<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XXXVIII. AT THE RUFUS STONE </h2>
<p>He folded his arms as Dangle and Phipps returned towards him. Phipps was
abashed by his inability to cope with the tandem, which he was now
wheeling, but Dangle was inclined to be quarrelsome. "Miss Milton?" he
said briefly.</p>
<p>Mr. Hoopdriver bowed over his folded arms.</p>
<p>"Miss Milton within?" said Dangle.</p>
<p>"AND not to be disturved," said Mr. Hoopdriver.</p>
<p>"You are a scoundrel, sir," said Mr. Dangle.</p>
<p>"Et your service," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "She awaits 'er stepmother, sir."</p>
<p>Mr. Dangle hesitated. "She will be here immediately," he said. "Here is
her friend, Miss Mergle."</p>
<p>Mr. Hoopdriver unfolded his arms slowly, and, with an air of immense calm,
thrust his hands into his breeches pockets. Then with one of those fatal
hesitations of his, it occurred to him that this attitude was merely
vulgarly defiant he withdrew both, returned one and pulled at the
insufficient moustache with the other. Miss Mergle caught him in
confusion. "Is this the man?" she said to Dangle, and forthwith, "How DARE
you, sir? How dare you face me? That poor girl!"</p>
<p>"You will permit me to observe," began Mr. Hoopdriver, with a splendid
drawl, seeing himself, for the first time in all this business, as a
romantic villain.</p>
<p>"Ugh," said Miss Mergle, unexpectedly striking him about the midriff with
her extended palms, and sending him staggering backward into the hall of
the hotel.</p>
<p>"Let me pass," said Miss Mergle, in towering indignation. "How dare you
resist my passage?" and so swept by him and into the dining-room, wherein
Jessie had sought refuge.</p>
<p>As Mr. Hoopdriver struggled for equilibrium with the umbrella-stand,
Dangle and Phipps, roused from their inertia by Miss Mergle's activity,
came in upon her heels, Phipps leading. "How dare you prevent that lady
passing?" said Phipps.</p>
<p>Mr. Hoopdriver looked obstinate, and, to Dangle's sense, dangerous, but he
made no answer. A waiter in full bloom appeared at the end of the passage,
guardant. "It is men of your stamp, sir," said Phipps, "who discredit
manhood."</p>
<p>Mr. Hoopdriver thrust his hands into his pockets. "Who the juice are you?"
shouted Mr. Hoopdriver, fiercely.</p>
<p>"Who are YOU, sir?" retorted Phipps. "Who are you? That's the question.
What are YOU, and what are you doing, wandering at large with a young lady
under age?"</p>
<p>"Don't speak to him," said Dangle.</p>
<p>"I'm not a-going to tell all my secrets to any one who comes at me," said
Hoopdriver. "Not Likely." And added fiercely, "And that I tell you, sir."</p>
<p>He and Phipps stood, legs apart and both looking exceedingly fierce at one
another, and Heaven alone knows what might not have happened, if the long
clergyman had not appeared in the doorway, heated but deliberate.
"Petticoated anachronism," said the long clergyman in the doorway,
apparently still suffering from the antiquated prejudice that demanded a
third wheel and a black coat from a clerical rider. He looked at Phipps
and Hoopdriver for a moment, then extending his hand towards the latter,
he waved it up and down three times, saying, "Tchak, tchak, tchak," very
deliberately as he did so. Then with a concluding "Ugh!" and a gesture of
repugnance he passed on into the dining-room from which the voice of Miss
Mergle was distinctly audible remarking that the weather was extremely hot
even for the time of year.</p>
<p>This expression of extreme disapprobation had a very demoralizing effect
upon Hoopdriver, a demoralization that was immediately completed by the
advent of the massive Widgery.</p>
<p>"Is this the man?" said Widgery very grimly, and producing a special voice
for the occasion from somewhere deep in his neck.</p>
<p>"Don't hurt him!" said Mrs. Milton, with clasped hands. "However much
wrong he has done her—No violence!"</p>
<p>"'Ow many more of you?" said Hoopdriver, at bay before the umbrella stand.
