As he went down the narrow staircase,
covered with its dingy and threadbare carpet, he found
the house so full of dirty yellow haze that he realized
that the fog must be of the extraordinary ones which
are remembered in after-years as abnormal specimens
of their kind. He recalled that there had been
one of the sort three years before, and that traffic
and business had been almost entirely stopped by it,
that accidents had happened in the streets, and that
people having lost their way had wandered about turning
corners until they found themselves far from their
intended destinations and obliged to take refuge in
hotels or the houses of hospitable strangers.
Curious incidents had occurred and odd stories were
told by those who had felt themselves obliged by circumstances
to go out into the baffling gloom. He guessed
that something of a like nature had fallen upon the
town again. The gas-light on the landings and
in the melancholy hall burned feebly—so
feebly that one got but a vague view of the rickety
hat-stand and the shabby overcoats and head-gear hanging
upon it. It was well for him that he had but
a corner or so to turn before he reached the pawnshop
in whose window he had seen the pistol he intended
to buy.
When he opened the street-door he
saw that the fog was, upon the whole, perhaps even
heavier and more obscuring, if possible, than the one
so well remembered. He could not see anything
three feet before him, he could not see with distinctness
anything two feet ahead. The sensation of stepping
forward was uncertain and mysterious enough to be almost
appalling. A man not sufficiently cautious might
have fallen into any open hole in his path.
Antony Dart kept as closely as possible to the sides
of the houses. It would have been easy to walk
off the pavement into the middle of the street but
for the edges of the curb and the step downward from
its level. Traffic had almost absolutely ceased,
though in the more important streets link-boys were
making efforts to guide men or four-wheelers slowly
along. The blind feeling of the thing was rather
awful. Though but few pedestrians were out, Dart
found himself once or twice brushing against or coming
into forcible contact with men feeling their way about
like himself.
“One turn to the right,”
he repeated mentally, “two to the left, and the
place is at the corner of the other side of the street.”
He managed to reach it at last, but
it had been a slow, and therefore, long journey.
All the gas-jets the little shop owned were lighted,
but even under their flare the articles in the window—the
one or two once cheaply gaudy dresses and shawls and
men’s garments—hung in the haze like
the dreary, dangling ghosts of things recently executed.
Among watches and forlorn pieces of old-fashioned
jewelry and odds and ends, the pistol lay against
the folds of a dirty gauze shawl. There it was.
It would have been annoying if someone else had been
beforehand and had bought it.
Inside the shop more dangling spectres
hung and the place was almost dark. It was a
shabby pawnshop, and the man lounging behind the counter
was a shabby man with an unshaven, unamiable face.
“I want to look at that pistol
in the right-hand corner of your window,” Antony
Dart said.
The pawnbroker uttered a sound something
between a half-laugh and a grunt. He took the
weapon from the window.
Antony Dart examined it critically.
He must make quite sure of it. He made no further
remark. He felt he had done with speech.
Being told the price asked for the
purchase, he drew out his purse and took the money
from it. After making the payment he noted that
he still possessed a five-pound note and some sovereigns.
There passed through his mind a wonder as to who
would spend it. The most decent thing, perhaps,
would be to give it away. If it was in his room—to-morrow—
the parish would not bury him, and it would be safer
that the parish should.
He was thinking of this as he left
the shop and began to cross the street. Because
his mind was wandering he was less watchful.
Suddenly a rubber-tired hansom, moving without sound,
appeared immediately in his path—the horse’s
head loomed up above his own. He made the inevitable
involuntary whirl aside to move out of the way, the
hansom passed, and turning again, he went on.
His movement had been too swift to allow of his realizing
the direction in which his turn had been made.
He was wholly unaware that when he crossed the street
he crossed backward instead of forward. He turned
a corner literally feeling his way, went on, turned
another, and after walking the length of the street,
suddenly understood that he was in a strange place
and had lost his bearings.
This was exactly what had happened
to people on the day of the memorable fog of three
years before. He had heard them talking of such
experiences, and of the curious and baffling sensations
they gave rise to in the brain. Now he understood
them. He could not be far from his lodgings,
but he felt like a man who was blind, and who had been
turned out of the path he knew. He had not the
resource of the people whose stories he had heard.
