As the streets that lead from the Strand to the Embankment
are very narrow, it is better not to walk down them arm-in-arm. If
you persist, lawyers' clerks will have to make flying leaps into
the mud; young lady typists will have to fidget behind you. In the
streets of London where beauty goes unregarded, eccentricity must
pay the penalty, and it is better not to be very tall, to wear a
long blue cloak, or to beat the air with your left
hand.
One afternoon in the beginning of October when the traffic
was becoming brisk a tall man strode along the edge of the pavement
with a lady on his arm. Angry glances struck upon their backs. The
small, agitated figures—for in comparison with this couple most
people looked small—decorated with fountain pens, and burdened with
despatch-boxes, had appointments to keep, and drew a weekly salary,
so that there was some reason for the unfriendly stare which was
bestowed upon Mr. Ambrose's height and upon Mrs. Ambrose's cloak.
But some enchantment had put both man and woman beyond the reach of
malice and unpopularity. In his guess one might guess from the
moving lips that it was thought; and in hers from the eyes fixed
stonily straight in front of her at a level above the eyes of most
that it was sorrow. It was only by scorning all she met that she
kept herself from tears, and the friction of people brushing past
her was evidently painful. After watching the traffic on the
Embankment for a minute or two with a stoical gaze she twitched her
husband's sleeve, and they crossed between the swift discharge of
motor cars. When they were safe on the further side, she gently
withdrew her arm from his, allowing her mouth at the same time to
relax, to tremble; then tears rolled down, and leaning her elbows
on the balustrade, she shielded her face from the curious. Mr.
Ambrose attempted consolation; he patted her shoulder; but she
showed no signs of admitting him, and feeling it awkward to stand
beside a grief that was greater than his, he crossed his arms
behind him, and took a turn along the pavement.
The embankment juts out in angles here and there, like
pulpits; instead of preachers, however, small boys occupy them,
dangling string, dropping pebbles, or launching wads of paper for a
cruise. With their sharp eye for eccentricity, they were inclined
to think Mr. Ambrose awful; but the quickest witted cried
"Bluebeard!" as he passed. In case they should proceed to tease his
wife, Mr. Ambrose flourished his stick at them, upon which they
decided that he was grotesque merely, and four instead of one cried
"Bluebeard!" in chorus.
Although Mrs. Ambrose stood quite still, much longer than is
natural, the little boys let her be. Some one is always looking
into the river near Waterloo Bridge; a couple will stand there
talking for half an hour on a fine afternoon; most people, walking
for pleasure, contemplate for three minutes; when, having compared
the occasion with other occasions, or made some sentence, they pass
on. Sometimes the flats and churches and hotels of Westminster are
like the outlines of Constantinople in a mist; sometimes the river
is an opulent purple, sometimes mud-coloured, sometimes sparkling
blue like the sea. It is always worth while to look down and see
what is happening. But this lady looked neither up nor down; the
only thing she had seen, since she stood there, was a circular
iridescent patch slowly floating past with a straw in the middle of
it. The straw and the patch swam again and again behind the
tremulous medium of a great welling tear, and the tear rose and
fell and dropped into the river. Then there struck close upon her
ears—
Lars Porsena of Clusium
By the nine Gods he
swore—
and then more faintly, as if the speaker had passed her on
his walk—
That the Great House of
Tarquin
Should suffer wrong no
more.
Yes, she knew she must go back to all that, but at present
she must weep. Screening her face she sobbed more steadily than she
had yet done, her shoulders rising and falling with great
regularity. It was this figure that her husband saw when, having
reached the polished Sphinx, having entangled himself with a man
selling picture postcards, he turned; the stanza instantly stopped.
He came up to her, laid his hand on her shoulder, and said,
"Dearest." His voice was supplicating. But she shut her face away
from him, as much as to say, "You can't possibly
understand."
As he did not leave her, however, she had to wipe her eyes,
and to raise them to the level of the factory chimneys on the other
bank. She saw also the arches of Waterloo Bridge and the carts
moving across them, like the line of animals in a shooting gallery.
They were seen blankly, but to see anything was of course to end
her weeping and begin to walk.
"I would rather walk," she said, her husband having hailed a
cab already occupied by two city men.
The fixity of her mood was broken by the action of walking.
