<SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER II </h3>
<h4>
AT NO. 8, BELITHA VILLAS
</h4>
<p>It was nine o'clock when Edward Povey pushed open the little iron gate
of No. 8, Belitha Villas, Clapham, thereby announcing his return to the
other eleven villas in the same row. For the twelve little iron gates
of Belitha Villas had each its own peculiar squeak and clang, a fact
that added considerably to the scandal-mongering of the little
community, and had caused a certain old reprobate at No. 3 to make
liberal use of the oil-can.</p>
<p>The master of No. 8 let himself in with his latch-key, and groping his
way down the dark and narrow passage pushed open the dining-room door.
The room was in darkness save for a little evil-smelling oil-lamp which
shed a dismal radiance upon a cloth spread half across the table. An
unsympathetic slab of red topside of beef glared aggressively from a
dish in which the gravy had set to an unhealthy-looking fat-ringed
jelly. This, flanked by the remains of a cottage loaf and a glass of
ale, constituted the meal that Charlotte had left for the refreshment
of her lord and master. The ale had long been drawn, and stood dead
and listless, showing a surface destitute of foam. Edward took one
sip, then sat down and lit a cigarette.</p>
<p>His gaze wandered round the little room, the corners of which were in a
dingy shadow, and contrasted it in his mind with the grill-room of the
Blue Dragon. And then his eye lighted upon a letter propped up against
the brass lamp and put there evidently so that it should attract his
early attention. He took it up and read it through, then with a few
uncomplimentary remarks he thrust it into his pocket and, taking up the
lamp, made his way up-stairs. Another moment and he was back again,
holding the lamp above his head and searching the dim corners of the
room.</p>
<p>A large unwieldy form that had been stretched upon a sofa in the shadow
of the window recess roused itself and sat upright. It was clad in a
shabby dressing-gown of some dark material and it had a stern eye.</p>
<p>"You're late, Edward."</p>
<p>"Yes, my dear, I am a little, I think. I thought you were up-stairs or
had run along to have a chat with Mrs. Oakley. I didn't see you in the
shadow there."</p>
<p>"I saw <i>you</i>, Edward, and I saw you read the letter, and I—I heard
what you called uncle, and I am not in the habit of running along and
having a chat with my neighbours in the middle of the night."</p>
<p>"Well, my dear woman, I didn't know you were there when I read his
letter or I wouldn't have said it,—and it's only nine o'clock."</p>
<p>"That's enough, Edward; you've said what you've said. I'm astonished,
but it can't be mended; they say men speak their true thoughts when
they're in drink."</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon, Charlotte, I——"</p>
<p>"I'm not angry, Edward, but don't bang the lamp down like that, you'll
splash the oil out. I repeat I'm not angry, only sorry. When I see a
man come home at this hour and turn up his nose at a glass of good
honest ale I know what it means. But that doesn't excuse what you said
about uncle."</p>
<p>"Well, he's a rotten nuisance. I know as well as you do that we can't
afford to upset the old chap, but he shouldn't come down on us like
this, especially——"</p>
<p>"Especially what——?"</p>
<p>"——especially when it's—it's not convenient. The fact is,
Charlotte, we'll have to draw in our horns a bit. I've got the sack,
my dear, the push—the bullet—after twenty-two years—curse 'em."</p>
<p>"Edward, you forget you're speaking to me."</p>
<p>"Oh, no, I don't, my dear. I'm talking exactly how I feel. I'll get
even with 'em yet. I'm going to draw some fresh beer."</p>
<p>When Edward returned, Charlotte had lit the hanging lamp with the green
shade over the centre of the table and had settled herself in the one
saddle-bag chair. Her husband sat opposite to her on a shiny horsehair
stool and poured out a glass of foaming ale.</p>
<p>"Your health, my dear," he said, and drank deep.</p>
<p>"Umph! you seem to take it coolly, Edward; I suppose you think it's the
easiest thing in the world to get employment at your age. Look at Mr.