He would not stop and address anyone. There could
be no certainty as to whom he might find himself speaking
to. He would speak to no one. He would
wander about until he came upon some clew. Even
if he came upon none, the fog would surely lift a little
and become a trifle less dense in course of time.
He drew up the collar of his overcoat, pulled his
hat down over his eyes and went on—his hand
on the thing he had thrust into a pocket.
He did not find his clew as he had
hoped, and instead of lifting the fog grew heavier.
He found himself at last no longer striving for any
end, but rambling along mechanically, feeling like
a man in a dream—a nightmare. Once
he recognized a weird suggestion in the mystery about
him. To-morrow might one be wandering about aimlessly
in some such haze. He hoped not.
His lodgings were not far from the
Embankment, and he knew at last that he was wandering
along it, and had reached one of the bridges.
His mood led him to turn in upon it, and when he reached
an embrasure to stop near it and lean upon the parapet
looking down. He could not see the water, the
fog was too dense, but he could hear some faint splashing
against stones. He had taken no food and was
rather faint. What a strange thing it was to
feel faint for want of food—to stand alone,
cut off from every other human being—everything
done for. No wonder that sometimes, particularly
on such days as these, there were plunges made from
the parapet—no wonder. He leaned farther
over and strained his eyes to see some gleam of water
through the yellowness. But it was not to be
done. He was thinking the inevitable thing, of
course; but such a plunge would not do for him.
The other thing would destroy all traces.
As he drew back he heard something
fall with the solid tinkling sound of coin on the
flag pavement. When he had been in the pawnbroker’s
shop he had taken the gold from his purse and thrust
it carelessly into his waistcoat pocket, thinking
that it would be easy to reach when he chose to give
it to one beggar or another, if he should see some
wretch who would be the better for it. Some
movement he had made in bending had caused a sovereign
to slip out and it had fallen upon the stones.
He did not intend to pick it up, but
in the moment in which he stood looking down at it
he heard close to him a shuffling movement. What
he had thought a bundle of rags or rubbish covered
with sacking—some tramp’s deserted
or forgotten belongings—was stirring.
It was alive, and as he bent to look at it the sacking
divided itself, and a small head, covered with a shock
of brilliant red hair, thrust itself out, a shrewd,
small face turning to look up at him slyly with deep-set
black eyes.
It was a human girl creature about twelve years old.
“Are yer goin’ to do it?”
she said in a hoarse, street-strained voice.
“Yer would be a fool if yer did—with
as much as that on yer.”
She pointed with a reddened, chapped,
and dirty hand at the sovereign.
“Pick it up,” he said. “You
may have it.”
Her wild shuffle forward was an actual
leap. The hand made a snatching clutch at the
coin. She was evidently afraid that he was either
not in earnest or would repent. The next second
she was on her feet and ready for flight.
“Stop,” he said; “I’ve got
more to give away.”
She hesitated—not believing
him, yet feeling it madness to lose a chance.
“More!” she gasped.
Then she drew nearer to him, and a singular change
came upon her face. It was a change which made
her look oddly human.
“Gawd, mister!” she said.
“Yer can give away a quid like it was nothin’—an’
yer’ve got more—an’ yer goin’
to do that—jes cos yer ’ad a
bit too much lars night an’ there’s a fog
this mornin’! You take it straight from
me—don’t yer do it. I give yer
that tip for the suvrink.”
She was, for her years, so ugly and
so ancient, and hardened in voice and skin and manner
that she fascinated him. Not that a man who has
no To-morrow in view is likely to be particularly
conscious of mental processes. He was done for,
but he stood and stared at her. What part of
the Power moving the scheme of the universe stood near
and thrust him on in the path designed he did not
know then—perhaps never did. He was
still holding on to the thing in his pocket, but he
spoke to her again.
“What do you mean?” he asked glumly.
She sidled nearer, her sharp eyes on his face.