The shooting motor cars, more like spiders in the moon than
terrestrial objects, the thundering drays, the jingling hansoms,
and little black broughams, made her think of the world she lived
in. Somewhere up there above the pinnacles where the smoke rose in
a pointed hill, her children were now asking for her, and getting a
soothing reply. As for the mass of streets, squares, and public
buildings which parted them, she only felt at this moment how
little London had done to make her love it, although thirty of her
forty years had been spent in a street. She knew how to read the
people who were passing her; there were the rich who were running
to and from each others' houses at this hour; there were the
bigoted workers driving in a straight line to their offices; there
were the poor who were unhappy and rightly malignant. Already,
though there was sunlight in the haze, tattered old men and women
were nodding off to sleep upon the seats. When one gave up seeing
the beauty that clothed things, this was the skeleton
beneath.
A fine rain now made her still more dismal; vans with the odd
names of those engaged in odd industries—Sprules, Manufacturer of
Saw-dust; Grabb, to whom no piece of waste paper comes amiss—fell
flat as a bad joke; bold lovers, sheltered behind one cloak, seemed
to her sordid, past their passion; the flower women, a contented
company, whose talk is always worth hearing, were sodden hags; the
red, yellow, and blue flowers, whose heads were pressed together,
would not blaze. Moreover, her husband walking with a quick
rhythmic stride, jerking his free hand occasionally, was either a
Viking or a stricken Nelson; the sea-gulls had changed his
note.
"Ridley, shall we drive? Shall we drive,
Ridley?"
Mrs. Ambrose had to speak sharply; by this time he was far
away.
The cab, by trotting steadily along the same road, soon
withdrew them from the West End, and plunged them into London. It
appeared that this was a great manufacturing place, where the
people were engaged in making things, as though the West End, with
its electric lamps, its vast plate-glass windows all shining
yellow, its carefully-finished houses, and tiny live figures
trotting on the pavement, or bowled along on wheels in the road,
was the finished work. It appeared to her a very small bit of work
for such an enormous factory to have made. For some reason it
appeared to her as a small golden tassel on the edge of a vast
black cloak.
Observing that they passed no other hansom cab, but only vans
and waggons, and that not one of the thousand men and women she saw
was either a gentleman or a lady, Mrs. Ambrose understood that
after all it is the ordinary thing to be poor, and that London is
the city of innumerable poor people. Startled by this discovery and
seeing herself pacing a circle all the days of her life round
Picadilly Circus she was greatly relieved to pass a building put up
by the London County Council for Night Schools.
"Lord, how gloomy it is!" her husband groaned. "Poor
creatures!"
What with the misery for her children, the poor, and the
rain, her mind was like a wound exposed to dry in the
air.
At this point the cab stopped, for it was in danger of being
crushed like an egg-shell. The wide Embankment which had had room
for cannonballs and squadrons, had now shrunk to a cobbled lane
steaming with smells of malt and oil and blocked by waggons. While
her husband read the placards pasted on the brick announcing the
hours at which certain ships would sail for Scotland, Mrs. Ambrose
did her best to find information. From a world exclusively occupied
in feeding waggons with sacks, half obliterated too in a fine
yellow fog, they got neither help nor attention. It seemed a
miracle when an old man approached, guessed their condition, and
proposed to row them out to their ship in the little boat which he
kept moored at the bottom of a flight of steps. With some
hesitation they trusted themselves to him, took their places, and
were soon waving up and down upon the water, London having shrunk
to two lines of buildings on either side of them, square buildings
and oblong buildings placed in rows like a child's avenue of
bricks.
The river, which had a certain amount of troubled yellow
light in it, ran with great force; bulky barges floated down
swiftly escorted by tugs; police boats shot past everything; the
wind went with the current. The open rowing-boat in which they sat
bobbed and curtseyed across the line of traffic. In mid-stream the
old man stayed his hands upon the oars, and as the water rushed
past them, remarked that once he had taken many passengers across,
where now he took scarcely any. He seemed to recall an age when his
boat, moored among rushes, carried delicate feet across to lawns at
Rotherhithe.
"They want bridges now," he said, indicating the monstrous
outline of the Tower Bridge. Mournfully Helen regarded him, who was
putting water between her and her children. Mournfully she gazed at
the ship they were approaching; anchored in the middle of the
stream they could dimly read her name—
Euphrosyne .
Very dimly in the falling dusk they could see the lines of
the rigging, the masts and the dark flag which the breeze blew out
squarely behind.
