<SPAN name="CH8"><!-- CH8 --></SPAN>
<h2> CHAPTER VIII </h2>
<h3> A MUSEUM IDYLL </h3>
<p>Whether it was that practice revived a forgotten
skill on my part, or that Miss Bellingham had over-estimated
the amount of work to be done, I am unable
to say. But whichever may have been the explanation,
the fact is that the fourth afternoon saw our task
so nearly completed that I was fain to plead that a
small remainder might be left over to form an excuse
for yet one more visit to the reading-room.</p>
<p>Short, however, as had been the period of our
collaboration, it had been long enough to produce a
great change in our relations to one another. For there
is no friendship so intimate and satisfying as that engendered
by community of work, and none—between
man and woman, at any rate—so frank and wholesome.</p>
<p>Every day I had arrived to find a pile of books with
the places duly marked and the blue covered quarto
note-books in readiness. Every day we had worked
steadily at the allotted task, had then handed in the
books and gone forth together to enjoy a most companionable
tea in the milk-shop; thereafter to walk
home by way of Queen Square, talking over the day's
work and discussing the state of the world in the far-off
days when Ahkhenaten was king and the Tell el Amarna
tablets were a-writing.</p>
<p>It had been a pleasant time, so pleasant, that as I
handed in the books for the last time, I sighed to think
that it was over; that not only was the task finished,
but that the recovery of my fair patient's hand, from
which I had that morning removed the splint, had put
an end to the need of my help.</p>
<p>"What shall we do?" I asked, as we came out into
the central hall; "it is too early for tea. Shall we go
and look at some of the galleries?"</p>
<p>"Why not?" she answered. "We might look over
some of the things connected with what we have been
doing. For instance, there is a relief of Ahkhenaten
upstairs in the Third Egyptian Room; we might go
and look at that."</p>
<p>I fell in eagerly with the suggestion, placing myself
under her experienced guidance, and we started by way
of the Roman Gallery, past the long row of extremely
commonplace and modern-looking Roman Emperors.</p>
<p>"I don't know," she said, pausing for a moment
opposite a bust labelled "Trajan" (but obviously a
portrait of Phil May), "how I am ever even to thank
you for all that you have done? to say nothing of
repayment."</p>
<p>"There is no need to do either," I replied. "I
have enjoyed working with you, so I have had my
reward. But still," I added, "if you want to do me
a great kindness, you have it in your power."</p>
<p>"How?"</p>
<p>"In connection with my friend Doctor Thorndyke.
I told you he was an enthusiast. Now he is,
for some reason, most keenly interested in everything
relating to your uncle, and I happen to know that,
if any legal proceedings should take place, he would
very much like to keep a friendly eye on the case."</p>
<p>"And what do you want me to do?"</p>
<p>"I want you, if an opportunity should occur for
him to give your father advice or help of any kind,
to use your influence with your father in favour of,
rather than in opposition to, his accepting it—always
assuming that you have no real feeling against his
doing so."</p>
<p>Miss Bellingham looked at me thoughtfully for a
few moments, and then laughed softly.</p>
<p>"So the great kindness that I am to do you is to
let you do me a further kindness through your friend!"</p>
<p>"No," I protested; "that is where you are quite
mistaken. It isn't benevolence on Doctor Thorndyke's
part; it is professional enthusiasm."</p>
<p>She smiled sceptically.</p>
<p>"You don't believe in it," I said; "but consider
other cases. Why does a surgeon get out of bed on
a winter's night to do an emergency operation at a
hospital? He doesn't get paid for it. Do you think
it is altruism?"</p>
<p>"Yes, of course. Isn't it?"</p>
<p>"Certainly not. He does it because it is his job,
because it is his business to fight with disease—and
win."</p>
<p>"I don't see much difference," she said. "It is work
done for love instead of for payment. However, I
will do what you ask if the opportunity arises; but
I shan't suppose that I am repaying your kindness
to me."</p>
<p>"I don't mind, so long as you do it," I said, and we
walked on for some time in silence.</p>
<p>"Isn't it odd," she said presently, "how our talk
always seems to come back to my uncle? Oh, and
that reminds me that the things he gave to the Museum
are in the same room as the Ahkhenaten relief. Would
you like to see them?"</p>
<p>"Of course I should."</p>
<p>"Then we will go and look at them first." She
paused, and then, rather shyly and with a rising colour,
she continued: "And I think I should like to introduce
you to a very dear friend of mine—with your permission,
of course."</p>
<p>This last addition she made hastily, seeing, I suppose,
that I looked rather glum at the suggestion. Inwardly
I consigned her friend to the devil, especially if
of the masculine gender; outwardly I expressed my
felicity at making the acquaintance of any person
whom she should honour with her friendship. Whereat,
to my discomfiture, she laughed enigmatically; a very
soft laugh, low-pitched and musical, like the cooing of
a glorified pigeon.</p>
<p>I strolled on by her side, speculating a little anxiously
on the coming introduction. Was I being conducted
to the lair of one of the savants attached to the establishment?