“I bin watchin’ yer,”
she said. “I sat down and pulled the sack
over me ‘ead to breathe inside it an’
get a bit warm. An’ I see yer come.
I knowed wot yer was after, I did. I watched
yer through a ’ole in me sack. I wasn’t
goin’ to call a copper. I shouldn’t
want ter be stopped meself if I made up me mind.
I seed a gal dragged out las’ week an’
it’d a broke yer ’art to see ’er
tear ‘er clothes an’ scream. Wot
business ‘ad they preventin’ ‘er
goin’ off quiet? I wouldn’t ‘a’
stopped yer—but w’en the quid fell,
that made it different.”
“I—” he said,
feeling the foolishness of the statement, but making
it, nevertheless, “I am ill.”
“Course yer ill. It’s
yer ‘ead. Come along er me an’ get
a cup er cawfee at a stand, an’ buck up.
If yer’ve give me that quid straight—
wish-yer-may-die—I’ll go with yer
an’ get a cup myself. I ain’t ’ad
a bite since yesterday—an’ ‘t
wa’n’t nothin’ but a slice o’
polony sossidge I found on a dust-’eap.
Come on, mister.”
She pulled his coat with her cracked
hand. He glanced down at it mechanically, and
saw that some of the fissures had bled and the roughened
surface was smeared with the blood. They stood
together in the small space in which the fog enclosed
them—he and she—the man with
no To-morrow and the girl thing who seemed as old as
himself, with her sharp, small nose and chin, her
sharp eyes and voice—and yet—perhaps
the fogs enclosing did it—something drew
them together in an uncanny way. Something made
him forget the lost clew to the lodging-house—
something made him turn and go with her—a
thing led in the dark.
“How can you find your way?” he said.
“I lost mine.”
“There ain’t no fog can
lose me,” she answered, shuffling along by his
side; “‘sides, it’s goin’ to
lift. Look at that man comin’ to’ards
us.”
It was true that they could see through
the orange-colored mist the approaching figure of
a man who was at a yard’s distance from them.
Yes, it was lifting slightly—at least enough
to allow of one’s making a guess at the direction
in which one moved.
“Where are you going?” he asked.
“Apple Blossom Court,”
she answered. “The cawfee-stand’s
in a street near it—and there’s a
shop where I can buy things.”
“Apple Blossom Court!” he ejaculated.
“What a name!”
“There ain’t no apple-blossoms
there,” chuckling; “nor no smell of ’em.
’T ain’t as nice as its nime is—Apple
Blossom Court ain’t.”
“What do you want to buy?
A pair of shoes?” The shoes her naked feet
were thrust into were leprous-looking things through
which nearly all her toes protruded. But she
chuckled when he spoke.
“No, I ‘m goin’
to buy a di’mond tirarer to go to the opery in,”
she said, dragging her old sack closer round her neck.
“I ain’t ad a noo un since I went to
the last Drorin’-room.”
It was impudent street chaff, but
there was cheerful spirit in it, and cheerful spirit
has some occult effect upon morbidity. Antony
Dart did not smile, but he felt a faint stirring of
curiosity, which was, after all, not a bad thing for
a man who had not felt an interest for a year.
“What is it you are going to buy?”
“I’m goin’ to fill
me stummick fust,” with a grin of elation.
“Three thick slices o’ bread an’
drippin’ an’ a mug o’ cawfee.
An’ then I’m goin’ to get sumethin’
’earty to carry to Polly. She ain’t
no good, pore thing!”
“Who is she?”
Stopping a moment to drag up the heel
of her dreadful shoe, she answered him with an unprejudiced
directness which might have been appalling if he had
been in the mood to be appalled.
“Ain’t eighteen, an’
tryin’ to earn ‘er livin’ on the
street. She ain’t made for it. Little
country thing, allus frightened to death an’
ready to bust out cryin’. Gents ain’t
goin’ to stand that. A lot of ’em
wants cheerin’ up as much as she does. Gent
as was in liquor last night knocked ‘er down
an’ give ’er a black eye. ‘T
wan’t ill feelin’, but he lost his temper,
an’ give ’er a knock casual. She
can’t go out to-night, an’ she’s
been ‘uddled up all day cryin’ for ’er
mother.”
