by W.
W. Jacobs
Mr. John Blows stood listening to
the foreman with an air of lofty disdain. He was a free-born Englishman, and
yet he had been summarily paid off at eleven o'clock in the morning and told
that his valuable services would no longer be required. More than that, the
foreman had passed certain strictures upon his features which, however true
they might be, were quite irrelevant to the fact that Mr. Blows had been
discovered slumbering in a shed when he should have been laying bricks.
"Take your ugly face off
these 'ere works," said the foreman; "take it 'ome and bury it in the
back-yard. Anybody'll be glad to lend you a spade."
Mr. Blows, in a somewhat fluent
reply, reflected severely on the foreman's immediate ancestors, and the strange
lack of good-feeling and public spirit they had exhibited by allowing him to
grow up.
"Take it 'ome and bury
it," said the foreman again. "Not under any plants you've got a
liking for."
"I suppose," said Mr.
Blows, still referring to his foe's parents, and now endeavouring to make
excuses for them--"I s'pose they was so pleased, and so surprised when
they found that you was a 'uman being, that they didn't mind anything
else."
He walked off with his head in
the air, and the other men, who had partially suspended work to listen, resumed
their labours. A modest pint at the Rising Sun revived his drooping spirits,
and he walked home thinking of several things which he might have said to the
foreman if he had only thought of them in time.
He paused at the open door of his
house and, looking in, sniffed at the smell of mottled soap and dirty water
which pervaded it. The stairs were wet, and a pail stood in the narrow passage.
From the kitchen came the sounds of crying children and a scolding mother.
Master Joseph Henry Blows, aged three, was "holding his breath," and
the family were all aghast at the length of his performance. He re-covered it
as his father entered the room, and drowned, without distressing himself, the
impotent efforts of the others. Mrs. Blows turned upon her husband a look of
hot inquiry.
"I've got the chuck,"
he said, surlily.
"What, again?" said the
unfortunate woman. "Yes, again," repeated her husband.
Mrs. Blows turned away, and
dropping into a chair threw her apron over her head and burst into discordant
weeping. Two little Blows, who had ceased their outcries, resumed them again
from sheer sympathy.
"Stop it," yelled the
indignant Mr. Blows; "stop it at once; d'ye hear?"
"I wish I'd never seen
you," sobbed his wife from behind her apron. "Of all the lazy, idle,
drunken, good-for-nothing----"
"Go on," said Mr.
Blows, grimly.
"You're more trouble than
you're worth," declared Mrs. Blows. "Look at your father, my
dears," she continued, taking the apron away from her face; "take a
good look at him, and mind you don't grow up like it."
Mr. Blows met the combined gaze
of his innocent offspring with a dark scowl, and then fell to moodily walking
up and down the passage until he fell over the pail. At that his mood changed,
and, turning fiercely, he kicked that useful article up and down the passage
until he was tired.
"I've 'ad enough of
it," he muttered. He stopped at the kitchen-door and, putting his hand in
his pocket, threw a handful of change on to the floor and swung out of the
house.
Another pint of beer confirmed
him in his resolution. He would go far away and make a fresh start in the
world. The morning was bright and the air fresh, and a pleasant sense of
freedom and adventure possessed his soul as he walked. At a swinging pace he
soon left Gravelton behind him, and, coming to the river, sat down to smoke a
final pipe before turning his back forever on a town which had treated him so
badly.
The river murmured agreeably and
the rushes stirred softly in the breeze; Mr. Blows, who could fall asleep on an
upturned pail, succumbed to the influence at once; the pipe dropped from his
mouth and he snored peacefully.
He was awakened by a choking
scream, and, starting up hastily, looked about for the cause. Then in the water
he saw the little white face of Billy Clements, and wading in up to his middle
he reached out and, catching the child by the hair, drew him to the bank and
set him on his feet. Still screaming with terror, Billy threw up some of the
water he had swallowed, and without turning his head made off in the direction
of home, calling piteously upon his mother.