and would he add a superfluous third
to our little party of two, so complete and companionable,
<i>solus cum sola</i>, in this populated wilderness?
Above all, would he turn out to be a comely young
man, and bring my aerial castles tumbling about my
ears? The shy look and the blush with which she had
suggested the introduction were ominous indications,
upon which I mused gloomily as we ascended the stairs
and passed through the wide doorway. I glanced
apprehensively at my companion, and met a quiet,
inscrutable smile; and at that moment she halted outside
a wall-case and faced me.</p>
<p>"This is my friend," she said. "Let me present
you to Artemidorus, late of the Fayyum. Oh, don't
smile!" she pleaded. "I am quite serious. Have you
never heard of pious Catholics who cherish a devotion
to some long-departed saint? That is my feeling towards
Artemidorus, and if you only knew what comfort
he has shed into the heart of a lonely woman; what
a quiet, unobtrusive friend he has been to me in my
solitary, friendless days, always ready with a kindly
greeting on his gentle, thoughtful face, you would like
him for that alone. And I want you to like him and
to share our silent friendship. Am I very silly, very
sentimental?"</p>
<p>A wave of relief had swept over me, and the mercury
of my emotional thermometer, which had shrunk almost
into the bulb, leaped up to summer heat. How charming
it was of her and how sweetly intimate, to wish
to share this mystical friendship with me! And what
a pretty conceit it was, too, and how like this strange,
inscrutable maiden, to come here and hold silent converse
with this long-departed Greek. And the pathos
of it all touched me deeply amidst the joy of this newborn
intimacy.</p>
<p>"Are you scornful?" she asked, with a shade of
disappointment, as I made no reply.</p>
<p>"No, indeed I am not," I answered earnestly. "I
want to make you aware of my sympathy and my
appreciation without offending you by seeming to exaggerate,
and I don't know how to express it."</p>
<p>"Oh, never mind about the expression, so long as
you feel it. I thought you would understand," and
she gave me a smile that made me tingle to my finger-tips.</p>
<p>We stood awhile gazing in silence at the mummy—for
such, indeed, was her friend Artemidorus. But not
an ordinary mummy. Egyptian in form, it was entirely
Greek in feeling; and brightly coloured as it
was, in accordance with the racial love of colour, the
tasteful refinement with which the decoration of the
case was treated made those around look garish and
barbaric. But the most striking feature was a charming
panel portrait which occupied the place of the
usual mask. This painting was a revelation to me.
Except that it was executed in tempera instead of
oil, it differed in no respect from modern work. There
was nothing archaic or even ancient about it. With
its freedom of handling and its correct rendering of
light and shade, it might have been painted yesterday;
indeed, enclosed in an ordinary gilt frame, it might
have passed without remark in an exhibition of modern
portraits.</p>
<p>Miss Bellingham observed my admiration and smiled
approvingly.</p>
<p>"It is a charming little portrait, isn't it?" she said;
"and such a sweet face, too; so thoughtful and human
with just a shade of melancholy. But the whole thing
is full of charm. I fell in love with it the first time
I saw it. And it is so Greek!"</p>
<p>"Yes, it is, in spite of the Egyptian gods and
symbols."</p>
<p>"Rather because of them, I think," said she. "There
we have the typical Greek attitude, the genial, cultivated
eclecticism that appreciated the fitness of even
the most alien forms of art. There is Anubis standing
beside the bier; there are Isis and Nephthys, and there
below, Horus and Tahuti. But we can't suppose that
Artemidorus worshipped or believed in those gods.
