None Other Gods - Robert Hugh Benson (e book reader for pc .txt) 📗
- Author: Robert Hugh Benson
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Gertie was up soon after five next morning to get breakfast for her men, since the Major had announced that he would go with Frank to see whether possibly there might not be a job for him too; and as soon as they had gone, very properly went to sleep again on the bed in the sitting-room.
Gertie had a strenuous time of it, in spite of the Major's frequently expressed opinion that women had no idea what work was. For, first, there was the almost unending labor of providing food and cooking it as well as possible; there was almost a standing engagement of mending and washing clothes; there were numerous arguments to be conducted, on terms of comparative equality, if possible, with landladies or farmers' wives--Gertie always wore a brass wedding-ring and showed it sometimes a little ostentatiously; and, finally, when the company was on the march, it was only fair that she should carry the heavier half of the luggage, in order to compensate for her life of luxury and ease at other times. Gertie, then, was usually dog-tired, and slept whenever she could get a chance.
It was nearly eight o'clock before she was awakened again by sharp knocking on her door; and on opening it, found the landlady' standing there, examining a letter with great attention. (It had already been held up to the light against the kitchen window.)
"For one of your folks, isn't it, Mrs.--er--" Gertie took it. It was written on excellent paper, and directed in a man's handwriting to Mr. Gregory:
"Thank you, Mrs.--er--" said Gertie.
Then she went back into her room, put the letter carefully away in the drawer of the table and set about her household business.
About eleven o'clock she stepped out for a little refreshment. She had, of course, a small private exchequer of her own, amounting usually to only a few pence, of which the Major knew nothing. This did not strike her as at all unfair; she only wondered gently sometimes at masculine innocence in not recognizing that such an arrangement was perfectly certain. She got into conversation with some elder ladies, who also had stepped out for refreshment, and had occasion, at a certain point, to lay her wedding-ring on the bar-counter for exhibition. So it was not until a little after twelve that she remembered the time and fled. She was not expecting her men home to dinner; in fact, she had wrapped up provisions for them in fragments of the Major's _Sporting Times_ before they had left; but it was safer to be at home. One never knew.
As she came into the room, for an instant her heart leaped into her mouth, but it was only Frank.
"Whatever's the matter?" she said.
"Turned off," said Frank shortly. He was sitting gloomily at the table with his hands in his pockets.
"Turned off?"
He nodded.
"What's up?"
"'Tecs," said Frank.
Gertie's mouth opened a little.
"One of them saw me going in and wired for instructions. He had seen the case in the police-news and thought I answered to the description. Then he came back at eleven and told the governor."
"And--"
"Yes."
There was a pause.
"And George?"
"Oh! he's all right," said Frank a little bitterly. "There's nothing against him. Got any dinner, Gertie? I can't pay for it ... oh, yes, I can; here's half a day." (He chucked ninepence upon the table; the sixpence rolled off again, but he made no movement to pick it up.)
Gertie looked at him a moment.
"Well--" she began emphatically, then she stooped to pick up the sixpence.
Frank sighed.
"Oh! don't begin all that--there's a good girl. I've said it all myself--quite adequately, I assure you."
Gertie's mouth opened again. She laid the sixpence on the table.
"I mean, there's nothing to be said," explained Frank. "The point is--what's to be done?"
Gertie had no suggestions. She began to scrape out the frying-pan in which the herrings had been cooked last night.
"There's a letter for you," she said suddenly.
Frank sat up.
"Where?"
"In the drawer there--by your hand. Frankie...."
Frank tore at the handle and it came off. He uttered a short exclamation. Then, with infinite craft he fitted the handle in again, wrapped in yet one more scrap of the _Sporting Times_, and drew out the drawer. His face fell abruptly as he saw the handwriting.
"That can wait," he muttered, and chucked the letter face downwards on to the table.
"Frankie," said the girl again, still intent on her frying-pan.
"Well?"
"It's all my fault," she said in a low voice.
"Your fault! How do you make that out?"
"If it hadn't been for me, you wouldn't have taken the tin from George, and...."
"Oh, Lord!" said Frank, "if we once begin on that!... And if it hadn't been for George, he wouldn't have taken the tin; and if it hadn't been for Maggie Cooper, there wouldn't have been the tin; and if it hadn't been for Maggie's father's sister, she wouldn't have gone out with it. It's all Maggie's father's sister's fault, my dear! It's nothing to do with you."
