"It wasn"t my bus!"
_Bus?_ Had danger robbed her of her reason? The boys were cheering now and looking past Miss Levering: she turned, bewildered, to see "Mrs.
Brown" and a sister reformer mounting the top of a sober London Road car. They had been running for that, then--and not for life! Miss Levering raised her hand and her voice as she looked back at Ernestine--
"I"ve got a trap. Come!"
"Where?"
Ernestine stepped out from the vociferating, jostling crowd and followed the new face as simply as though she had been waiting for just that summons. The awful moment was when, with a shout, the tail of rowdies followed after. Miss Levering had not bargained for that. Her agitated glance left the unsavoury horde at her heels and went nervously up and down the street. It was plainly not only, nor even chiefly, the hooligans she feared, but the amazed eye of some acquaintance. Bad enough to meet Henderson"s!
"Jump in!" she said hastily to the girl, and then, "Go on!" she called out desperately, flying in after Ernestine and slamming the door. "Drive _fast_!" She thrust her head through the window to add, "_Anywhere!_"
And she sank back. "How dreadful that was!"
"What was?" said the rescued one, glancing out of the carriage with an air of suddenly renewed interest.
"Why, the attack of those hooligans on a handful of defenceless women."
"Oh, they weren"t attacking us."
"What were they doing?"
"Oh, just running after us and screaming a little."
"But I _saw_ them--pushing and jostling and----"
"Oh, it was all quite good-natured."
"You mean you weren"t frightened?"
"There"s nothing to be frightened at." She was actually saying it in a soothing, "motherly" sort of way, calculated to steady the lady"s nerves--rea.s.suring the rescuer.
Vida"s eye fell on the festoon of braid falling from the dark cloth skirt.
"Well, the polite attentions of your friends seem to have rather damaged your gown."
Over a big leather portfolio that she held clasped in her arms, Ernestine, too, looked down at the torn frock.
"That foolish tr.i.m.m.i.n.g--it"s always getting stepped on."
Miss Levering"s search had produced a pin.
"No; I"ll just pull it off."
Ernestine did so, and proceeded to drop a yard of it out of the window.
Miss Levering began to laugh.
"Which way are we going?" says Miss Blunt, looking out. "I have to be at Battersea at----"
"What were you doing at Pimlico Pier?"
"Holding a meeting for the Government employees--the people who work for the Army and Navy Clothing Department."
"Oh. And you live at Battersea?"
"No; but I have a meeting there to-night. We had a very good one at the Docks, too." Her eyes sparkled.
"A Suffrage meeting?"
"Yes; one of the best we"ve had----"
"When was that?"
"During the dinner hour. The men stood with their pails and ate while they listened. They were quite nice and understanding, those men."
"What day was that?"
"This morning."
"And the Battersea meeting?"
"That"s not for another hour; but I have to be there first--to arrange."
"When do you dine?"
"Oh, I"ll get something either before the meeting or after--whenever there"s time."
"Isn"t it a pity not to get your food regularly? Won"t you last longer if you do?"
"Oh, I shall last." She sat contentedly, hugging her big portfolio.
The lady glanced at the carriage clock. "In the house where I live, dinner is a sort of sacred rite. If you are two seconds late you are disgraced, so I"m afraid I can"t----"
"There"s the bus I was waiting for!" Ernestine thrust her head out.
"Stop, will you!" she commanded the astonished Henderson. "Good-bye."
She nodded, jumped out, shut the door, steadied her hat, and was gone.
It was so an acquaintance began that was destined to make a difference to more than one life. Those days of the summer that Miss Claxton spent indoctrinating the women of Wales, and that Mrs. Chisholm utilized in "organizing Scotland," were dedicated by Ernestine and her friends to stirring up London and the various dim and populous worlds of the suburbs.
Much oftener than even Mrs. Fox-Moore knew, her sister, instead of being in the houses where she was supposed to be, and doing the things she was expected to be doing, might have been seen in highly unexpected haunts prosecuting her acquaintance with c.o.c.kney crowds, never learning Ernestine"s fearlessness of them, and yet in some way fascinated almost as much as she was repelled. At first she would sit in a hansom at safe distance from the turmoil that was usually created by the expounders of what to the populace was a "rum new doctrine" invented by Ernestine.
Miss Levering would lean over the ap.r.o.n of the cab hearing only sc.r.a.ps, till the final, "Now, all who are in favour of Justice, hold up their hands." As the crowd broke and dissolved, the lady in the hansom would throw open the doors, and standing up in front of the dashboard, she would hail and carry off the arch-agitator, while the crowd surged round. Several times this programme had been carried out, when one afternoon, after seeing the girl and her big leather portfolio safe in the cab, and the cab safe out of the crowd, Vida heaved a sigh of relief.
"_There!_ Now tell me, what did you do yesterday?"--meaning, How in the world did you manage without me to take care of you?
"Yesterday? We had a meeting down at the Woolwich a.r.s.enal. And we distributed handbills for two hours. And we had a debate in the evening at the New Reform Club."
"Oh, you didn"t hold a meeting here in the afternoon?"
"Yes we did. I forgot that." She seemed also to have forgotten that her new friend had been prevented from appearing to carry her off.