Part 2 (1/2)
”Here he comes!”
”Look, that's him!”
”Give 'un a cheer, boys.”
”Hip, hip, hoor-roar!”
The sound burst upon the clear sky in a deafening peal. The stranger paused and looked confused.
”Dear me!” he murmured to himself, ”the population here seems to be excited about something--and, bless my soul, what a lot of it there is!”
He might well say so. Along the road, arms, sticks, baskets, and handkerchiefs were frantically waving; men shouting and children hurrahing with might and main. Windows were flung up; heads protruded; flags waved in frenzied welcome. The tumult was stupendous. There was not a man, woman, or child in Troy but felt the demonstration must be hearty, and determined to make it a success.
”What _can_ have caused this riot?”
The stranger paused with a half-timid air, but after a while resumed his walk. The shouts broke out again, and louder than ever.
”Welcome, welcome to Troy! Hooroar! One more, lads! Hooroar!” and all the handkerchiefs waved anew.
”Bless my soul, what _is_ the matter?”
Then suddenly he became aware that all this frantic display was meant for _him_. How he first learnt it he could never afterwards explain, but the shock of it brought a deathly faintness.
”There is some horrible mistake,” he murmured hoa.r.s.ely, and turned to run.
He was too late. The crowd had closed around him, and swept him on, cheering, yelling, vociferating towards the town. He feebly put up a hand for silence--
”My friends,” he shouted, ”you are--”
”Yes, yes, we know. Welcome! Welcome! Hip-hip-hoo-roar!”
”My friends, I a.s.sure you--”
_Boom! Boom! Tring-a-ring--boom!_
It was that accursed Fife and Drum Temperance Band. In a moment five-and-twenty fifers were blowing ”See, the conquering hero comes,”
with all their breath, and marching to the beat of a deafening drum.
Behind them came a serried crowd with the stranger in its midst, and a straggling train of farmers' gigs and screaming urchins closed the procession.
Miss Limpenny, at the first-storey window of No. 1 Alma Villas, heard the yet distant din. With trembling fingers she hung out of window a loyal pocket-handkerchief (worn by her mother at the Jubilee of King George III), shut down the sash upon it, and discreetly retired again behind her white blinds to watch.
The cheering grew louder, and Miss Limpenny's heart beat faster.
”I hope,” she thought to herself, ”I hope that their high connections will not have given them a distaste for our hearty ways. Well as I know Troy, I think I might be frightened at this display of public feeling.”
She peeped out over the white blinds. Next door, the Admiral was fuming nervously up and down his gravel walk. He was debating the propriety of his costume. Even yet there was time to run up-stairs and don his c.o.c.ked hat and gold-laced coat before the procession arrived. Between the claims of his civil and official positions the poor man was in a ferment.
”As a man of the world,” Miss Limpenny soliloquised, ”the Honourable Frederic Goodwyn-Sandys cannot fail to appreciate our sterling Admiral. Dear, dear, here they come! I do trust dearest Lavinia has not put herself in too conspicuous a position at the parlour window.
What a lot of people, to be sure!”
The crowd had gathered volume during its pa.s.sage through the town, and the ”Conquering Hero” was more distractingly shrill than ever.
The goal was almost reached, for ”The Bower” stood next door to Alma Villas, and was divided from them only by a road which led down to the water's edge and the Penpoodle ferry boat.