As the little boat sidled up to the steamer, and the old man
shipped his oars, he remarked once more pointing above, that ships
all the world over flew that flag the day they sailed. In the minds
of both the passengers the blue flag appeared a sinister token, and
this the moment for presentiments, but nevertheless they rose,
gathered their things together, and climbed on deck.
Down in the saloon of her father's ship, Miss Rachel Vinrace,
aged twenty-four, stood waiting her uncle and aunt nervously. To
begin with, though nearly related, she scarcely remembered them; to
go on with, they were elderly people, and finally, as her father's
daughter she must be in some sort prepared to entertain them. She
looked forward to seeing them as civilised people generally look
forward to the first sight of civilised people, as though they were
of the nature of an approaching physical discomfort—a tight shoe or
a draughty window. She was already unnaturally braced to receive
them. As she occupied herself in laying forks severely straight by
the side of knives, she heard a man's voice saying
gloomily:
"On a dark night one would fall down these stairs head
foremost," to which a woman's voice added, "And be
killed."
As she spoke the last words the woman stood in the doorway.
Tall, large-eyed, draped in purple shawls, Mrs. Ambrose was
romantic and beautiful; not perhaps sympathetic, for her eyes
looked straight and considered what they saw. Her face was much
warmer than a Greek face; on the other hand it was much bolder than
the face of the usual pretty Englishwoman.
"Oh, Rachel, how d'you do," she said, shaking
hands.
"How are you, dear," said Mr. Ambrose, inclining his forehead
to be kissed. His niece instinctively liked his thin angular body,
and the big head with its sweeping features, and the acute,
innocent eyes.
"Tell Mr. Pepper," Rachel bade the servant. Husband and wife
then sat down on one side of the table, with their niece opposite
to them.
"My father told me to begin," she explained. "He is very busy
with the men. . . . You know Mr. Pepper?"
A little man who was bent as some trees are by a gale on one
side of them had slipped in. Nodding to Mr. Ambrose, he shook hands
with Helen.
"Draughts," he said, erecting the collar of his
coat.
"You are still rheumatic?" asked Helen. Her voice was low and
seductive, though she spoke absently enough, the sight of town and
river being still present to her mind.
"Once rheumatic, always rheumatic, I fear," he replied. "To
some extent it depends on the weather, though not so much as people
are apt to think."
"One does not die of it, at any rate," said
Helen.
"As a general rule—no," said Mr. Pepper.
"Soup, Uncle Ridley?" asked Rachel.
"Thank you, dear," he said, and, as he held his plate out,
sighed audibly, "Ah! she's not like her mother." Helen was just too
late in thumping her tumbler on the table to prevent Rachel from
hearing, and from blushing scarlet with embarrassment.
"The way servants treat flowers!" she said hastily. She drew
a green vase with a crinkled lip towards her, and began pulling out
the tight little chrysanthemums, which she laid on the table-cloth,
arranging them fastidiously side by side.
There was a pause.
"You knew Jenkinson, didn't you, Ambrose?" asked Mr. Pepper
across the table.
"Jenkinson of Peterhouse?"
"He's dead," said Mr. Pepper.
"Ah, dear!—I knew him—ages ago," said Ridley. "He was the
hero of the punt accident, you remember? A queer card. Married a
young woman out of a tobacconist's, and lived in the Fens—never
heard what became of him."
"Drink—drugs," said Mr. Pepper with sinister conciseness. "He
left a commentary. Hopeless muddle, I'm told."
"The man had really great abilities," said
Ridley.
"His introduction to Jellaby holds its own still," went on
Mr. Pepper, "which is surprising, seeing how text-books
change."
"There was a theory about the planets, wasn't there?" asked
Ridley.
"A screw loose somewhere, no doubt of it," said Mr. Pepper,
shaking his head.
Now a tremor ran through the table, and a light outside
swerved. At the same time an electric bell rang sharply again and
again.
"We're off," said Ridley.
A slight but perceptible wave seemed to roll beneath the
floor; then it sank; then another came, more perceptible. Lights
slid right across the uncurtained window. The ship gave a loud
melancholy moan.
"We're off!" said Mr. Pepper. Other ships, as sad as she,
answered her outside on the river. The chuckling and hissing of
water could be plainly heard, and the ship heaved so that the
steward bringing plates had to balance himself as he drew the
curtain. There was a pause.
"Jenkinson of Cats—d'you still keep up with him?" asked
Ambrose.