Mr. Blows, shivering on the bank,
watched him out of sight, and, missing his cap, was just in time to see that
friend of several seasons slowly sinking in the middle of the river. He
squeezed the water from his trousers and, crossing the bridge, set off across
the meadows.
His self-imposed term of
bachelorhood lasted just three months, at the end of which time he made up his
mind to enact the part of the generous husband and forgive his wife everything.
He would not go into details, but issue one big, magnanimous pardon.
Full of these lofty ideas he set
off in the direction of home again. It was a three-days' tramp, and the evening
of the third day saw him but a bare two miles from home. He clambered up the
bank at the side of the road and, sprawling at his ease, smoked quietly in the
moonlight.
A waggon piled up with straw came
jolting and creaking toward him. The driver sat dozing on the shafts, and Mr. Blows
smiled pleasantly as he recognised the first face of a friend he had seen for
three months. He thrust his pipe in his pocket and, rising to his feet,
clambered on to the back of the waggon, and lying face downward on the straw
peered down at the unconscious driver below.
"I'll give old Joe a
surprise," he said to himself. "He'll be the first to welcome me
back."
"Joe," he said, softly.
"'Ow goes it, old pal?"
Mr. Joe Carter, still dozing,
opened his eyes at the sound of his name and looked round; then, coming to the
conclusion that he had been dreaming, closed them again.
"I'm a-looking at you,
Joe," said Mr. Blows, waggishly. "I can see you."
Mr. Carter looked up sharply and,
catching sight of the grinning features of Mr. Blows protruding over the edge
of the straw, threw up his arms with a piercing shriek and fell off the shafts
on to the road. The astounded Mr. Blows, raising himself on his hands, saw him
pick himself up and, giving vent to a series of fearsome yelps, run clumsily
back along the road.
"Joe!" shouted Mr.
Blows. "J-o-o-oE!"
Mr. Carter put his hands to his
ears and ran on blindly, while his friend, sitting on the top of the straw,
regarded his proceedings with mixed feelings of surprise and indignation.
"It can't be that tanner 'e
owes me," he mused, "and yet I don't know what else it can be. I
never see a man so jumpy."
He continued to speculate while
the old horse, undisturbed by the driver's absence, placidly continued its
journey. A mile farther, however, he got down to take the short cut by the
fields.
"If Joe can't look after his
'orse and cart," he said, primly, as he watched it along the road,
"it's not my business."
The footpath was not much used at
that time of night, and he only met one man. They were in the shadow of the
trees which fringed the new cemetery as they passed, and both peered. The
stranger was satisfied first and, to Mr. Blows's growing indignation, first
gave a leap backward which would not have disgraced an acrobat, and then made off
across the field with hideous outcries.
"If I get 'old of some of
you," said the offended Mr. Blows, "I'll give you something to holler
for."
He pursued his way grumbling, and
insensibly slackened his pace as he drew near home. A remnant of conscience which
had stuck to him without encouragement for thirty-five years persisted in
suggesting that he had behaved badly. It also made a few ill-bred inquiries as
to how his wife and children had subsisted for the last three months. He stood
outside the house for a short space, and then, opening the door softly, walked
in.
The kitchen-door stood open, and
his wife in a black dress sat sewing by the light of a smoky lamp. She looked
up as she heard his footsteps, and then, without a word, slid from the chair
full length to the floor.
"Go on," said Mr.
Blows, bitterly; "keep it up. Don't mind me."
Mrs. Blows paid no heed; her face
was white and her eyes were closed. Her husband, with a dawning perception of
the state of affairs, drew a mug of water from the tap and flung it over her.
She opened her eyes and gave a faint scream, and then, scrambling to her feet,
tottered toward him and sobbed on his breast.
"There, there," said
Mr. Blows. "Don't take on; I forgive you."
"Oh, John," said his
wife, sobbing convulsively, "I thought you was dead. I thought you was
dead. It's only a fortnight ago since we buried you!"
"Buried me?" said the
startled Mr. Blows. "Buried me?"
"I shall wake up and find
I'm dreaming," wailed Mrs. Blows; "I know I shall. I'm always
dreaming that you're not dead. Night before last I dreamt that you was alive,
and I woke up sobbing as if my 'art would break."