"Where is she? What has he done with her?" said Mrs. Milton.</p>
<p>"I'm not going to stand here and be insulted by a lot of strangers," said
Mr. Hoopdriver. "So you needn't think it."</p>
<p>"Please don't worry, Mr. Hoopdriver," said Jessie, suddenly appearing in
the door of the dining-room. "I'm here, mother." Her face was white.</p>
<p>Mrs. Milton said something about her child, and made an emotional charge
at Jessie. The embrace vanished into the dining-room. Widgery moved as if
to follow, and hesitated. "You'd better make yourself scarce," he said to
Mr. Hoopdriver.</p>
<p>"I shan't do anything of the kind," said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a catching
of the breath. "I'm here defending that young lady."</p>
<p>"You've done her enough mischief, I should think," said Widgery, suddenly
walking towards the dining-room, and closing the door behind him, leaving
Dangle and Phipps with Hoopdriver.</p>
<p>"Clear!" said Phipps, threateningly.</p>
<p>"I shall go and sit out in the garden," said Mr. Hoopdriver, with dignity.
"There I shall remain."</p>
<p>"Don't make a row with him," said Dangle.</p>
<p>And Mr. Hoopdriver retired, unassaulted, in almost sobbing dignity.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XXXIX. </h2>
<p>So here is the world with us again, and our sentimental excursion is over.
In the front of the Rufus Stone Hotel conceive a remarkable collection of
wheeled instruments, watched over by Dangle and Phipps in grave and
stately attitudes, and by the driver of a stylish dogcart from Ringwood.
In the garden behind, in an attitude of nervous prostration, Mr.
Hoopdriver was seated on a rustic seat. Through the open window of a
private sitting-room came a murmur of voices, as of men and women in
conference. Occasionally something that might have been a girlish sob.</p>
<p>"I fail to see what status Widgery has," says Dangle, "thrusting himself
in there."</p>
<p>"He takes too much upon himself," said Phipps.</p>
<p>"I've been noticing little things, yesterday and to-day," said Dangle, and
stopped.</p>
<p>"They went to the cathedral together in the afternoon."</p>
<p>"Financially it would be a good thing for her, of course," said Dangle,
with a gloomy magnanimity.</p>
<p>He felt drawn to Phipps now by the common trouble, in spite of the man's
chequered legs. "Financially it wouldn't be half bad."</p>
<p>"He's so dull and heavy," said Phipps.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, within, the clergyman had, by promptitude and dexterity, taken
the chair and was opening the case against the unfortunate Jessie. I
regret to have to say that my heroine had been appalled by the visible
array of public opinion against her excursion, to the pitch of tears. She
was sitting with flushed cheeks and swimming eyes at the end of the table
opposite to the clergyman. She held her handkerchief crumpled up in her
extended hand. Mrs. Milton sat as near to her as possible, and
occasionally made little dabs with her hand at Jessie's hand, to indicate
forgiveness. These advances were not reciprocated, which touched Widgery
very much. The lady in green, Miss Mergle (B. A.), sat on the opposite
side near the clergyman. She was the strong-minded schoolmistress to whom
Jessie had written, and who had immediately precipitated the pursuit upon
her. She had picked up the clergyman in Ringwood, and had told him
everything forthwith, having met him once at a British Association
meeting. He had immediately constituted himself administrator of the
entire business. Widgery, having been foiled in an attempt to conduct the
proceedings, stood with his legs wide apart in front of the fireplace
ornament, and looked profound and sympathetic. Jessie's account of her
adventures was a chary one and given amidst frequent interruptions. She
surprised herself by skilfully omitting any allusion to the Bechamel
episode. She completely exonerated Hoopdriver from the charge of being
more than an accessory to her escapade. But public feeling was heavy
against Hoopdriver. Her narrative was inaccurate and sketchy, but happily
the others were too anxious to pass opinions to pin her down to
particulars. At last they had all the facts they would permit.</p>
<p>"My dear young lady," said the clergyman, "I can only ascribe this
extravagant and regrettable expedition of yours to the wildest
misconceptions of your place in the world and of your duties and
responsibilities. Even now, it seems to me, your present emotion is due
not so much to a real and sincere penitence for your disobedience and
folly as to a positive annoyance at our most fortunate interference—"</p>
<p>"Not that," said Mrs. Milton, in a low tone. "Not that."</p>
<p>"But WHY did she go off like this?" said Widgery. "That's what <i>I</i>
want to know."</p>
<p>Jessie made an attempt to speak, but Mrs. Milton said "Hush!" and the
ringing tenor of the clergyman rode triumphantly over the meeting. "I
cannot understand this spirit of unrest that has seized upon the more
intelligent portion of the feminine community. You had a pleasant home, a
most refined and intelligent lady in the position of your mother, to
cherish and protect you—"</p>
<p>"If I HAD a mother," gulped Jessie, succumbing to the obvious snare of
self-pity, and sobbing.</p>
<p>"To cherish, protect, and advise you. And you must needs go out of it all
alone into a strange world of unknown dangers-"</p>
<p>"I wanted to learn," said Jessie.</p>
<p>"You wanted to learn. May you never have anything to UNlearn."</p>
<p>"AH!" from Mrs. Milton, very sadly.</p>
<p>"It isn't fair for all of you to argue at me at once," submitted Jessie,
irrelevantly.</p>
<p>"A world full of unknown dangers," resumed the clergyman. "Your proper
place was surely the natural surroundings that are part of you. You have
been unduly influenced, it is only too apparent, by a class of literature
which, with all due respect to distinguished authoress that shall be
nameless, I must call the New Woman Literature. In that deleterious
ingredient of our book boxes—"</p>
<p>"I don't altogether agree with you there," said Miss Mergle, throwing her
head back and regarding him firmly through her spectacles, and Mr. Widgery
coughed.</p>
<p>"What HAS all this to do with me?" asked Jessie, availing herself of the
interruption.</p>
<p>"The point is," said Mrs. Milton, on her defence, "that in my books—"</p>
<p>"All I want to do," said Jessie, "is to go about freely by myself. Girls
do so in America. Why not here?"</p>
<p>"Social conditions are entirely different in America," said Miss Mergle.
