"I never in all my life saw anyone read like you do," she affirmed.
"Doesn"t it tire your eyes?"
Then she would move a step nearer and spell out the t.i.tle of the book, looking sideways at it like a fat goose.
"Holy Living and Holy Dying. Ugh! Enough to give you the horrors, isn"t it? And only this morning they hung that fellow at Pentonville. This _is_ Tuesday, isn"t it?"
After three or four days of trying to understand him, Mrs. Murdoch decided that Alf must be called in to solve his peculiarity.
Mr. Alfred Murdoch was younger than Michael had expected. He could scarcely have been more than forty, and Michael had formed a preconception of an elderly chemist reduced by misfortune and misdeeds to the status of one of those individuals who with a discreet manner somewhere between a family doctor and a grocer place themselves at the service of the public in an atmosphere of antiseptics. Mr. Murdoch was not at all like this. He was a squat swarthy man with one very dark eye that stared fixedly regardless of the expression of its fellow. Michael could not make up his mind whether this eye were blind or not. He rather hoped it was, but in any case its fierce blankness was very disconcerting. Conversation between Michael and Mr. Murdoch was not very lively, and Mrs. Murdoch"s adjutant inquisitiveness made Michael the more monosyllabic whenever her husband did commit himself to a direct inquiry.
"I looked for you in the Horseshoe the other evening," said Michael finally, at a loss how in any other way to give Mr. Murdoch an impression that he took the faintest interest in his existence.
"In the Horseshoe?" repeated Mr. Murdoch, in surprise. "I never go to the Horseshoe only when a friend asks me in to have one."
Michael saw Mrs. Murdoch frowning at him, and, perceiving that there was a reason why her husband must not suppose she had been to the Horseshoe on the evening of his arrival, he said he had gathered somehow, he did not exactly know where or why or when, that Mr. Murdoch was often to be found in the Horseshoe. He wished this awkward and unpleasant man would leave him and c.o.c.k his rolling eye anywhere else but in his room.
"Bit of a reader, aren"t you?" inquired the chemist.
Michael admitted he read a good deal.
"Ever read Jibbon"s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire?" continued the chemist.
"Some of it."
Mr. Murdoch said in that case it was just as well he hadn"t bought some volumes he"d seen on a barrow in the Caledonian Road.
"Four-and-six, with two books out in the middle," he proclaimed.
Michael could merely nod his comment, though he racked his brains to think of some remark that would betray a vestige of cordiality. Mr.
Murdoch got up to retire to the kitchen. He evidently did not find his tenant sympathetic. Outside on the landing Michael heard him say to his wife: "Stuck up la-di-da sort of a----, isn"t he?"
Presently the wife came up again.
"How did you like my old man?"
"Oh, very much."
"Did you notice his eye?"
Michael said he had noticed something.
"His brother Fred did that for him."
She spoke proudly, as if Fred"s act had been a humane achievement. "When they were boys," she explained. "It gives him a funny look. I remember when I first met him it gave me the creeps, but I don"t notice it really now. Would you believe he couldn"t see an elephant with it?"
"I wondered if it were blind," said Michael.
"Blind as a leg of mutton," said Mrs. Murdoch, and still there lingered in her accents a trace of pride. Then suddenly her demeanor changed and there crept over her countenance what Michael was bound to believe to be an expression of coyness.
"Don"t say anything more to Alf about the Horseshoe. You see, I only gave you the idea I was meeting him, because I didn"t really know you very well at the time. Of course really I"d gone to see my sister. No, without a joke, I was spending the evening with a gentleman friend."
Michael looked at her in astonishment.
"My old man wouldn"t half knock me about, if he had the least suspicion.
But it"s someone I knew before I was married, and that makes a difference, doesn"t it?"
"Does your husband go out with lady friends he knew before he was married?" Michael asked, and wondered if Mrs. Murdoch would see an implied reproof.
"What?" she shrilled. "I"d like to catch him nosing after another woman. He wouldn"t see a hundred elephants before I"d done with him. I"d show him."
"But why should you have freedom and not he?" Michael asked.
"Never mind about him. You let him try. You see what he"d get."
Michael did not think the argument could be carried on very profitably.
So he showed signs of wanting to return to his book, and Mrs. Murdoch retired. What extraordinary standards she had, and how bitterly she was prepared to defend a convention, for after all in such a marriage the infidelity of the husband was nothing but a conventional offense: she obviously had no affection for him. The point of view became very topsyturvy in Neptune Crescent, Michael decided.
On the last evening of the fortnight during which he had regularly visited the Orient, Michael went straight back to Camden Town without waiting to scan the cafes and restaurants until half-past twelve as he usually had. This abode in Neptune Crescent was empty, and as always when that was the case the personality of the house was very vivid upon his imagination. As he turned up the gas-jet in the hall, the cramped interior with its fusty smell and its thread-bare staircarpet disappearing into the upper gloom round the corner seemed to be dreadfully closing in upon him. The old house conveyed a sense of having the power to choke out of him every sane and orderly and decent impulse.