“Where is her mother?”
“In the country—on
a farm. Polly took a place in a lodgin’-’ouse
an’ got in trouble. The biby was dead,
an’ when she come out o’ Queen Charlotte’s
she was took in by a woman an’ kep’.
She kicked ’er out in a week ‘cos of
her cryin’. The life didn’t suit ’er.
I found ‘er cryin’ fit to split ‘er
chist one night—corner o’ Apple Blossom
Court—an’ I took care of ’er.”
“Where?”
“Me chambers,” grinning;
“top loft of a ’ouse in the court.
If anyone else ’d ’ave it I should be
turned out. It’s an ’ole, I can tell
yer— but it’s better than sleepin’
under the bridges.”
“Take me to see it,” said
Antony Dart. “I want to see the girl.”
The words spoke themselves.
Why should he care to see either cockloft or girl?
He did not. He wanted to go back to his lodgings
with that which he had come out to buy. Yet he
said this thing. His companion looked up at
him with an expression actually relieved.
“Would yer tike up with ’er?”
with eager sharpness, as if confronting a simple business
proposition. “She’s pretty an’
clean, an’ she won’t drink a drop o’
nothin’. If she was treated kind she’d
be cheerfler. She’s got a round fice an’
light ‘air an’ eyes. ’Er ’air’s
curly. P’raps yer’d like ’er.”
“Take me to see her.”
“She’d look better to-morrow,”
cautiously, “when the swellin’s gone down
round ’er eye.”
Dart started—and it was
because he had for the last five minutes forgotten
something.
“I shall not be here to-morrow,”
he said. His grasp upon the thing in his pocket
had loosened, and he tightened it.
“I have some more money in my
purse,” he said deliberately. “I
meant to give it away before going. I want to
give it to people who need it very much.”
She gave him one of the sly, squinting glances.
“Deservin’ cases?” She put it to
him in brazen mockery.
“I don’t care,” he answered slowly
and heavily. “I don’t care a damn.”
Her face changed exactly as he had
seen it change on the bridge when she had drawn nearer
to him. Its ugly hardness suddenly looked human.
And that she could look human was fantastic.
“’Ow much ’ave yer?” she asked.
“’Ow much is it?”
“About ten pounds.”
She stopped and stared at him with open mouth.
“Gawd!” she broke out;
“ten pounds ’d send Apple Blossom Court
to ‘eving. Leastways, it’d take
some of it out o’ ’ell.”
“Take me to it,” he said roughly.
“Take me.”
She began to walk quickly, breathing
fast. The fog was lighter, and it was no longer
a blinding thing.
A question occurred to Dart.
“Why don’t you ask me to give the money
to you?” he said bluntly.
“Dunno,” she answered
as bluntly. But after taking a few steps farther
she spoke again.
“I ’m cheerfler than most
of ’em,” she elaborated. “If
yer born cheerfle yer can stand things. When
I gets a job nussin’ women’s bibies they
don’t cry when I ’andles ’em.
I gets many a bite an’ a copper ’cos o’
that. Folks likes yer. I shall get on better
than Polly when I’m old enough to go on the
street.”
The organ of whose lagging, sick pumpings
Antony Dart had scarcely been aware for months gave
a sudden leap in his breast. His blood actually
hastened its pace, and ran through his veins instead
of crawling—a distinct physical effect
of an actual mental condition. It was produced
upon him by the mere matter-of-fact ordinariness of
her tone. He had never been a sentimental man,
and had long ceased to be a feeling one, but at that
moment something emotional and normal happened to him.
“You expect to live in that way?” he said.
“Ain’t nothin’ else
fer me to do. Wisht I was better lookin’.
But I’ve got a lot of ‘air,” clawing
her mop, “an’ it’s red. One
day,” chuckling, “a gent ses to me—he
ses: ’Oh! yer’ll do. Yer an
ugly little devil—but ye are a devil.’”
She was leading him through a narrow,
filthy back street, and she stopped, grinning up in
his face.