"As much as one ever does," said Mr. Pepper. "We meet
annually. This year he has had the misfortune to lose his wife,
which made it painful, of course."
"Very painful," Ridley agreed.
"There's an unmarried daughter who keeps house for him, I
believe, but it's never the same, not at his age."
Both gentlemen nodded sagely as they carved their
apples.
"There was a book, wasn't there?" Ridley
enquired.
"There was a book, but
there never will be a book,"
said Mr. Pepper with such fierceness that both ladies looked up at
him.
"There never will be a book, because some one else has
written it for him," said Mr. Pepper with considerable acidity.
"That's what comes of putting things off, and collecting fossils,
and sticking Norman arches on one's pigsties."
"I confess I sympathise," said Ridley with a melancholy sigh.
"I have a weakness for people who can't begin."
". . . The accumulations of a lifetime wasted," continued Mr.
pepper. "He had accumulations enough to fill a barn."
"It's a vice that some of us escape," said Ridley. "Our
friend Miles has another work out to-day."
Mr. Pepper gave an acid little laugh. "According to my
calculations," he said, "he has produced two volumes and a half
annually, which, allowing for time spent in the cradle and so
forth, shows a commendable industry."
"Yes, the old Master's saying of him has been pretty well
realised," said Ridley.
"A way they had," said Mr. Pepper. "You know the Bruce
collection?—not for publication, of course."
"I should suppose not," said Ridley significantly. "For a
Divine he was—remarkably free."
"The Pump in Neville's Row, for example?" enquired Mr.
Pepper.
"Precisely," said Ambrose.
Each of the ladies, being after the fashion of their sex,
highly trained in promoting men's talk without listening to it,
could think—about the education of children, about the use of fog
sirens in an opera—without betraying herself. Only it struck Helen
that Rachel was perhaps too still for a hostess, and that she might
have done something with her hands.
"Perhaps—?" she said at length, upon which they rose and
left, vaguely to the surprise of the gentlemen, who had either
thought them attentive or had forgotten their
presence.
"Ah, one could tell strange stories of the old days," they
heard Ridley say, as he sank into his chair again. Glancing back,
at the doorway, they saw Mr. Pepper as though he had suddenly
loosened his clothes, and had become a vivacious and malicious old
ape.
Winding veils round their heads, the women walked on deck.
They were now moving steadily down the river, passing the dark
shapes of ships at anchor, and London was a swarm of lights with a
pale yellow canopy drooping above it. There were the lights of the
great theatres, the lights of the long streets, lights that
indicated huge squares of domestic comfort, lights that hung high
in air. No darkness would ever settle upon those lamps, as no
darkness had settled upon them for hundreds of years. It seemed
dreadful that the town should blaze for ever in the same spot;
dreadful at least to people going away to adventure upon the sea,
and beholding it as a circumscribed mound, eternally burnt,
eternally scarred. From the deck of the ship the great city
appeared a crouched and cowardly figure, a sedentary
miser.
Leaning over the rail, side by side, Helen said, "Won't you
be cold?" Rachel replied, "No. . . . How beautiful!" she added a
moment later. Very little was visible—a few masts, a shadow of land
here, a line of brilliant windows there. They tried to make head
against the wind.
"It blows—it blows!" gasped Rachel, the words rammed down her
throat. Struggling by her side, Helen was suddenly overcome by the
spirit of movement, and pushed along with her skirts wrapping
themselves round her knees, and both arms to her hair. But slowly
the intoxication of movement died down, and the wind became rough
and chilly. They looked through a chink in the blind and saw that
long cigars were being smoked in the dining-room; they saw Mr.
Ambrose throw himself violently against the back of his chair,
while Mr. Pepper crinkled his cheeks as though they had been cut in
wood. The ghost of a roar of laughter came out to them, and was
drowned at once in the wind. In the dry yellow-lighted room Mr.
Pepper and Mr. Ambrose were oblivious of all tumult; they were in
Cambridge, and it was probably about the year 1875.
"They're old friends," said Helen, smiling at the sight.
"Now, is there a room for us to sit in?"
Rachel opened a door.
"It's more like a landing than a room," she said. Indeed it
had nothing of the shut stationary character of a room on shore. A
table was rooted in the middle, and seats were stuck to the sides.