Hardy at No. 4, out for fifteen months and speaks Portuguese, they say,
like a native——"</p>
<p>Edward held up a protesting hand.</p>
<p>"Mr. Hardy, my dear, doesn't enter into this. What's happened to-day
has made me do a bit of hard thinking. Forty's not old, Charlotte,
it's young. I feel like a boy just let out of school. I'll be full of
schemes in a day or two."</p>
<p>Mrs. Povey waved her hands unconvincedly.</p>
<p>"But the present," she remarked with a sinister sweetness. "I suppose
that hasn't entered into your head, eh? How about uncle? he's a
self-made man and thinks everyone should succeed. When he hears you're
sacked he'll cut us off without the shilling. He always says he's got
no use for failures."</p>
<p>Mrs. Povey paused, and getting no reply went on.</p>
<p>"Besides, I've written to Aunt Eliza plenty of times and said how well
we were doing; in fact, I'm afraid I've exaggerated, and now, here he
is coming to visit us. I'm afraid he'll have a sort of awakening—and
so will we."</p>
<p>Sitting forward with his hands on his knees, Edward Povey was staring
into the little heap of cinders in the heart of which still glowed a
dull red. His lips were parted and his eyes were dilated. Mrs. Povey
leant over and shook him roughly by the shoulder. Then she moved the
jug of beer out of his reach.</p>
<p>"Edward Povey, ain't you ashamed of yourself—the state you're in—go
to bed—you hear me?"</p>
<p>Her husband drew his eyes from the contemplation of the fire and
motioned to his wife to sit down.</p>
<p>"It's working out," he said, and stretched out his hand for the jug
that wasn't there. Then he cleared his throat and told his wife about
his adventure of the evening. Charlotte listened in a forbidding
silence, and when he had finished:</p>
<p>"I don't know what all this gallivanting about in restaurants has to do
with me," she said sharply, "a few shillings a week—it'll hardly pay
your fare."</p>
<p>"One moment, dear? You say that uncle comes to us on Monday—you know
what his visits are, only business trips, and at the most he'll stay
two nights. And, Charlotte, Mr. Kyser goes to Switzerland to-morrow
for a month—see?"</p>
<p>"See what?"</p>
<p>"My dear Charlotte, I've always thought that women as a class are
inferior to us men, but for sheer unadulterated stupidity and criminal
density commend me to Charlotte Povey."</p>
<p>"Edward—you dare to——"</p>
<p>"Dare, my dear, I dare anything. Fifteen years of being compared to
Brown, Jones and Robinson and Hardy is enough, madam. The men you have
thrown in my face are worms, Charlotte, <i>worms</i>. I dare anything," he
repeated, and walked round the table and recovered the jug.</p>
<p>"Now listen, Charlotte," he went on more quietly, when he had reseated
himself. "I said that uncle is coming to us on <i>Monday</i>, and that
Kyser goes to Switzerland or Sweden, or somewhere <i>to-morrow</i>."</p>
<p>Mrs. Povey was leaning back in her chair, her eyes closed to denote
that to her at least the proceedings had lost all interest. Something,
however, in the tone of her husband's voice brought her sharply to
herself.</p>
<p>"Bushey is a fine place, nice and high, and healthy, Charlotte, and
will suit uncle down to the ground. He'll find us living there in
style—it'll impress him—and——"</p>
<p>"Edward! are you mad? Bushey—we don't live at Bushey."</p>
<p>Her husband smiled sarcastically.</p>
<p>"Don't we, my dear? really you surprise me—but we're going to,
Charlotte, we're going to—for two nights only, as the play-bills say.
We are going to <i>borrow</i> Adderbury Cottage. The firm owes me a bit,
and I'll take it out in Adderbury Cottages."</p>
<p>Charlotte was fully roused now.</p>
<p>"Edward Povey, I'll not do it."</p>
<p>Her husband brought his fist down on the table with a thump that
rattled the crockery and even infused a little flickering life into the
surface of the glass of dull supper beer.</p>
<p>"You'll do as I say, Charlotte; I'm master here now, and new brooms
sweep clean, you know. Now, put some more coals on, and go to bed."</p>
<p>With a strange sense of awe Mrs. Povey, for the first time in her
married life, did as she was bid, and, with a look of wonderment on her
vacant face, glided slowly from the room. For perhaps another hour
Edward sat over the replenished fire elaborating his scheme. Really it
was absurdly simple; of risk there was none. A kind fate had shown
them a simple way out of their difficulties, and it would be criminal
to ignore it. He knew Uncle Jasper far too well to think of admitting
to him that he was a failure in the world. He knew, too, that the old
man held him in some little contempt, and he welcomed this chance of
showing him his mistake. As for Charlotte, she had evidently committed
herself pretty deeply in her correspondence with Aunt Eliza, and Edward
anticipated no sustained opposition from that quarter.</p>
<p>It was past midnight when Edward rose and opened the little fumed oak
bureau that stood in the recess by the fire-place, and taking a sheet
of the notepaper of Messrs. Kyser, Schultz & Company, wrote to Mr.
Jasper Jarman telling him how glad Charlotte and himself were to hear
that he proposed paying them a visit. He said that the firm for which
he had the honour to work had at last awakened to the value of his
services, and that a substantial increase of salary had given him the
opportunity to receive his dear wife's uncle in a manner more fitted to
his position, and that he remained with all good wishes, his uncle's
most affectionate nephew, Edward Povey.</p>
<p>The little iron gate creaked again that night, and as Edward dropped
the letter into the box at the corner of the terrace he told himself
that his new life promised infinitely more possibilities than that to
which he had been accustomed for the past fifteen years.</p>
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