yes, I am,’ Ernest answered
feebly. ’I’m going to walk home at
once to Holloway.’
‘To Holloway!’ the sub-editor
said in a tone of comparative horror. ’Oh!
no, I can’t allow that. Wait here an hour
or two till the workmen’s trains begin running.
Or, stay; Lancaster left his brougham here for me
to-night, as I have to be off early to-morrow on business;
I’ll send you home in that, and let Hawkins get
me a cab from the mews by order.’
Ernest made no resistance; and so
the sub-editor sent him home at once in Lancaster’s
brougham.
When he got home in the early grey
of morning, he found Edie still sitting up for him
in her chair, and wondering what could be detaining
him so long at the newspaper office. He threw
himself wildly at her feet, and, in such broken sentences
as he was able to command, he told her all the pitiful
story. Edie soothed him and kissed him as he
went along, but never said a word for good or evil
till he had finished.
‘It was a terrible temptation,
darling,’ she said softly: ’a terrible
temptation, indeed, and I don’t wonder you gave
way to it; but we mustn’t touch the three guineas.
As you say rightly, it’s blood-money.’
Ernest drew the cheque slowly from
his pocket, and held it hesitatingly a moment in his
hand. Edie looked at him curiously.
‘What are you going to do with
it, darling?’ she asked in a low voice, as he
gazed vacantly at the last dying embers in the little
smouldering fireplace.
‘Nothing, Edie dearest,’
Ernest answered huskily, folding it up and putting
it away in the drawer by the window. They neither
of them dared to look the other in the face, but they
bad not the heart to burn it boldly. It was blood-money,
to be sure; but three guineas are really so very useful!
Four days later, little Dot was taken
with a sudden illness. Ernest and Edie sat watching
by her little cradle throughout the night, and saw
with heavy hearts that she was rapidly growing feebler.
Poor wee soul, they had nothing to keep her for:
it would be better, perhaps, if she were gone; and
yet, the human heart cannot be stifled by such calm
deliverances of practical reason; it will let
its hot emotions overcome the cold calculations of
better and worse supplied it by the unbiassed intellect.
All night long they sat there tearfully,
fearing she would not live till morning; and in the
early dawn they sent round hastily for a neighbouring
doctor. They had no money to pay him with, to
be sure; but that didn’t much matter; they could
leave it over for the present, and perhaps some day
before long Ernest might write another social, and
earn an honest three guineas. Anyhow, it was
a question of life and death, and they could not help
sending for the doctor, whatever difficulty they might
afterwards find in paying him.
The doctor came, and looked with the
usual professional seriousness at the baby patient.
Did they feed her entirely on London milk? he asked
doubtfully. Yes, entirely. Ah! then that
was the sole root of the entire mischief. She
was very dangerously ill, no doubt, and he didn’t
know whether he could pull her through anyhow; but
if anything would do it, it was a change to goat’s
milk. There was a man who sold goat’s milk
round the corner. He would show Ernest where
to find him.
Ernest looked doubtfully at Edie,
and Edie looked back again at Ernest. One thought
rose at once in both their minds. They had no
money to pay for it with, except—except
that dreadful cheque. For four days it had lain,
burning a hole in Ernest’s heart from its drawer
by the window, and he had not dared to change it.
Now he rose without saying a word, and opened the
drawer in a solemn, hesitating fashion. He looked
once more at Edie inquiringly; Edie nodded a faint
approval. Ernest, pale as death, put on his hat,
and went out totteringly with the doctor. He stopped
on the way to change the cheque at the baker’s
where they usually dealt, and then went on to the
goat’s milk shop. How that sovereign he
flung upon the counter seemed to ring the knell of
his seif-respect! The man who changed it noticed
the strangeness of Ernest’s look, and knew at
once he had not come by the money honestly. He
rang it twice to make sure it was good, and then gave
the change to Ernest. But Dot, at least, was
saved; that was a great thing. The milk arrived
duly every morning for some weeks, and, after a severe
struggle, Dot grew gradually better. While the
danger lasted, neither of them dared think much of
the cheque; but when Dot had got quite well again,
Ernest was concious of a certain unwonted awkwardness
of manner in talking to Edie. He knew perfectly
well what it meant; they were both accomplices in
crime together.
When Ernest wrote his ‘social’
after Max Schurz’s affair, he felt he had already
touched the lowest depths of degradation. He knew
now that he had touched a still lower one. Oh!
horrible abyss of self-abasement!—he had
taken the blood-money. And yet, it was to save
Dot’s life! Herbert was right, after all:
quite right. Yes, yes, all hope was gone:
the environment had finally triumphed.
In the awful self-reproach of that
deadly remorse for the acceptance of the blood-money,
Ernest Le Breton felt at last in his heart that surely
the bitterness of death was past. It would be
better for them all to die together than to live on
through such a life of shame and misery. Ah,
Peter, Peter, you are not the only one that has denied
his Lord and Master!
And yet, Ernest Le Breton had only
written part of a newspaper leader about a small revolt
of the Bodahls. And he suffered more agony for
it than many a sensitive man, even, has suffered for
the commission of some obvious crime.
‘I say, Berkeley,’ Lancaster
droned out in the lobby of their club one afternoon
shortly afterwards, ’what on earth am I ever
to do about that socialistic friend of yours, Le Breton?
I can’t ever give him any political work again,
you know. Just fancy! first, you remember, I
set him upon the Schurz imprisonment business, and
he nearly went mad then because I didn’t back
up Schurz for wanting to murder the Emperor of Russia.
After that, just now the other day, I tried him on
the Bodahl business, and hang me if he didn’t
have qualms of conscience about it afterwards, and
trudge back through all the snow that awful Tuesday,
to see if he couldn’t induce Wilks to stop the
press, and let him cut it all out at the last moment!
He’s as mad as a March hare, you know, and if
it weren’t that I’m really sorry for him
I wouldn’t go on taking socials from him any
longer. But I will; I’ll give him work as
long as he’ll do it for me on any terms; though,
of course, it’s obviously impossible under the
circumstances to let him have another go at politics,
isn’t it?’
‘You’re really awfully
kind, Lancaster,’ Berkeley answered warmly.
’No other fellow would do as much for Le Breton
as you do. I admit he’s absolutely impracticable,
but I would give more than I can tell you if only
I thought he could be made to pull through somehow.’
‘Impracticable!’ the editor
said shortly, ’I believe you, indeed. Why,
do you remember that ridiculous Schurz business?
Well, I sent Le Breton a cheque for eight guineas
for that lot, and can you credit it, it’s remained
uncashed from that day to this. I really think
he must have destroyed it.’
‘No doubt,’ Arthur answered,
with a smile. ’And the Bodahls? What
about them?’
’Oh! he kept that cheque for
a few days uncashed—though I’m sure
he wanted money at the time; but in the end, I’m
happy to say, he cashed it.’
Arthur’s countenance fell ominously.
‘He did!’ he said gloomily.
’He cashed it! That’s bad news indeed,
then. I must go and see them to-morrow morning
early. I’m afraid they must be at the last
pitch of poverty before they’d consent to do
that. And yet, Solomon says, men do not despise
a thief if he steal to satisfy his soul when he is
hungry. And Le Breton, after all, has a wife
and child to think of.’
Lancaster stared at him blankly, and
turned aside to glance at the telegrams, saying to
himself meanwhile, that all these young fellows of
the new school alike were really quite too incomprehensible
for a sensible, practical man like himself to deal
with comfortably.