For a whim of tristfulness, for the luxury of consummating the ineffable depression the house created in him, Michael prepared to glance at every one of the five rooms. The front door armed with the exaggerated defenses of an earlier period in building tempted him to lock and double-lock it, to draw each bolt and to fasten the two clanking chains.
He had the fantastic notion to do this so that Mr. and Mrs. Murdoch and Poppy might stay knocking and ringing outside in the summer night, while himself escaped into the sunflowers of the back garden and went climbing over garden wall and garden wall to abandon this curious mixture of salacity and respectableness, of flimsiness and solidity, this quite indefinably raffish and sinister and yet in a way strangely cozy house.
He opened gingerly the door of the ground-floor front. He peered cautiously in, lest Poppy should be lying on her bed. The gas-jet was glimmering with a scarcely perceptible pinhead of blue flame, but the light from the pa.s.sage showed all her clothes still strewn about. From the open door came out the faint perfume of stale scent which mingled with the fusty odor of the pa.s.sage in a most subtle expression of the house"s personality. He closed the door gently. In the silence it seemed almost as if the least percussion would rouse the very clothes from their stupor of disuse. In the kitchen was burning another pinhead of gas, and the light from the pa.s.sage reaching here very dimly was only just sufficient to give all the utensils a ghostly sheen and to show the mutilated hands at a quarter past five upon the luminous face of the clock. This unreal hour added the last touch to unreality, and when Michael went upstairs and saw the books littering his room, even they were scarcely sound guarantors of his own actuality. He had a certain queasiness in opening the door of the Murdochs" bedroom, and he was rather glad when he was confronted here by a black void whose secrecy he did not feel tempted to violate. With three or four books under his arm he went upstairs to bed. As he leaned out of the window two cats yawled and fizzed at one another among the laurels, and then scampered away into muteness. From a scintillation of colored lights upon the horizon he could hear the scrannel sounds of the railway come thinly along the night air. Nothing else broke the silence of the nocturnal streets.
Michael felt tired, and he was disappointed by his failure to find Lily. Just as he was dozing off, he remembered that his Viva Voce at Oxford was due some time this week. He must go back to Cheyne Walk to-morrow, and on this resolution he fell asleep.
Michael woke up with a start and instantly became aware that the house was full of discordant sounds. For a minute or two he lay motionless trying to connect the noise with the present, trying to separate his faculties from the insp.i.s.sate air that seemed to be throttling them. He was not yet free from the confusion of sleep, and for a few seconds he could only perceive the sound almost visibly churning the clotted darkness that was stifling him. Gradually the clamor resolved itself into the voices of Mr. Murdoch, Mrs. Murdoch and Poppy at the pitch of excitement. Nothing was intelligible except the oaths that came up in a series of explosions detached from the main din. He got out of bed and lit the gas, saw that it was one o"clock, dressed himself roughly, and opened the door of his room.
"Yes, my lad, you thought you was very clever."
"No, I didn"t think I was clever. Now then."
"Yes! You can spend all your money on that muck. The sauce of it. In a hansom!"
Here Poppy"s voice came in with a malignant piping sound.
"Muck yourself, you dirty old case-keeper!"
"You call me a case-keeper? What men have I ever let you bring back here?"
Mrs. Murdoch"s voice was swollen with wrath.
"You don"t know how many men I haven"t brought back. So now, you great ugly mare!" Poppy howled.
"The only fellow you"ve ever brought to my house is that one-eyed---- who calls himself my husband. Mister _Mur_doch! Mis-ter _Murdoch!_ And you get out of my house in the streets where you belong. I don"t want no two-and-fours in _my_ house."
"Hark at her!" Poppy cried, in a horrible screaming laugh. "Why don"t you go back on the streets yourself? Why, I can remember you as one of the old fourpenny Hasbeens when I was still dressmaking; a dirty drunken old teat that couldn"t have got off with a blind tramp."
Michael punctuated each fresh taunt and accusation with a step forward to interfere; and every time he held himself back, pondering the impossibility of extracting from these charges and countercharges any logical a.s.signment of blame. It made him laugh to think how extraordinarily in the wrong they all three were and at the same time how they were all perfectly convinced they were right. The only factor left out of account was Mrs. Murdoch"s own behavior. He wondered rather what effect that gentleman friend would produce on the husband. He decided that he had better go back to bed until the racket subsided.
Then, just as he was turning away in the midst of an outpouring of vileness far more foul than anything uttered so far, he heard what sounded like a blow. That of course could not be tolerated, and he descended to intervene.