Part 7 (1/2)
Mrs. Thompson hesitated, and then answered kindly.
”Certainly. Why not? I am accessible here to any of the staff--from Mr.
Mears to the door boy. That has always been a part of my system.”
After this the young man appeared from time to time, craving a draught of wisdom at the fountain-head. The department was doing well, and he never brought bad news.
But he was a little too much inclined to begin talking about himself; telling his story--an orphan who had made his own way in the world; describing his efforts to improve a defective education, his speaking at a debating society, his acting with the Kennington Thespian Troupe.
”Your elocution,” said Mrs. Thompson, ”no doubt profited by the pains you took.... But now, if you please--”
Mrs. Thompson, with business-like firmness, stopped all idle chatter. A hint was enough for him, and he promptly became intent on matters of business.
He worked hard upstairs. He was the first to come and the last to go.
Once or twice he brought papers down to the dark ground floor when Mrs.
Thompson was toiling late.
One night he showed her the coloured and beautifully printed pictures that had been sent with the new season's lists.
”There. This is my choice.”
She laid her hand flat on a picture; and he, pus.h.i.+ng about the other pictures and talking, put his hand against hers. He went on talking, as if unconscious that he had touched her, that he was now touching her.
She moved her hand away, and for a moment an angry flame of thought swept through her brain. Had it been an accident, or a monstrous impertinence? He went on talking without a tremor in his voice; and she understood that he was absolutely unconscious of what he had done. He was completely absorbed by consideration of the coloured prints of tea and dinner services.
Mrs. Thompson abruptly struck the desk bell, drew back her chair, and rose.
”Davies,” she called loudly, ”bring your lantern. I am going through....
Don't bother me any more about all that, Mr. Marsden. Make your own selections--and get them pa.s.sed by Mr. Mears. Good-night.”
V
Miss Enid had again taken up riding, and she seemed unusually energetic in her efforts to acquire a difficult art. During this hot dry weather the roads were too hard to permit of hacking with much pleasure; but Enid spent many afternoons in Mr. Young's fine riding school. She was having jumping lessons; and she threw out hints to Mrs. Thompson that next autumn she would be able not only to ride to meet, but even to follow hounds.
”Oh, my darling, I should never have a moment's peace of mind if I knew you were risking your pretty neck out hunting.”
”I could easily get a good pilot,” said Enid; ”and then I should be quite safe.”
One Thursday afternoon--early-closing day--Mr. Marsden, who happened to know that Enid would be at the school, went round to see his friend Mr.
Whitehouse, the riding-master. He looked very smart in his blue serge suit, straw hat, and brown boots; and the clerk in Mr. Young's office quite thought he was one of the governor's toffs come to buy horses.
Mr. Marsden sent his card to Mr. Whitehouse; and then waited in a sloping sanded pa.s.sage, obviously trodden by four-footed as well as two-footed people, from which he could peep into the dark office, a darker little dressing-room, and an open stable where the hind quarters of horses showed in stalls. There was a queer staircase without stairs, and he heard a sound of pawing over his head--horses upstairs as well as downstairs. The whole place looked and smelt very horsey.
The riding-master's horse was presently led past him; the lesson was nearly over, and the young lady was about to take a few leaps. A groom told him that he might go in.
The vast hall had high and narrow double doors to admit the horses; and inside, beneath the dirty gla.s.s roof, it was always twilight, with strange echoes and reverberations issuing from the smooth plastered walls; at a considerable height in one of the walls there was a large window, opening out of a room that looked like the royal box of a theatre.