Happily the tropical suns had bleached the tapestries to a faded
blue-green colour, and the mirror with its frame of shells, the
work of the steward's love, when the time hung heavy in the
southern seas, was quaint rather than ugly. Twisted shells with red
lips like unicorn's horns ornamented the mantelpiece, which was
draped by a pall of purple plush from which depended a certain
number of balls. Two windows opened on to the deck, and the light
beating through them when the ship was roasted on the Amazons had
turned the prints on the opposite wall to a faint yellow colour, so
that "The Coliseum" was scarcely to be distinguished from Queen
Alexandra playing with her Spaniels. A pair of wicker arm-chairs by
the fireside invited one to warm one's hands at a grate full of
gilt shavings; a great lamp swung above the table—the kind of lamp
which makes the light of civilisation across dark fields to one
walking in the country.
"It's odd that every one should be an old friend of Mr.
Pepper's," Rachel started nervously, for the situation was
difficult, the room cold, and Helen curiously silent.
"I suppose you take him for granted?" said her
aunt.
"He's like this," said Rachel, lighting on a fossilised fish
in a basin, and displaying it.
"I expect you're too severe," Helen remarked.
Rachel immediately tried to qualify what she had said against
her belief.
"I don't really know him," she said, and took refuge in
facts, believing that elderly people really like them better than
feelings. She produced what she knew of William Pepper. She told
Helen that he always called on Sundays when they were at home; he
knew about a great many things—about mathematics, history, Greek,
zoology, economics, and the Icelandic Sagas. He had turned Persian
poetry into English prose, and English prose into Greek iambics; he
was an authority upon coins; and—one other thing—oh yes, she
thought it was vehicular traffic.
He was here either to get things out of the sea, or to write
upon the probable course of Odysseus, for Greek after all was his
hobby.
"I've got all his pamphlets," she said. "Little pamphlets.
Little yellow books." It did not appear that she had read
them.
"Has he ever been in love?" asked Helen, who had chosen a
seat.
This was unexpectedly to the point.
"His heart's a piece of old shoe leather," Rachel declared,
dropping the fish. But when questioned she had to own that she had
never asked him.
"I shall ask him," said Helen.
"The last time I saw you, you were buying a piano," she
continued. "Do you remember—the piano, the room in the attic, and
the great plants with the prickles?"
"Yes, and my aunts said the piano would come through the
floor, but at their age one wouldn't mind being killed in the
night?" she enquired.
"I heard from Aunt Bessie not long ago," Helen stated. "She
is afraid that you will spoil your arms if you insist upon so much
practising."
"The muscles of the forearm—and then one won't
marry?"
"She didn't put it quite like that," replied Mrs.
Ambrose.
"Oh, no—of course she wouldn't," said Rachel with a
sigh.
Helen looked at her. Her face was weak rather than decided,
saved from insipidity by the large enquiring eyes; denied beauty,
now that she was sheltered indoors, by the lack of colour and
definite outline. Moreover, a hesitation in speaking, or rather a
tendency to use the wrong words, made her seem more than normally
incompetent for her years. Mrs. Ambrose, who had been speaking much
at random, now reflected that she certainly did not look forward to
the intimacy of three or four weeks on board ship which was
threatened. Women of her own age usually boring her, she supposed
that girls would be worse. She glanced at Rachel again. Yes! how
clear it was that she would be vacillating, emotional, and when you
said something to her it would make no more lasting impression than
the stroke of a stick upon water. There was nothing to take hold of
in girls—nothing hard, permanent, satisfactory. Did Willoughby say
three weeks, or did he say four? She tried to
remember.
At this point, however, the door opened and a tall burly man
entered the room, came forward and shook Helen's hand with an
emotional kind of heartiness, Willoughby himself, Rachel's father,
Helen's brother-in-law. As a great deal of flesh would have been
needed to make a fat man of him, his frame being so large, he was
not fat; his face was a large framework too, looking, by the
smallness of the features and the glow in the hollow of the cheek,
more fitted to withstand assaults of the weather than to express
sentiments and emotions, or to respond to them in
others.
"It is a great pleasure that you have come," he said, "for
both of us."
Rachel murmured in obedience to her father's
glance.
"We'll do our best to make you comfortable. And Ridley. We
think it an honour to have charge of him. Pepper'll have some one
to contradict him—which I daren't do. You find this child grown,
don't you? A young woman, eh?"
Still holding Helen's hand he drew his arm round Rachel's
shoulder, thus making them come uncomfortably close, but Helen
forbore to look.
"You think she does us credit?" he asked.
"Oh yes," said Helen.