"Here we respect Class Distinctions."</p>
<p>"It's very unfortunate. What I want to know is, why I cannot go away for a
holiday if I want to."</p>
<p>"With a strange young man, socially your inferior," said Widgery, and made
her flush by his tone.</p>
<p>"Why not?" she said. "With anybody."</p>
<p>"They don't do that, even in America," said Miss Mergle.</p>
<p>"My dear young lady," said the clergyman, "the most elementary principles
of decorum—A day will come when you will better understand how
entirely subservient your ideas are to the very fundamentals of our
present civilisation, when you will better understand the harrowing
anxiety you have given Mrs. Milton by this inexplicable flight of yours.
We can only put things down at present, in charity, to your ignorance—"</p>
<p>"You have to consider the general body of opinion, too," said Widgery.</p>
<p>"Precisely," said Miss Mergle. "There is no such thing as conduct in the
absolute." "If once this most unfortunate business gets about," said the
clergyman, "it will do you infinite harm."</p>
<p>"But I'VE done nothing wrong. Why should I be responsible for other
people's—"</p>
<p>"The world has no charity," said Mrs. Milton.</p>
<p>"For a girl," said Jessie. "No."</p>
<p>"Now do let us stop arguing, my dear young lady, and let us listen to
reason. Never mind how or why, this conduct of yours will do you infinite
harm, if once it is generally known. And not only that, it will cause
infinite pain to those who care for you. But if you will return at once to
your home, causing it to be understood that you have been with friends for
these last few days—"</p>
<p>"Tell lies," said Jessie. "Certainly not. Most certainly not. But I
understand that is how your absence is understood at present, and there is
no reason—"</p>
<p>Jessie's grip tightened on her handkerchief. "I won't go back," she said,
"to have it as I did before. I want a room of my own, what books I need to
read, to be free to go out by myself alone, Teaching—"</p>
<p>"Anything," said Mrs. Milton, "anything in reason."</p>
<p>"But will you keep your promise?" said Jessie.</p>
<p>"Surely you won't dictate to your mother!" said Widgery.</p>
<p>"My stepmother! I don't want to dictate. I want definite promises now."</p>
<p>"This is most unreasonable," said the clergyman. "Very well," said Jessie,
swallowing a sob but with unusual resolution. "Then I won't go back. My
life is being frittered away—"</p>
<p>"LET her have her way," said Widgery.</p>
<p>"A room then. All your Men. I'm not to come down and talk away half my
days—"</p>
<p>"My dear child, if only to save you," said Mrs. Milton. "If you don't keep
your promise—"</p>
<p>"Then I take it the matter is practically concluded," said the clergyman.
"And that you very properly submit to return to your proper home. And now,
if I may offer a suggestion, it is that we take tea. Freed of its tannin,
nothing, I think, is more refreshing and stimulating."</p>
<p>"There's a train from Lyndhurst at thirteen minutes to six," said Widgery,
unfolding a time table. "That gives us about half an hour or
three-quarters here—if a conveyance is obtainable, that is."</p>
<p>"A gelatine lozenge dropped into the tea cup precipitates the tannin in
the form of tannate of gelatine," said the clergyman to Miss Mergle, in a
confidential bray.</p>
<p>Jessie stood up, and saw through the window a depressed head and shoulders
over the top of the back of a garden seat. She moved towards the door.