They are there because they are splendid decoration
and perfectly appropriate in character. The real feeling
of those who loved the dead man breaks out in
the inscription." She pointed to a band below the
pectoral, where, in gilt capital letters, was written the
two words, "ΑΡΤΕΜΙΔΩΡΕ
ΕΥΨΥΧΙ."</p>
<p>"Yes," I said, "it is very dignified and very human."</p>
<p>"And so sincere and full of real emotion," she added.
"I find it unspeakably touching. 'O Artemidorus,
farewell!' There is the real note of human grief, the
sorrow of eternal parting. How much finer it is than
the vulgar boastfulness of the Semitic epitaphs, or
our own miserable, insincere make-believe of the 'Not
lost but gone before' type. He was gone from them
for ever; they would look on his face and hear his
voice no more; they realised that this was their last
farewell. Oh, there is a world of love and sorrow in
those two simple words!"</p>
<p>For some time neither of us spoke. The glamour
of this touching memorial of a long-buried grief had
stolen over me, and I was content to stand silent by
my beloved companion and revive, with a certain pensive
pleasure, the ghosts of human emotions over which
so many centuries had rolled. Presently she turned
to me with a frank smile. "You have been weighed
in the balance of friendship," she said, "and not found
wanting. You have the gift of sympathy, even with
a woman's sentimental fancies."</p>
<p>I suspected that a good many men would have developed
this precious quality under the circumstances,
but I refrained from saying so. There is no use in
crying down one's own wares. I was glad enough to
have earned her good opinion so easily, and when she
at length turned away from the case and passed
through into the adjoining room, it was a very complacent
young man who bore her company.</p>
<p>"Here is Ahkhenaten—or Khu-en-aten, as the
authorities here render the hieroglyphics." She indicated
a fragment of a coloured relief labelled:
"Portion of a painted stone tablet with a portrait
figure of Amen-hetep IV," and we stopped to look at
the frail, effeminate figure of the great king, with his
large cranium, his queer, pointed chin and the Aten
rays stretching out their weird hands as if caressing
him.</p>
<p>"We mustn't stay here if you want to see my uncle's
gift, because this room closes at four to-day." With
this admonition she moved on to the other end of the
room, where she halted before a large floor-case containing
a mummy and a large number of other objects.
A black label with white lettering set forth the various
contents with a brief explanation as follows:</p>
<p>"Mummy of Sebek-hotep, a scribe of the twenty-second
dynasty, together with the objects found in
the tomb. These include the four Canopic jars, in
which the internal organs were deposited, the Ushabti
figures, tomb provisions and various articles that had
belonged to the deceased; his favourite chair, his head-rest,
his ink-palette, inscribed with his name and the
name of the king, Osorkon I, in whose reign he lived,
and other smaller articles. Presented by John Bellingham, Esq."</p>
<p>"They have put all the objects together in one case,"
Miss Bellingham explained, "to show the contents of
an ordinary tomb of the better class. You see that the
dead man was provided with all his ordinary comforts:
provisions, furniture, the ink-palette that he had been
accustomed to use in writing on papyri, and a staff
of servants to wait on him."</p>
<p>"Where are the servants?" I asked.</p>
<p>"The little Ushabti figures," she answered; "they
were the attendants of the dead, you know, his servants
in the under-world. It was a quaint idea, wasn't it?