"Because we expect great things of her," he continued,
squeezing his daughter's arm and releasing her. "But about you
now." They sat down side by side on the little sofa. "Did you leave
the children well? They'll be ready for school, I suppose. Do they
take after you or Ambrose? They've got good heads on their
shoulders, I'll be bound?"
At this Helen immediately brightened more than she had yet
done, and explained that her son was six and her daughter ten.
Everybody said that her boy was like her and her girl like Ridley.
As for brains, they were quick brats, she thought, and modestly she
ventured on a little story about her son,—how left alone for a
minute he had taken the pat of butter in his fingers, run across
the room with it, and put it on the fire—merely for the fun of the
thing, a feeling which she could understand.
"And you had to show the young rascal that these tricks
wouldn't do, eh?"
"A child of six? I don't think they matter."
"I'm an old-fashioned father."
"Nonsense, Willoughby; Rachel knows better."
Much as Willoughby would doubtless have liked his daughter to
praise him she did not; her eyes were unreflecting as water, her
fingers still toying with the fossilised fish, her mind absent. The
elder people went on to speak of arrangements that could be made
for Ridley's comfort—a table placed where he couldn't help looking
at the sea, far from boilers, at the same time sheltered from the
view of people passing. Unless he made this a holiday, when his
books were all packed, he would have no holiday whatever; for out
at Santa Marina Helen knew, by experience, that he would work all
day; his boxes, she said, were packed with books.
"Leave it to me—leave it to me!" said Willoughby, obviously
intending to do much more than she asked of him. But Ridley and Mr.
Pepper were heard fumbling at the door.
"How are you, Vinrace?" said Ridley, extending a limp hand as
he came in, as though the meeting were melancholy to both, but on
the whole more so to him.
Willoughby preserved his heartiness, tempered by respect. For
the moment nothing was said.
"We looked in and saw you laughing," Helen remarked. "Mr.
Pepper had just told a very good story."
"Pish. None of the stories were good," said her husband
peevishly.
"Still a severe judge, Ridley?" enquired Mr.
Vinrace.
"We bored you so that you left," said Ridley, speaking
directly to his wife.
As this was quite true Helen did not attempt to deny it, and
her next remark, "But didn't they improve after we'd gone?" was
unfortunate, for her husband answered with a droop of his
shoulders, "If possible they got worse."
The situation was now one of considerable discomfort for
every one concerned, as was proved by a long interval of constraint
and silence. Mr. Pepper, indeed, created a diversion of a kind by
leaping on to his seat, both feet tucked under him, with the action
of a spinster who detects a mouse, as the draught struck at his
ankles. Drawn up there, sucking at his cigar, with his arms
encircling his knees, he looked like the image of Buddha, and from
this elevation began a discourse, addressed to nobody, for nobody
had called for it, upon the unplumbed depths of ocean. He professed
himself surprised to learn that although Mr. Vinrace possessed ten
ships, regularly plying between London and Buenos Aires, not one of
them was bidden to investigate the great white monsters of the
lower waters.
"No, no," laughed Willoughby, "the monsters of the earth are
too many for me!"
Rachel was heard to sigh, "Poor little goats!"
"If it weren't for the goats there'd be no music, my dear;
music depends upon goats," said her father rather sharply, and Mr.
Pepper went on to describe the white, hairless, blind monsters
lying curled on the ridges of sand at the bottom of the sea, which
would explode if you brought them to the surface, their sides
bursting asunder and scattering entrails to the winds when released
from pressure, with considerable detail and with such show of
knowledge, that Ridley was disgusted, and begged him to
stop.
From all this Helen drew her own conclusions, which were
gloomy enough. Pepper was a bore; Rachel was an unlicked girl, no
doubt prolific of confidences, the very first of which would be:
"You see, I don't get on with my father." Willoughby, as usual,
loved his business and built his Empire, and between them all she
would be considerably bored. Being a woman of action, however, she
rose, and said that for her part she was going to bed. At the door
she glanced back instinctively at Rachel, expecting that as two of
the same sex they would leave the room together. Rachel rose,
looked vaguely into Helen's face, and remarked with her slight
stammer, "I'm going out to t-t-triumph in the wind."
Mrs. Ambrose's worst suspicions were confirmed; she went down
the passage lurching from side to side, and fending off the wall
now with her right arm, now with her left; at each lurch she
exclaimed emphatically, "Damn!"