“I say, mister,” she wheedled,
“let’s stop at the cawfee-stand. It’s
up this way.”
When he acceded and followed her,
she quickly turned a corner. They were in another
lane thick with fog, which flared with the flame of
torches stuck in costers’ barrows which stood
here and there—barrows with fried fish
upon them, barrows with second-hand-looking vegetables
and others piled with more than second-hand-looking
garments. Trade was not driving, but near one
or two of them dirty, ill-used looking women, a man
or so, and a few children stood. At a corner
which led into a black hole of a court, a coffee-stand
was stationed, in charge of a burly ruffian in corduroys.
“Come along,” said the
girl. “There it is. It ain’t
strong, but it’s ’ot.”
She sidled up to the stand, drawing
Dart with her, as if glad of his protection.
“’Ello, Barney,”
she said. “‘Ere’s a gent warnts
a mug o’ yer best. I’ve ‘ad
a bit o’ luck, an’ I wants one mesself.”
“Garn,” growled Barney.
“You an’ yer luck! Gent may want
a mug, but y’d show yer money fust.”
“Strewth! I’ve got
it. Y’ aint got the chinge fer wot I ’ave
in me ’and ’ere. ’As ’e,
mister?”
“Show it,” taunted the
man, and then turning to Dart. “Yer wants
a mug o’ cawfee?”
“Yes.”
The girl held out her hand cautiously—the
piece of gold lying upon its palm.
“Look ’ere,” she said.
There were two or three men slouching
about the stand. Suddenly a hand darted from
between two of them who stood nearest, the sovereign
was snatched, a screamed oath from the girl rent the
thick air, and a forlorn enough scarecrow of a young
fellow sprang away.
The blood leaped in Antony Dart’s
veins again and he sprang after him in a wholly normal
passion of indignation. A thousand years ago—as
it seemed to him—he had been a good runner.
This man was not one, and want of food had weakened
him. Dart went after him with strides which astonished
himself. Up the street, into an alley and out
of it, a dozen yards more and into a court, and the
man wheeled with a hoarse, baffled curse. The
place had no outlet.
“Hell!” was all the creature said.
Dart took him by his greasy collar.
Even the brief rush had left him feeling like a living
thing—which was a new sensation.
“Give it up,” he ordered.
The thief looked at him with a half-laugh
and obeyed, as if he felt the uselessness of a struggle.
He was not more than twenty-five years old, and his
eyes were cavernous with want. He had the face
of a man who might have belonged to a better class.
When he had uttered the exclamation invoking the
infernal regions he had not dropped the aspirate.
“I ’m as hungry as she is,” he raved.
“Hungry enough to rob a child beggar?”
said Dart.
“Hungry enough to rob a starving
old woman—or a baby,” with a defiant
snort. “Wolf hungry—tiger hungry—hungry
enough to cut throats.”
He whirled himself loose and leaned
his body against the wall, turning his face toward
it. Suddenly he made a choking sound and began
to sob.
“Hell!” he choked. “I’ll
give it up! I’ll give it up!”
What a figure—what a figure,
as he swung against the blackened wall, his scarecrow
clothes hanging on him, their once decent material
making their pinning together of buttonless places,
their looseness and rents showing dirty linen, more
abject than any other squalor could have made them.
Antony Dart’s blood, still running warm and well,
was doing its normal work among the brain-cells which
had stirred so evilly through the night. When
he had seized the fellow by the collar, his hand had
left his pocket. He thrust it into another pocket
and drew out some silver.
“Go and get yourself some food,”
he said. “As much as you can eat.
Then go and wait for me at the place they call Apple
Blossom Court. I don’t know where it is,
but I am going there. I want to hear how you
came to this. Will you come?”
The thief lurched away from the wall
and toward him. He stared up into his eyes through
the fog. The tears had smeared his cheekbones.
“God!” he said.
“Will I come? Look and see if I’ll
come.” Dart looked.
“Yes, you’ll come,”
he answered, and he gave him the money. “I
’m going back to the coffee-stand.”