But it was all very complete and consistent, and quite
reasonable, too, if once one accepts the belief in the
persistence of the individual apart from the body."</p>
<p>"Yes," I agreed, "and that is the only fair way to
judge a religious system, by taking the main beliefs
for granted. But what a business it must have been,
bringing all these things from Egypt to London."</p>
<p>"It was worth the trouble, though, for it is a fine
and instructive collection. And the work is all very
good of its kind. You notice that the Ushabti figures
and the heads that form the stoppers of the Canopic
jars are quite finely modelled. The mummy itself, too,
is rather handsome, though that coat of bitumen on
the back doesn't improve it. But Sebek-hotep must
have been a fine-looking man."</p>
<p>"The mask on the case is a portrait, I suppose?"</p>
<p>"Yes; in fact, it is rather more. To some extent
it is the actual face of the man himself. This mummy
is enclosed in what is called a cartonnage, that is a
case moulded on the figure. The cartonnage, was formed
of a number of layers of linen or papyrus united by
glue or cement, and when the case had been fitted
to the mummy it was moulded to the body, so that the
general form of the features and limbs was often
apparent. After the cement was dry the case was
covered with a thin layer of stucco and the face
modelled more completely, and then the decorations
and inscriptions were painted on. So that, you see,
in a cartonnage, the body was sealed up like a nut in
its shell, unlike the more ancient forms in which the
mummy was merely rolled up and enclosed in a wooden
coffin."</p>
<p>At this moment there smote upon our ears a politely
protesting voice announcing in sing-song tones that
it was closing time; and simultaneously a desire for
tea suggested the hospitable milk-shop. With leisurely
dignity that ignored the official who shepherded us
along the galleries, we made our way to the entrance,
still immersed in conversation on matters sepulchral.</p>
<p>It was rather earlier than our usual hour for leaving
the Museum and, moreover, it was our last day—for
the present. Wherefore we lingered over our tea to
an extent that caused the milk-shop lady to view us
with some disfavour, and when at length we started
homeward, we took so many short cuts that six o'clock
found us no nearer our destination than Lincoln's Inn
Fields; whither we had journeyed by a slightly indirect
route that traversed (among other places) Russell
Square, Red Lion Square, with the quaint passage of
the same name, Bedford Row, Jockey's Fields, Hand
Court, and Great Turnstile.</p>
<p>It was in the latter thoroughfare that our attention
was attracted by a flaming poster outside a newsvendor's
bearing the startling inscription:</p>
<p><b>
"MORE MEMENTOES OF MURDERED MAN."
</b></p>
<p>Miss Bellingham glanced at the poster and shuddered.</p>
<p>"Horrible! Isn't it?" she said. "Have you read
about them?"</p>
<p>"I haven't been noticing the papers the last few,
days," I replied.</p>
<p>"No, of course you haven't. You've been slaving
at those wretched notes. We don't very often see the
papers, at least we don't take them in, but Miss Oman
has kept us supplied during the last day or two. She
is a perfect little ghoul; she delights in horrors of
every kind, and the more horrible the better."</p>
<p>"But," I asked, "what is it that they have found?"</p>
<p>"Oh, they are the remains of some poor creature
who seems to have been murdered and cut in pieces.
It is dreadful. It made me shudder to read of it, for
I couldn't help thinking of poor Uncle John, and, as
for my father, he was really quite upset."</p>
<p>"Are these the bones that were found in a watercress-bed
at Sidcup?"</p>
<p>"Yes. But they have found several more. The
police have been most energetic. They seem to have
been making a systematic search, and the result has
been that they have discovered several portions of the
body, scattered about in very widely separated places—Sidcup,
Lee, St. Mary Cray; and yesterday it was
reported that an arm had been found in one of the
ponds called 'the Cuckoo Pits,' close to our old home."</p>
<p>"What! in Essex?" I exclaimed.</p>
<p>"Yes, in Epping Forest, quite near Woodford.