"While you have tea, mother," she said, "I must tell Mr. Hoopdriver of our
arrangements."</p>
<p>"Don't you think I—" began the clergyman.</p>
<p>"No," said Jessie, very rudely; "I don't."</p>
<p>"But, Jessie, haven't you already—"</p>
<p>"You are already breaking the capitulation," said Jessie.</p>
<p>"Will you want the whole half hour?" said Widgery, at the bell.</p>
<p>"Every minute," said Jessie, in the doorway. "He's behaved very nobly to
me."</p>
<p>"There's tea," said Widgery.</p>
<p>"I've had tea."</p>
<p>"He may not have behaved badly," said the clergyman. "But he's certainly
an astonishingly weak person to let a wrong-headed young girl—"</p>
<p>Jessie closed the door into the garden.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Mr. Hoopdriver made a sad figure in the sunlight outside. It was
over, this wonderful excursion of his, so far as she was concerned, and
with the swift blow that separated them, he realised all that those days
had done for him. He tried to grasp the bearings of their position. Of
course, they would take her away to those social altitudes of hers. She
would become an inaccessible young lady again. Would they let him say
good-bye to her?</p>
<p>How extraordinary it had all been! He recalled the moment when he had
first seen her riding, with the sunlight behind her, along the riverside
road; he recalled that wonderful night at Bognor, remembering it as if
everything had been done of his own initiative. "Brave, brave!" she had
called him. And afterwards, when she came down to him in the morning,
kindly, quiet. But ought he to have persuaded her then to return to her
home? He remembered some intention of the sort. Now these people snatched
her away from him as though he was scarcely fit to live in the same world
with her. No more he was! He felt he had presumed upon her worldly
ignorance in travelling with her day after day. She was so dainty, so
delightful, so serene. He began to recapitulate her expressions, the light
of her eyes, the turn of her face.. .</p>
<p>He wasn't good enough to walk in the same road with her. Nobody was.
Suppose they let him say good-bye to her; what could he say? That? But
they were sure not to let her talk to him alone; her mother would be there
as—what was it? Chaperone. He'd never once had a chance of saying
what he felt; indeed, it was only now he was beginning to realise what he
felt. Love I he wouldn't presume. It was worship. If only he could have
one more chance. He must have one more chance, somewhere, somehow. Then he
would pour out his soul to her eloquently. He felt eloquently, and words
would come. He was dust under her feet...</p>
<p>His meditation was interrupted by the click of a door handle, and Jessie
appeared in the sunlight under the verandah. "Come away from here," she
said to Hoopdriver, as he rose to meet her. "I'm going home with them. We
have to say good-bye."</p>
<p>Mr. Hoopdriver winced, opened and shut his mouth, and rose without a word.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XL. </h2>
<p>At first Jessie Milton and Mr. Hoopdriver walked away from the hotel in
silence. He heard a catching in her breath and glanced at her and saw her
ips pressed tight and a tear on her cheek. Her face was hot and bright.
She was looking straight before her. He could think of nothing to say, and
thrust his hands in his pockets and looked away from her intentionally.
After a while she began to talk. They dealt disjointedly with scenery
first, and then with the means of self-education. She took his address at
Antrobus's and promised to send him some books. But even with that it was
spiritless, aching talk, Hoopdriver felt, for the fighting mood was over.
She seemed, to him, preoccupied with the memories of her late battle, and
that appearance hurt him.</p>
<p>"It's the end," he whispered to himself. "It's the end."</p>
<p>They went into a hollow and up a gentle wooded slope, and came at last to
a high and open space overlooking a wide expanse of country. There, by a
common impulse, they stopped. She looked at her watch—a little
ostentatiously. They stared at the billows of forest rolling away beneath
them, crest beyond crest, of leafy trees, fading at last into blue.</p>
<p>"The end" ran through his mind, to the exclusion of all speakable
thoughts.</p>
<p>"And so," she said, presently, breaking the silence, "it comes to
good-bye."</p>
<p>For half a minute he did not answer. Then he gathered his resolution.
"There is one thing I MUST say."</p>
<p>"Well?" she said, surprised and abruptly forgetting the recent argument.
"I ask no return. But—"</p>
<p>Then he stopped. "I won't say it. It's no good. It would be rot from me—now.
I wasn't going to say anything. Good-bye."</p>
<p>She looked at him with a startled expression in her eyes. "No," she said.