The thief stood staring after him
as he went out of the court. Dart was speaking
to himself.
“I don’t know why I did
it,” he said. “But the thing had
to be done.”
In the street he turned into he came
upon the robbed girl, running, panting, and crying.
She uttered a shout and flung herself upon him, clutching
his coat.
“Gawd!” she sobbed hysterically,
“I thort I’d lost yer! I thort I’d
lost all of it, I did! Strewth! I ’m
glad I’ve found yer—” and she
stopped, choking with her sobs and sniffs, rubbing
her face in her sack.
“Here is your sovereign,” Dart said, handing
it to her.
She dropped the corner of the sack and looked up with
a queer laugh.
“Did yer find a copper? Did yer give him
in charge?”
“No,” answered Dart.
“He was worse off than you. He was starving.
I took this from him; but I gave him some money and
told him to meet us at Apple Blossom Court.”
She stopped short and drew back a pace to stare up
at him.
“Well,” she gave forth, “y’
are a queer one!”
And yet in the amazement on her face
he perceived a remote dawning of an understanding
of the meaning of the thing he had done.
He had spoken like a man in a dream.
He felt like a man in a dream, being led in the thick
mist from place to place. He was led back to
the coffee-stand, where now Barney, the proprietor,
was pouring out coffee for a hoarse-voiced coster
girl with a draggled feather in her hat, who greeted
their arrival hilariously.
“Hello, Glad!” she cried out. “Got
yer suvrink back?”
Glad—it seemed to be the
creature’s wild name—nodded, but held
close to her companion’s side, clutching his
coat.
“Let’s go in there an’
change it,” she said, nodding toward a small
pork and ham shop near by. “An’
then yer can take care of it for me.”
“What did she call you?”
Antony Dart asked her as they went.
“Glad. Don’t know
as I ever ‘ad a nime o’ me own, but a little
cove as went once to the pantermine told me about
a young lady as was Fairy Queen an’ ’er
name was Gladys Beverly St. John, so I called mesself
that. No one never said it all at onct—they
don’t never say nothin’ but Glad.
I’m glad enough this mornin’,” chuckling
again, “‘avin’ the luck to come
up with you, mister. Never had luck like it ’afore.”
They went into the pork and ham shop
and changed the sovereign. There was cooked food
in the windows—roast pork and boiled ham
and corned beef. She bought slices of pork and
beef, and of suet-pudding with a few currants sprinkled
through it.
“Will yer ’elp me to carry
it?” she inquired. “I’ll ’ave
to get a few pen’worth o’ coal an’
wood an’ a screw o’ tea an’ sugar.
My wig, wot a feed me an’ Polly’ll ’ave!”
As they returned to the coffee-stand
she broke more than once into a hop of glee.
Barney had changed his mind concerning her.
A solid sovereign which must be changed and a companion
whose shabby gentility was absolute grandeur when
compared with his present surroundings made a difference.
She received her mug of coffee and
thick slice of bread and dripping with a grin, and
swallowed the hot sweet liquid down in ecstatic gulps.
“Ain’t I in luck?”
she said, handing her mug back when it was empty.
“Gi’ me another, Barney.”
Antony Dart drank coffee also and
ate bread and dripping. The coffee was hot and
the bread and dripping, dashed with salt, quite eatable.
He had needed food and felt the better for it.
“Come on, mister,” said
Glad, when their meal was ended. “I want
to get back to Polly, an’ there’s coal
and bread and things to buy.”
She hurried him along, breaking her
pace with hops at intervals. She darted into
dirty shops and brought out things screwed up in paper.
She went last into a cellar and returned carrying
a small sack of coal over her shoulders.
“Bought sack an’ all,”
she said elatedly. “A sack’s a good
thing to ’ave.”
“Let me carry it for you,” said Antony
Dart
“Spile yer coat,” with her sidelong upward
glance.
“I don’t care,” he answered.
“I don’t care a damn.”
