"I wonder what it is," he went on. "Is it worth anything? Perhaps if I dig it out, I may be able to sell it as a curiosity."
A moment"s reflection told him, however, that he would not be able to disinter it that day, even if he possessed the requisite implements. On its lower side it was probably still red-hot. Through the soles of his boots, broken as they were, he could easily feel the heat of the ground, so the experiment must be deferred for twenty-four hours, perhaps longer. At any rate, he was sure that his mysterious visitor represented a realizable a.s.set, and the knowledge gave him a sudden distaste for coffee grounds and stale crusts. He resolved to spend his remaining three halfpence on a breakfast, and at the same time, make some guarded inquiries as to the nature and possible cash value of the meteor itself. Evidently, its fall had attracted no public attention. The fury of the elements and the subsequent heavy rain were effectual safeguards in this respect, and Johnson"s Mews, marked out for demolition a fortnight later, were practically deserted now day and night. Philip did not then know that London had already much to talk about in the recorded incidents of the two storms. The morning newspapers were hysterical with headlines announcing fires, collapse of buildings, street accidents, and lamentable loss of life in all parts of the metropolis. As the day wore, and full details came to hand, the list of mishaps would be doubled, while scientific observers would begin a nine days" wrangle in the effort to determine the precise reason why the electrical disturbance should have been wholly confined to the metropolitan area. Philip Anson, a ragged boy of fifteen, residing in a desolate nook of the most disheveled district in the East End, possessed the very genesis of the mystery, yet the web of fate was destined to weave a spell that would deftly close his lips.
Meanwhile he wanted his breakfast. He gathered thirty fair-sized, white pebbles and a few jagged lumps of the ironlike material. These he wrapped in a piece of newspaper, screwed up the small package tightly, and placed it in his trousers" pocket. Thinking deeply about the awesome incidents of the previous night, he donned his coat and did not notice the packet of letters lying in the chair. Never before had these doc.u.ments left his possession. The door was locked and the key in his pocket before he missed them. It was in his mind to turn back. In another second he would have obeyed the impulse, had not a mighty gust of wind swept through the yard and carried his tattered cap into the pa.s.sage. That settled it. Philip ran after his headgear, and so was blown into a strange sea of events.
"They are quite safe there," he thought. "In any case, it will be best not to carry them about in future. They get so frayed, and some day I may want them."
Emerging from the haven of the mews, he found the untidy life of the Mile End Road eddying in restless confusion through a gale. The gaunt, high walls surrounding his secluded dwelling had sheltered him from the bl.u.s.tering, March wind that was now drying the streets and creating much ill-temper in the hearts of carters, stall owners and girls with large hats and full skirts. In a word, everything that could be flapped or shaken, or rudely swept anywhere out of its rightful place, was dealt with accordingly. In one instance a heavy tarpaulin was lifted clean off a wagon and neatly lodged over the heads of the driver and horses of a pa.s.sing omnibus. They were not extricated from its close embrace without some difficulty and a great quant.i.ty of severe yet cogent remarks by the wagoner and the driver, a.s.sisted by the "bus conductor and various pa.s.sengers.
Philip laughed heartily, for the first time since his mother"s death. He waited until the driver and the wagoner had exchanged their farewell compliments. Then he made off briskly toward an establishment where three halfpence would purchase a cup of coffee and a bun.
In ten minutes he felt much refreshed, and his busy mind reverted to the mysterious package he carried. Thinking it best to seek the counsel of an older head, he went to O"Brien"s shop. The old man was taking down the shutters, and found the task none too easy. Without a word, Philip helped him, and soon the pensioner was wiping his spectacles in the shelter of the shop.
"I dunno what the weather is comin" to at all at all," he grumbled.
"Last night was like the takin" uv the Redan, an" this mornin" reminds me uv crossin" the Bay o" Biscay."
"It certainly was a fearful thunderstorm," said Philip.
"Faix, boy, that"s a thrue word. It was just like ould times in the hills in Injia, where the divil himself holds coort some nights. But what"s the matter? Didn"t you get that job?"
Philip laughed again. "I am not sure yet," he replied. "I really came in to ask you what this is."