"Sobbing?" said Mr.
Blows, with a scowl. "For joy, John," explained his wife.
Mr. Blows was about to ask for a
further explanation of the mystery when he stopped, and regarded with much
interest a fair-sized cask which stood in one corner.
"A cask o' beer," he
said, staring, as he took a glass from the dresser and crossed over to it.
"You don't seem to 'ave taken much 'arm during my--my going after
work."
"We 'ad it for the funeral,
John," said his wife; "leastways, we 'ad two; this is the
second."
Mr. Blows, who had filled the
glass, set it down on the table untasted; things seemed a trifle uncanny.
"Go on," said Mrs.
Blows; "you've got more right to it than anybody else. Fancy 'aving you
here drinking up the beer for your own funeral."
"I don't understand what
you're a-driving at," retorted Mr. Blows, drinking somewhat gingerly from
the glass. 'Ow could there be a funeral without me?"
"It's all a mistake,"
said the overjoyed Mrs. Blows; "we must have buried somebody else. But
such a funeral, John; you would ha' been proud if you could ha' seen it. All
Gravelton followed, nearly. There was the boys' drum and fife band, and the
Ancient Order of Camels, what you used to belong to, turned out with their
brass band and banners--all the people marching four abreast and sometimes
five."
Mr. Blows's face softened; he had
no idea that he had established himself so firmly in the affections of his
fellow-townsmen.
"Four mourning
carriages," continued his wife, "and the--the hearse, all covered in
flowers so that you couldn't see it 'ardly. One wreath cost two pounds."
Mr. Blows endeavoured to conceal
his gratification beneath a mask of surliness. "Waste o' money," he
growled, and stooping to the cask drew himself an-other glass of beer.
"Some o' the gentry sent
their carriages to follow," said Mrs. Blows, sitting down and clasping her
hands in her lap.
"I know one or two that 'ad
a liking for me," said Mr. Blows, almost blushing.
"And to think that it's all
a mistake," continued his wife. "But I thought it was you; it was
dressed like you, and your cap was found near it."
"H'm," said Mr. Blows;
"a pretty mess you've been and made of it. Here's people been giving two
pounds for wreaths and turning up with brass bands and banners because they
thought it was me, and it's all been wasted."
"It wasn't my fault,"
said his wife. "Little Billy Clements came running 'ome the day you went
away and said 'e'd fallen in the water, and you'd gone in and pulled 'im out.
He said 'e thought you was drownded, and when you didn't come 'ome I naturally
thought so too. What else could I think?"
Mr. Blows coughed, and holding
his glass up to the light regarded it with a preoccupied air.
"They dragged the
river," resumed his wife, "and found the cap, but they didn't find
the body till nine weeks afterward. There was a inquest at the Peal o' Bells,
and I identified you, and all that grand funeral was because they thought you'd
lost your life saving little Billy. They said you was a hero."
"You've made a nice mess of
it," repeated Mr. Blows.
"The rector preached the
sermon," continued his wife; "a beautiful sermon it was, too. I wish
you'd been there to hear it; I should 'ave enjoyed it ever so much better. He
said that nobody was more surprised than what 'e was at your doing such a
thing, and that it only showed 'ow little we knowed our fellow-creatures. He
said that it proved there was good in all of us if we only gave it a chance to
come out."
Mr. Blows eyed her suspiciously,
but she sat thinking and staring at the floor.
"I s'pose we shall have to
give the money back now," she said, at last.
"Money!" said the
other; "what money?"
"Money that was collected
for us," replied his wife. "One 'undered and eighty-three pounds
seven shillings and fourpence."
Mr. Blows took a long breath.
"Ow much?" he said, faintly; "say it agin."
His wife obeyed.
"Show it to me," said
the other, in trembling tones; "let's 'ave a look at it. Let's 'old some
of it."
"I can't," was the
reply; "there's a committee of the Camels took charge of it, and they pay
my rent and allow me ten shillings a week. Now I s'pose it'll have to be given
back?"
