Bereavement came to Mr. Polly before
the realisation of opulence and its anxieties and
responsibilities. That only dawned upon him on
the morrow—which chanced to be Sunday—as
he walked with Johnson before church time about the
tangle of struggling building enterprise that constituted
the rising urban district of Easewood. Johnson
was off duty that morning, and devoted the time very
generously to the admonitory discussion of Mr. Polly’s
worldly outlook.
“Don’t seem to get the
hang of the business somehow,” said Mr. Polly.
“Too much blooming humbug in it for my way of
thinking.”
“If I were you,” said
Mr. Johnson, “I should push for a first-class
place in London—take almost nothing and
live on my reserves. That’s what I should
do.”
“Come the Heavy,” said Mr. Polly.
“Get a better class reference.”
There was a pause. “Think of investing
your money?” asked Johnson.
“Hardly got used to the idea of having it yet,
O’ Man.”
“You’ll have to do something
with it. Give you nearly twenty pounds a year
if you invest it properly.”
“Haven’t seen it yet in that light,”
said Mr. Polly defensively.
“There’s no end of things you could put
it into.”
“It’s getting it out again
I shouldn’t feel sure of. I’m no sort
of Fiancianier. Sooner back horses.”
“I wouldn’t do that if I were you.”
“Not my style, O’ Man.”
“It’s a nest egg,” said Johnson.
Mr. Polly made an indeterminate noise.
“There’s building societies,”
Johnson threw out in a speculative tone. Mr.
Polly, with detached brevity, admitted there were.
“You might lend it on mortgage,”
said Johnson. “Very safe form of investment.”
“Shan’t think anything
about it—not till the O’ Man’s
underground,” said Mr. Polly with an inspiration.
They turned a corner that led towards the junction.
“Might do worse,” said Johnson, “than
put it into a small shop.”
At the moment this remark made very
little appeal to Mr. Polly. But afterwards it
developed. It fell into his mind like some small
obscure seed, and germinated.
“These shops aren’t in a bad position,”
said Johnson.
The row he referred to gaped in the
late painful stage in building before the healing
touch of the plasterer assuages the roughness of the
brickwork. The space for the shop yawned an oblong
gap below, framed above by an iron girder; “windows
and fittings to suit tenant,” a board at the
end of the row promised; and behind was the door space
and a glimpse of stairs going up to the living rooms
above. “Not a bad position,” said
Johnson, and led the way into the establishment.
“Room for fixtures there,” he said, pointing
to the blank wall. The two men went upstairs
to the little sitting-room or best bedroom (it would
have to be) above the shop. Then they descended
to the kitchen below.
“Rooms in a new house always look a bit small,”
said Johnson.
They came out of the house again by
the prospective back door, and picked their way through
builder’s litter across the yard space to the
road again. They drew nearer the junction to where
a pavement and shops already open and active formed
the commercial centre of Easewood. On the opposite
side of the way the side door of a flourishing little
establishment opened, and a man and his wife and a
little boy in a sailor suit came into the street.
The wife was a pretty woman in brown with a floriferous
straw hat, and the group was altogether very Sundayfied
and shiny and spick and span. The shop itself
had a large plate-glass window whose contents were
now veiled by a buff blind on which was inscribed
in scrolly letters: “Rymer, Pork Butcher
and Provision Merchant,” and then with voluptuous
elaboration: “The World-Famed Easewood Sausage.”
Greetings were exchanged between Mr.
Johnson and this distinguished comestible.
“Off to church already?” said Johnson.
“Walking across the fields to Little Dorington,”
said Mr. Rymer.
“Very pleasant walk,” said Johnson.
“Very,” said Mr. Rymer.
“Hope you’ll enjoy it,” said Mr.
Johnson.
“That chap’s done well,”
said Johnson sotto voce as they went on.
“Came here with nothing—practically,
four years ago. And as thin as a lath. Look
at him now!
“He’s worked hard of course,” said
Johnson, improving the occasion.
Thought fell between the cousins for a space.
“Some men can do one thing,”
said Johnson, “and some another…. For
a man who sticks to it there’s a lot to be done
in a shop.”