The final expletive was totally unnecessary,
but it meant a thing he did not say. Whatsoever
was thrusting him this way and that, speaking through
his speech, leading him to do things he had not dreamed
of doing, should have its will with him. He had
been fastened to the skirts of this beggar imp and
he would go on to the end and do what was to be done
this day. It was part of the dream.
The sack of coal was over his shoulder
when they turned into Apple Blossom Court. It
would have been a black hole on a sunny day, and now
it was like Hades, lit grimly by a gas-jet or two,
small and flickering, with the orange haze about them.
Filthy, flagging, murky doorways, broken steps and
broken windows stuffed with rags, and the smell of
the sewers let loose had Apple Blossom Court.
Glad, with the wealth of the pork
and ham shop and other riches in her arms, entered
a repellent doorway in a spirit of great good cheer
and Dart followed her. Past a room where a drunken
woman lay sleeping with her head on a table, a child
pulling at her dress and crying, up a stairway with
broken balusters and breaking steps, through a landing,
upstairs again, and up still farther until they reached
the top. Glad stopped before a door and shook
the handle, crying out:
“’S only me, Polly.
You can open it.” She added to Dart in
an undertone: “She ‘as to keep it
locked. No knowin’ who’d want to get
in. Polly,” shaking the door-handle again,
“Polly’s only me.”
The door opened slowly. On the
other side of it stood a girl with a dimpled round
face which was quite pale; under one of her childishly
vacant blue eyes was a discoloration, and her curly
fair hair was tucked up on the top of her head in
a knot. As she took in the fact of Antony Dart’s
presence her chin began to quiver.
“I ain’t fit to—to
see no one,” she stammered pitifully. “Why
did you, Glad—why did you?”
“Ain’t no ’arm in
’im,” said Glad. “‘E’s
one o’ the friendly ones. ’E give
me a suvrink. Look wot I’ve got,”
hopping about as she showed her parcels.
“You need not be afraid of me,”
Antony Dart said. He paused a second, staring
at her, and suddenly added, “Poor little wretch!”
Her look was so scared and uncertain
a thing that he walked away from her and threw the
sack of coal on the hearth. A small grate with
broken bars hung loosely in the fireplace, a battered
tin kettle tilted drunkenly near it. A mattress,
from the holes in whose ticking straw bulged, lay
on the floor in a corner, with some old sacks thrown
over it. Glad had, without doubt, borrowed her
shoulder covering from the collection. The garret
was as cold as the grave, and almost as dark; the
fog hung in it thickly. There were crevices enough
through which it could penetrate.
Antony Dart knelt down on the hearth
and drew matches from his pocket.
“We ought to have brought some paper,”
he said.
Glad ran forward.
“Wot a gent ye are!” she cried. “Y’
ain’t never goin’ to light it?”
“Yes.”
She ran back to the rickety table
and collected the scraps of paper which had held her
purchases. They were small, but useful.
“That wot was round the sausage an’ the
puddin’s greasy,” she exulted.
Polly hung over the table and trembled
at the sight of meat and bread. Plainly, she
did not understand what was happening. The greased
paper set light to the wood, and the wood to the coal.
All three flared and blazed with a sound of cheerful
crackling. The blaze threw out its glow as finely
as if it had been set alight to warm a better place.
The wonder of a fire is like the wonder of a soul.
This one changed the murk and gloom to brightness,
and the deadly damp and cold to warmth. It drew
the girl Polly from the table despite her fears.
She turned involuntarily, made two steps toward it,
and stood gazing while its light played on her face.
Glad whirled and ran to the hearth.
“Ye’ve put on a lot,”
she cried; “but, oh, my Gawd, don’t it
warm yer! Come on, Polly—come on.”
She dragged out a wooden stool, an
empty soap-box, and bundled the sacks into a heap
to be sat upon. She swept the things from the
table and set them in their paper wrappings on the
floor.
“Let’s all sit down close
to it—close,” she said, “an’
get warm an’ eat, an’ eat.”
She was the leaven which leavened
the lump of their humanity. What this leaven
is—who has found out? But she—little
rat of the gutter—was formed of it, and
her mere pure animal joy in the temporary animal comfort
of the moment stirred and uplifted them from their
depths.