Isn't it dreadful to think of it? They were probably
hidden when we were living there. I think it was that
that horrified my father so much. When he read it he
was so upset that he gathered up the whole bundle
of newspapers and tossed them out of the window; and
they blew over the wall, and poor Miss Oman had to
rush out and pursue them up the court."</p>
<p>"Do you think he suspects that these remains may
be those of your uncle?"</p>
<p>"I think so, though he has said nothing to that
effect, and, of course, I have not made any such suggestion
to him. We always preserve the fiction between
ourselves of believing that Uncle John is still
alive."</p>
<p>"But you don't think he is, do you?"</p>
<p>"No, I am afraid I don't; and I feel pretty sure
that my father doesn't think so either, but he doesn't
like to admit it to me."</p>
<p>"Do you happen to remember what bones have been
found?"</p>
<p>"No, I don't. I know that an arm was found in
the Cuckoo Pits, and I think a thigh-bone was dredged
up out of a pond near St. Mary Cray. But Miss Oman
will be able to tell you all about it, if you are interested.
She will be delighted to meet a kindred spirit," Miss
Bellingham added, with a smile.</p>
<p>"I don't know that I want to claim spiritual kinship
with a ghoul," said I; "especially such a very sharp-tempered
ghoul."</p>
<p>"Oh, don't disparage her, Doctor Berkeley!" Miss
Bellingham pleaded. "She isn't really bad-tempered;
only a little prickly on the surface. I oughtn't to have
called her a ghoul; she is just the sweetest, most
affectionate, most unselfish little angelic human hedgehog
that you could find if you travelled the wide world
through. Do you know that she has been working her
fingers to the bone making an old dress of mine presentable
because she is so anxious that I shall look
nice at your little supper-party."</p>
<p>"You are sure to do that, in any case," I said; "but
I withdraw my remark as to her temper unreservedly.
And I really didn't mean it, you know; I have always
liked the little lady."</p>
<p>"That's right; and now won't you come in and have
a few minutes' chat with my father? We are quite
early, in spite of the short cuts."</p>
<p>I assented readily, and the more so inasmuch as I
wanted a few words with Miss Oman on the subject of
catering and did not want to discuss it before my
friends. Accordingly I went in and gossiped with Mr.
Bellingham, chiefly about the work that we had done
at the Museum, until it was time for me to return to
the surgery.</p>
<p>Having taken my leave, I walked down the stairs
with reflective slowness and as much creaking of my
boots as I could manage; with the result, hopefully
anticipated, that as I approached the door of Miss
Oman's room it opened and the lady's head protruded.</p>
<p>"I'd change my cobbler if I were you," she said.</p>
<p>I thought of the "angelic human hedgehog," and
nearly sniggered in her face.</p>
<p>"I am sure you would, Miss Oman, instantly; though,
mind you, the poor fellow can't help his looks."</p>
<p>"You are a very flippant young man," she said
severely. Whereat I grinned, and she regarded me
silently with a baleful glare. Suddenly I remembered
my mission and became serious and sober.</p>
<p>"Miss Oman," I said, "I very much want to take
your advice on a matter of some importance—to me,
at least." (That ought to fetch her, I thought.) The
"advice fly"—strangely neglected by Izaak Walton—is
guaranteed to kill in any weather. And it did fetch
her. She rose in a flash and gorged it, cock's feathers,
worsted body and all.</p>
<p>"What is it about?" she asked eagerly. "But don't
stand out there where everybody can hear but me.
Come in and sit down."</p>
<p>Now, I didn't want to discuss the matter here, and,
besides, there was not time. I therefore assumed an
air of mystery.</p>
<p>"I can't, Miss Oman. I'm due at the surgery now.
But if you should be passing and should have a few
minutes to spare, I should be greatly obliged if you
would look in. I really don't quite know how to act."</p>
<p>"No, I expect not. Men very seldom do. But
you're better than most, for you know when you are
in difficulties and have the sense to consult a woman.
But what is it about? Perhaps I might be thinking
it over."</p>
<p>"Well, you know," I began evasively, "it's a simple
matter, but I can't very well—no, by Jove!" I added,
looking at my watch, "I must run, or I shall keep the
multitude waiting." And with this I bustled away,
leaving her literally dancing with curiosity.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
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