The words were brisk enough, but the manner was very heavy. It was like repeating a lesson learned in childhood.
"That's all right," began Gertie again, "but--"
"My dear girl, I shall be annoyed if you go back to all that. Why can't you let it alone? The point is, What's to happen? I can't go on sponging on you and the Major."
Gertie flushed under her tan.
"If you ever leave us," she said, "I'll--"
"Well?"
"I'll ... I'll never leave George."
Frank was puzzled for a moment. It seemed a _non sequitur_.
"Do you mean--"
"I've got me eyes," said Gertie emphatically, "and I know what you're thinking, though you don't say much. And I've been thinking, too."
Frank felt a faint warmth rise in his own heart. "You mean you've been thinking over what I said the other day?"
Gertie bent lower over her frying-pan and scraped harder than ever.
"Do stop that confounded row one second!" shouted Frank.
The noise stopped abruptly. Gertie glanced up and down again. Then she began again, more gently.
"That's better," said Frank.... "Well, I hope you have," he went on paternally. "You're a good girl, Gertie, and you know better. Go on thinking about it, and tell me when you've made up your mind. When'll dinner be ready?"
"Half an hour," said Gertie.
"Well, I'll go out for a bit and look round."
He took up the letter carelessly and went out.
(III)
As he passed the window Gertie glanced towards it with the corner of her eye. Then, frying-pan still in hand, she crept up to the angle and watched him go down the quay.
A very convenient barrel was set on the extreme edge of the embankment above the water, with another beside it, and Frank made for this immediately. She saw him sit on one of the barrels and put the letter, still unopened, on the top of the other. Then he fumbled in his pockets a little, and presently a small blue cloud of smoke went upwards like incense. Gertie watched him for an instant, but he did not move again. Then she went back to her frying-pan.
Twenty minutes later dinner was almost ready.
Gertie had spread upon the table, with great care, one of the Major's white pocket-handkerchiefs. He insisted upon those being, not only retained, but washed occasionally, and Gertie understood something of his reasons, since in the corner of each was embroidered a monogram, of which the letters were not "G.T." But she never could make out what they were.
Upon this tablecloth she had placed on one side a black-handled fork with two prongs, and a knife of the same pattern (this was for Frank) and on the other a small pewter tea-spoon and a knife, of which the only handle was a small iron spike from which the wood had fallen away. (This was for herself.) Then there was a tooth-glass for Frank, and a teacup--without a handle, but with a gold flower in the middle of it, to make up--for herself. In the center of the pocket-handkerchief stood a crockery jug, with a mauve design of York Minster, with a thundercloud behind it and a lady and gentleman with a child bowling a hoop in front of it. This was the landlady's property, and was half full of beer. Besides all this, there were two plates, one of a cold blue color, with a portrait of the Prince Consort, whiskers and hat complete, in a small medallion in the center, and the other white, with a representation of the Falls of Lodore. There was no possibility of mistaking any of the subjects treated upon these various pieces of table-ware, since the title of each was neatly printed, in various styles, just below the picture.
Gertie regarded this array with her head on one side. It was not often that they dined in such luxury. She wished she had a flower to put in the center. Then she stirred the contents of the frying-pan with an iron spoon, and went again to the window.
The figure on the barrel had not moved; but even as she looked she saw him put out his hand to the letter. She watched him. She saw him run a finger inside the envelope, and toss the envelope over the edge of the quay. Then she saw him unfold the paper inside and become absorbed.
This would never do. Gertie's idea of a letter was that it occupied at least several minutes to read through; so she went out quickly to the street door to call him in.
She called him, and he did not turn his head, nor even answer.
She called him again.
(IV)
The letter that Frank read lies, too, with a few other papers, before me as I write.
It runs as follows:
"MY DEAR FRANK,
"I know you won't like what I have to say, but it has to be
said. Believe me, it costs me as much to write as you to
read--perhaps more.
"It is this: Our engagement must be at an end.
"You have a perfect right to ask me for reasons, so I will give
them at once, as I don't want to open the subject again. It
would do no kind of good. My mind is absolutely made up.
"My main reason is this: When I became engaged to you I did not
know you properly. I thought you were quite different from what
you are. I thought that underneath all your nice wildness, and
so on, there was a very solid person. And I hinted that, you
will remember, in my first letter, which I suppose you have
received just before this. And now I simply can't think that
any longer.
"I don't in the least blame you for being what you are: that's
not my business. But I must just say this--that a man who
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