<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
<p>It was not till the end of October that she saw Captain Everard again,
and on that occasion—the only one of all the series on which hindrance
had been so utter—no communication with him proved possible.
She had made out even from the cage that it was a charming golden day:
a patch of hazy autumn sunlight lay across the sanded floor and also,
higher up, quickened into brightness a row of ruddy bottled syrups.
Work was slack and the place in general empty; the town, as they said
in the cage, had not waked up, and the feeling of the day likened itself
to something than in happier conditions she would have thought of romantically
as Saint Martin’s summer. The counter-clerk had gone to
his dinner; she herself was busy with arrears of postal jobs, in the
midst of which she became aware that Captain Everard had apparently
been in the shop a minute and that Mr. Buckton had already seized him.</p>
<p>He had as usual half a dozen telegrams; and when he saw that she
saw him and their eyes met he gave, on bowing to her, an exaggerated
laugh in which she read a new consciousness. It was a confession
of awkwardness; it seemed to tell her that of course he knew he ought
better to have kept his head, ought to have been clever enough to wait,
on some pretext, till he should have found her free. Mr. Buckton
was a long time with him, and her attention was soon demanded by other
visitors; so that nothing passed between them but the fulness of their
silence. The look she took from him was his greeting, and the
other one a simple sign of the eyes sent her before going out.
The only token they exchanged therefore was his tacit assent to her
wish that since they couldn’t attempt a certain frankness they
should attempt nothing at all. This was her intense preference;
she could be as still and cold as any one when that was the sole solution.</p>
<p>Yet more than any contact hitherto achieved these counted instants
struck her as marking a step: they were built so—just in the mere
flash—on the recognition of his now definitely knowing what it
was she would do for him. The “anything, anything”
she had uttered in the Park went to and fro between them and under the
poked-out china that interposed. It had all at last even put on
the air of their not needing now clumsily to manoeuvre to converse:
their former little postal make-believes, the intense implications of
questions and answers and change, had become in the light of the personal
fact, of their having had their moment, a possibility comparatively
poor. It was as if they had met for all time—it exerted
on their being in presence again an influence so prodigious. When
she watched herself, in the memory of that night, walk away from him
as if she were making an end, she found something too pitiful in the
primness of such a gait. Hadn’t she precisely established
on the part of each a consciousness that could end only with death?</p>
<p>It must be admitted that in spite of this brave margin an irritation,
after he had gone, remained with her; a sense that presently became
one with a still sharper hatred of Mr. Buckton, who, on her friend’s
withdrawal, had retired with the telegrams to the sounder and left her
the other work. She knew indeed she should have a chance to see
them, when she would, on file; and she was divided, as the day went
on, between the two impressions of all that was lost and all that was
re-asserted. What beset her above all, and as she had almost never
known it before, was the desire to bound straight out, to overtake the
autumn afternoon before it passed away for ever and hurry off to the
Park and perhaps be with him there again on a bench. It became
for an hour a fantastic vision with her that he might just have gone
to sit and wait for her. She could almost hear him, through the
tick of the sounder, scatter with his stick, in his impatience, the
fallen leaves of October. Why should such a vision seize her at
this particular moment with such a shake? There was a time—from
four to five—when she could have cried with happiness and rage.</p>
<p>Business quickened, it seemed, toward five, as if the town did wake
up; she had therefore more to do, and she went through it with little
sharp stampings and jerkings: she made the crisp postal-orders fairly
snap while she breathed to herself “It’s the last day—the
last day!” The last day of what? She couldn’t
have told. All she knew now was that if she <i>were</i> out of
the cage she wouldn’t in the least have minded, this time, its
not yet being dark. She would have gone straight toward Park Chambers
and have hung about there till no matter when. She would have
waited, stayed, rung, asked, have gone in, sat on the stairs.
What the day was the last of was probably, to her strained inner sense,
the group of golden ones, of any occasion for seeing the hazy sunshine
slant at that angle into the smelly shop, of any range of chances for
his wishing still to repeat to her the two words she had in the Park
scarcely let him bring out. “See here—see here!”—the
sound of these two words had been with her perpetually; but it was in
her ears to-day without mercy, with a loudness that grew and grew.
What was it they then expressed? what was it he had wanted her to see?
