The Sailor Part 69
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XX
The Sailor knew as soon as he stepped on the platform at Charing Cross that he had no wish to see again that city which had treated him with such unkindness. He left his gear in the station cloak room, and then by the time he had gone a few yards he regretted bitterly that he had ever come back at all. The mere sight of the omnibuses, of the names on the h.o.a.rdings, of the grotesquely miscellaneous throngs in the Strand, told him that eleven months of ceaseless wandering had done nothing, or at the best very little, to heal the wound he bore.
These streets brought an ache that, steel his will as he might, he could hardly bear. There to the right was the National Gallery. It was on just such a morning as this that she had led him to the Turners.
Farther along were Pall Mall and Edward Ambrose.
Five minutes he stood on the curb at the top of Northumberland Avenue, trying to decide whether he should cross Trafalgar Square. Once more the old sense of disintegration was upon him. Once more he was asking himself what he ought to do.
Eleven months had pa.s.sed, but things were as they were. In that time not a line had been added to the work he was trying to do. Yet he felt that his first duty was to go to see Edward Ambrose. Let him go now.
It was no use s.h.i.+rking it. But a curious instinct was holding him back. It was illogical, he knew, but every moment that he stood there seemed to make the task more difficult.
In a state of irresolution he crossed the road as far as an island in the middle. The sense of familiarity was growing at every step.
Within a very few yards was Spring Gardens. He could see two doors up the street the bra.s.s plate of Messrs. Mortimer mocking him through a weird subst.i.tute for the light of day.
In spite of all the months that had pa.s.sed, the sight of that bra.s.s plate was like a knife in his body. He turned from the island to dash across a very dangerous road, and came within an ace of the death that would have been so welcome. A taxi avoided him by an almost miraculous swerve, for which, when he realized it, he did not thank the driver.
All at sea he crossed the Square and entered Pall Mall. In the process of time he came to the home of _Brown's Magazine_. Edward Ambrose gave him a welcome that nearly brought tears to his eyes.
"My dear boy!" he said. "Not one word in all these months! Anyhow you have come back to us."
It was impossible to doubt the friends.h.i.+p and the affection of this greeting. The Sailor felt a pang of shame. As a fact, he had been too modest to expect such loyalty.
"I'm ... I'm sorry."
"You had no right to forget your friends," said Edward Ambrose, a little resentfully. He knew the workings of this childishly open mind, and it hurt him that a sincere emotion should have been underrated.
"Yes," said the Sailor queerly. "It was rotten."
"You are looking splendidly brown and well," said Edward Ambrose as soon as it seemed the part of wisdom to speak. "You don't mean to say that d.i.c.k Smith has been sailing the high seas all these long months?"
"Not d.i.c.k Smith. Ulysses."
Ambrose gave a little start of pure pleasure.
"Then," he said, "a master mariner has really come into port?"
"No." He stifled a groan. "And never will, I'm thinking. That poor sailor man is still becalmed east by west of Nowhere, and never a sign of land on either bow."
"But you _must_ put it through somehow. Tell me ... is there anything I can do to help you?"
The Sailor shook his head miserably.
"I can't accept that as final," said Edward Ambrose. "It's--it's--I hesitate to say what it may be if only you carry it out as you have conceived it. If you don't do that I some how feel the high G.o.ds will never forgive you ... or me."
If anything could have rekindled Aladdin's lamp in the Sailor's soul it would have been the enthusiasm of this friend. But it was not to be; the trolls had him captive.
"I'm sorry," he said gently, knowing the stab he dealt. "It is no fault of yours. It's you that's made me all I am ... and if any man could have helped me here you would have been that man. But I'm just a broken mariner. It's no use mincing it--I'm done."
The stark simplicity of the confession made Edward Ambrose gasp. He could say nothing. In the honest eyes was a look of consternation.
"A mariner has got to have a star to work by. Even old Ulysses had to have that. But there's not one for Henry Harper in all the firmament."
He fell into a sudden, odd, and queer kind of rage. "It's a black shame. If only I'd had a fair chance I'd have put this thing through.
You might say"--the harsh laugh jarred worse than the baffled anger--"I'm a chap who has been handicapped out of the race.
However..." The Sailor became silent.
Ambrose felt himself to be shaken. The impotent fury of this elemental soul was something beyond his experience. He hardened his heart. It must be his task to anchor this derelict adrift in uncharted seas until such time as help could come to him.
"Henry," he said suddenly, "does Mary Pridmore know you have returned?"
"No."
Edward Ambrose mustered his courage.
"If you don't bring the mariner into port it will be a heavy blow for her."
"What has it to do with her?" was the almost savage reply.
"She believes in you."
"Why should she?" There was almost a note of menace.
"She is your friend. We are both your friends."
The quiet tone somehow prevailed.
"Of course," he said queerly, "you are both my friends. And I'm not worthy of either."
"Suppose we leave her to be the judge of that."
The Sailor shook his head.
"She can't judge anything until ... until I've told her ... about Cora."
"She has not been told?" Ambrose spoke casually, impa.s.sively. Somehow he had allowed himself to guess that the Sailor had told her, and that she had sent him away. Why he should have come to that rather fantastic conclusion he didn't know, except that she had not had a line from Henry Harper in eleven months. But he saw at once that he was wrong.
He felt that he must use great care. The ice was even thinner than he had suspected. Moreover an acute perception told him that nothing would be easier than for ill informed well-meaningness to commit a tragic blunder.
"You don't mean to say you thought I had?" The Sailor put his question oddly, disconnectedly.
"The fact is," said Edward Ambrose jesuitically, "I have never been impertinent enough to think the matter out. I know nothing beyond the fact that Mary Pridmore is very much your friend."
"There's no use in saying that when I can never be hers."
"Ah, there I don't agree," said Edward Ambrose calmly.
"Why not look the facts in the face?"
The Sailor Part 69
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The Sailor Part 69 summary
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