With his hand in his pocket, he had untwisted the paper and taken out the white pebbles, which he now handed to O"Brien.
The old man took it, smelt it and adjusted his gla.s.ses for a critical examination.
"It ain"t alum," he announced.
"No. I think not."
"An" it ain"t gla.s.s."
"Probably not."
"Where did yer get it?"
"I found it lying on the pavement."
O"Brien scratched his head. ""Tis a quare-looking objec", anyhow. What good is it?"
"I cannot tell you. I thought that possibly it might have some value."
"What! A sc.r.a.p of white shtone like that. Arrah, what"s come over ye?"
"There is no harm in asking, is there? Some one should be able to tell me what it is made of."
Philip, from his small store of physical geography, knew that meteors were articles of sufficient rarity to attract attention. And he was tenacious withal.
"I suppose that a jeweler would be the best man to judge. He must understand about stones," he went on.
"Maybe; but I don"t see what"s the use. "Tis a sheer waste of time. But if y"re set on findin" out, go to a big man. These German Jews round about here are omadhauns. They don"t know a watch from a clock, an" if they did they"d chate ye."
"I never thought of that, yet I ought to know by this time. Thank you; I will go into the city."
He took the pebble, which he placed in his waistcoat pocket. Walking briskly, he traversed some part of the sorrowful journey of barely twelve hours earlier. What had happened to change his mood he did not know, and scarcely troubled to inquire. Last night he hurried through these streets in a frenzied quest for death. Now he strode along full of hope, joyous in the confidence of life and youth. His one dominant thought was that his mother had protected him, had s.n.a.t.c.hed him from the dark gate of eternity. Oddly enough, he laid far more stress on his escape from the meteor than on the accident that prevented his contemplated suicide. This latter idea had vanished with the madness that induced it. Philip was sane again, morally and mentally. He was keenly anxious to justify his mother"s trust in him. The bl.u.s.tering wind, annoying to most wayfarers, only aroused in him a spirit of resistance, of fort.i.tude. He breasted it so manfully that when at last he paused at the door of a great jewelry establishment in Ludgate Hill, his face was flushed and his manner eager and animated.
He opened the door, but was rudely brought back to a sense of his surroundings by the suspicious question of a shop-walker.
"Now, boy, what do you want here?"
The unconscious stress in the man"s words was certainly borne out by the contrast between Philip, a social pariah in attire, and the wealth of gold and precious stones cut off from him by panes of thick gla.s.s and iron bars. What, indeed, did this outcast want there?
Confused by the sudden demand, and no less by its complete obviousness, Philip flushed and stammered:
"I--er--only wished to obtain some information, sir," he answered.
Like all others, the shopman was amazed by the difference between the boy"s manners and his appearance.
"Information," he repeated, in his surprise. "What information can we give you?"
The wealth of the firm oppressed this man. He could only speak in accents of adulation where the shop was concerned.
Philip produced his white pebble.
"What is this?" he said.
The directness of the query again took his hearer aback. Without a word, he bent and examined the stone. Professional instinct mastered all other considerations.
"You must apply to that department." He majestically waved his hand toward a side counter. Philip obeyed silently, and approached a small, elderly personage, a man with clever, kindly eyes, who was submitting to microscopical examination a number of tiny stones spread out on a chamois leather folding case. He quietly removed the case when his glance rested on the boy.
"Well?" he said, blankly, wondering why on earth the skilled shop-walker had sent such a disreputable urchin to him. Philip was now quite collected in his wits. He held out the pebble, with a more detailed statement.
"I found this," he said. "I thought that it might be valuable, and a friend advised me to bring it here. Will you kindly tell me what it is?"
The man behind the counter stared at him for a moment, but he reached over for the stone. Without a word he placed it beneath the microscope and gave it a very brief examination. Then he pressed it against his cheek.
"Where did you get it?" he asked.
"I found it where it had fallen on the pavement."
"Are you sure?"
"Quite sure."
"Strange!" was the muttered comment, and Philip began to understand that his meteor possessed attributes. .h.i.therto unsuspected.
"But what is it?" he inquired, after a pause.