She seemed, whatever it was, perfectly to see it now—to see that
if she should just chuck the whole thing, should have a great and beautiful
courage, he would somehow make everything up to her. When the
clock struck five she was on the very point of saying to Mr. Buckton
that she was deadly ill and rapidly getting worse. This announcement
was on her lips, and she had quite composed the pale hard face she would
offer him: “I can’t stop—I must go home. If
I feel better, later on, I’ll come back. I’m very
sorry, but I <i>must</i> go.” At that instant Captain Everard
once more stood there, producing in her agitated spirit, by his real
presence, the strangest, quickest revolution. He stopped her off
without knowing it, and by the time he had been a minute in the shop
she felt herself saved.</p>
<p>That was from the first minute how she thought of it. There
were again other persons with whom she was occupied, and again the situation
could only be expressed by their silence. It was expressed, of
a truth, in a larger phrase than ever yet, for her eyes now spoke to
him with a kind of supplication. “Be quiet, be quiet!”
they pleaded; and they saw his own reply: “I’ll do whatever
you say; I won’t even look at you—see, see!”
They kept conveying thus, with the friendliest liberality, that they
wouldn’t look, quite positively wouldn’t. What she
was to see was that he hovered at the other end of the counter, Mr.
Buckton’s end, and surrendered himself again to that frustration.
It quickly proved so great indeed that what she was to see further was
how he turned away before he was attended to, and hung off, waiting,
smoking, looking about the shop; how he went over to Mr. Cocker’s
own counter and appeared to price things, gave in fact presently two
or three orders and put down money, stood there a long time with his
back to her, considerately abstaining from any glance round to see if
she were free. It at last came to pass in this way that he had
remained in the shop longer than she had ever yet known to do, and that,
nevertheless, when he did turn about she could see him time himself—she
was freshly taken up—and cross straight to her postal subordinate,
whom some one else had released. He had in his hand all this while
neither letters nor telegrams, and now that he was close to her—for
she was close to the counter-clerk—it brought her heart into her
mouth merely to see him look at her neighbour and open his lips.
She was too nervous to bear it. He asked for a Post-Office Guide,
and the young man whipped out a new one; whereupon he said he wished
not to purchase, but only to consult one a moment; with which, the copy
kept on loan being produced, he once more wandered off.</p>
<p>What was he doing to her? What did he want of her? Well,
it was just the aggravation of his “See here!” She
felt at this moment strangely and portentously afraid of him—had
in her ears the hum of a sense that, should it come to that kind of
tension, she must fly on the spot to Chalk Farm. Mixed with her
dread and with her reflexion was the idea that, if he wanted her so
much as he seemed to show, it might be after all simply to do for him
the “anything” she had promised, the “everything”
she had thought it so fine to bring out to Mr. Mudge. He might
want her to help him, might have some particular appeal; though indeed
his manner didn’t denote that—denoted on the contrary an
embarrassment, an indecision, something of a desire not so much to be
helped as to be treated rather more nicely than she had treated him
the other time. Yes, he considered quite probably that he had
help rather to offer than to ask for. Still, none the less, when
he again saw her free he continued to keep away from her; when he came
back with his thumbed Guide it was Mr. Buckton he caught—it was
from Mr. Buckton he obtained half-a-crown’s-worth of stamps.</p>
<p>After asking for the stamps he asked, quite as a second thought,
for a postal-order for ten shillings. What did he want with so
many stamps when he wrote so few letters? How could he enclose
a postal-order in a telegram? She expected him, the next thing,
to go into the corner and make up one of his telegrams—half a
dozen of them—on purpose to prolong his presence. She had
so completely stopped looking at him that she could only guess his movements—guess
even where his eyes rested. Finally she saw him make a dash that
might have been toward the nook where the forms were hung; and at this
she suddenly felt that she couldn’t keep it up. The counter-clerk
had just taken a telegram from a slavey, and, to give herself something
to cover her, she snatched it out of his hand. The gesture was
so violent that he gave her in return an odd look, and she also perceived
that Mr. Buckton noticed it. The latter personage, with a quick
stare at her, appeared for an instant to wonder whether his snatching
it in <i>his</i> turn mightn’t be the thing she would least like,
and she anticipated this practical criticism by the frankest glare she
had ever given him. It sufficed: this time it paralysed him; and
she sought with her trophy the refuge of the sounder.</p>
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