"But don't forget you are going to work. Remember, brother Chris, you are
my friend. You will work. You are not a very strong man, you know, now—you
will forgive me—nor do you know all you should. But what will you be
in six years' time?"</p>
<p>He stared hard in front of him still, and the lines about his weak mouth
seemed to strengthen. He knew she understood what he could not say.</p>
<p>"I'll work," he said, concisely. They stood side by side for a moment.
Then he said, with a motion of his head, "I won't come back to THEM. Do
you mind? Going back alone?"</p>
<p>She took ten seconds to think. "No." she said, and held out her hand,
biting her nether lip. "GOOD-BYE," she whispered.</p>
<p>He turned, with a white face, looked into her eyes, took her hand limply,
and then with a sudden impulse, lifted it to his lips. She would have
snatched it away, but his grip tightened to her movement. She felt the
touch of his lips, and then he had dropped her fingers and turned from her
and was striding down the slope. A dozen paces away his foot turned in the
lip of a rabbit hole, and he stumbled forward and almost fell. He
recovered his balance and went on, not looking back. He never once looked
back. She stared at his receding figure until it was small and far below
her, and then, the tears running over her eyelids now, turned slowly, and
walked with her hands gripped hard together behind her, towards Stoney
Cross again.</p>
<p>"I did not know," she whispered to herself. "I did not understand. Even
now—No, I do not understand."</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0041" id="link2H_4_0041"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XLI. THE ENVOY </h2>
<p>So the story ends, dear Reader. Mr. Hoopdriver, sprawling down there among
the bracken, must sprawl without our prying, I think, or listening to what
chances to his breathing. And of what came of it all, of the six years and
afterwards, this is no place to tell. In truth, there is no telling it,
for the years have still to run. But if you see how a mere counter-jumper,
a cad on castors, and a fool to boot, may come to feel the little
insufficiencies of life, and if he has to any extent won your sympathies,
my end is attained. (If it is not attained, may Heaven forgive us both!)
Nor will we follow this adventurous young lady of ours back to her home at
Surbiton, to her new struggle against Widgery and Mrs. Milton combined.
For, as she will presently hear, that devoted man has got his reward. For
her, also, your sympathies are invited.</p>
<p>The rest of this great holiday, too—five days there are left of it—is
beyond the limits of our design. You see fitfully a slender figure in a
dusty brown suit and heather mixture stockings, and brown shoes not
intended to be cycled in, flitting Londonward through Hampshire and
Berkshire and Surrey, going economically—for excellent reasons. Day
by day he goes on, riding fitfully and for the most part through
bye-roads, but getting a few miles to the north-eastward every day. He is
a narrow-chested person, with a nose hot and tanned at the bridge with
unwonted exposure, and brown, red-knuckled fists. A musing expression sits
upon the face of this rider, you observe. Sometimes he whistles
noiselessly to himself, sometimes he speaks aloud, "a juiced good try,
anyhow!" you hear; and sometimes, and that too often for my liking, he
looks irritable and hopeless. "I know," he says, "I know. It's over and
done. It isn't IN me. You ain't man enough, Hoopdriver. Look at yer silly
hands!... Oh, my God!" and a gust of passion comes upon him and he rides
furiously for a space.</p>
<p>Sometimes again his face softens. "Anyhow, if I'm not to see her—she's
going to lend me books," he thinks, and gets such comfort as he can. Then
again; "Books! What's books?" Once or twice triumphant memories of the
earlier incidents nerve his face for a while. "I put the ky-bosh on HIS
little game," he remarks. "I DID that," and one might even call him happy
in these phases. And, by-the-bye, the machine, you notice, has been
enamel-painted grey and carries a sonorous gong.</p>
<p>This figure passes through Basingstoke and Bagshot, Staines, Hampton, and
Richmond. At last, in Putney High Street, glowing with the warmth of an
August sunset and with all the 'prentice boys busy shutting up shop, and
the work girls going home, and the shop folks peeping abroad, and the
white 'buses full of late clerks and city folk rumbling home to their
dinners, we part from him. He is back. To-morrow, the early rising, the
dusting, and drudgery, begin again—but with a difference, with
wonderful memories and still more wonderful desires and ambitions
replacing those discrepant dreams.</p>
<p>He turns out of the High Street at the corner, dismounts with a sigh, and
pushes his machine through the gates of the Antrobus stable yard, as the
apprentice with the high collar holds them open. There are words of
greeting. "South Coast," you hear; and "splendid weather—splendid."
He sighs. "Yes—swapped him off for a couple of sovs. It's a juiced
good machine."</p>
<p>The gate closes upon him with a slam, and he vanishes from our ken.</p>
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