"Don't you talk nonsense,"
said Mr. Blows, violently. "You go to them interfering Camels and say you
want your money--all of it. Say you're going to Australia. Say it was my last
dying wish."
Mrs. Blows puckered her brow.
"I'll keep quiet upstairs
till you've got it," continued her husband, rapidly. "There was only
two men saw me, and I can see now that they thought I was my own ghost. Send
the kids off to your mother for a few days."
His wife sent them off next
morning, and a little later was able to tell him that his surmise as to his
friends' mistake was correct. All Gravelton was thrilled by the news that the
spiritual part of Mr. John Blows was walking the earth, and much exercised as
to his reasons for so doing.
"Seemed such a monkey trick
for 'im to do," complained Mr. Carter, to the listening circle at the Peal
o' Bells. "'I'm a-looking at you, Joe,' he ses, and he waggled his 'ead as
if it was made of india-rubber."
"He'd got something on 'is
mind what he wanted to tell you," said a listener, severely; "you
ought to 'ave stopped, Joe, and asked 'im what it was."
"I think I see myself,"
said the shivering Mr. Carter. "I think I see myself."
"Then he wouldn't 'ave
troubled you any more," said the other.
Mr. Carter turned pale and eyed
him fixedly. "P'r'aps it was only a death-warning," said another man.
"What d'ye mean, 'only a
death-warning'?" demanded the unfortunate Mr. Carter; "you don't know
what you're talking about."
"I 'ad an uncle o' mine see
a ghost once," said a third man, anxious to relieve the tension.
"And what 'appened?"
inquired the first speaker. "I'll tell you after Joe's gone," said
the other, with rare consideration.
Mr. Carter called for some more
beer and told the barmaid to put a little gin in it. In a pitiable state of
"nerves" he sat at the extreme end of a bench, and felt that he was
an object of unwholesome interest to his acquaintances. The finishing touch was
put to his discomfiture when a well-meaning friend in a vague and disjointed
way advised him to give up drink, swearing, and any other bad habits which he
might have contracted.
The committee of the Ancient
Order of Camels took the news calmly, and classed it with pink rats and other
abnormalities. In reply to Mrs. Blows's request for the capital sum, they
expressed astonishment that she could be willing to tear herself away from the
hero's grave, and spoke of the pain which such an act on her part would cause
him in the event of his being conscious of it. In order to show that they were
reasonable men, they allowed her an extra shilling that week.
The hero threw the dole on the
bedroom floor, and in a speech bristling with personalities, consigned the
committee to perdition. The confinement was beginning to tell upon him, and two
nights afterward, just before midnight, he slipped out for a breath of fresh
air.
It was a clear night, and all
Gravelton with one exception, appeared to have gone to bed. The exception was
Police-constable Collins, and he, after tracking the skulking figure of Mr.
Blows and finally bringing it to bay in a doorway, kept his for a fort-night.
As a sensible man, Mr. Blows took no credit to himself for the circumstance,
but a natural feeling of satisfaction at the discomfiture of a member of a
force for which he had long entertained a strong objection could not be denied.
Gravelton debated this new
appearance with bated breath, and even the purblind committee of the Camels had
to alter their views. They no longer denied the supernatural nature of the
manifestations, but, with a strange misunderstanding of Mr. Blows's desires,
attributed his restlessness to dissatisfaction with the projected tombstone,
and, having plenty of funds, amended their order for a plain stone at ten
guineas to one in pink marble at twenty-five.
"That there committee,"
said Mr. Blows to his wife, in a trembling voice, as he heard of the
alteration--"that there committee seem to think that they can play about
with my money as they like. You go and tell 'em you won't 'ave it. And say
you've given up the idea of going to Australia and you want the money to open a
shop with. We'll take a little pub somewhere."
Mrs. Blows went, and returned in
tears, and for two entire days her husband, a prey to gloom, sat trying to
evolve fresh and original ideas for the possession of the money. On the evening
of the second day he became low-spirited, and going down to the kitchen took a
glass from the dresser and sat down by the beer-cask.
Almost insensibly he began to
take a brighter view of things. It was Saturday night and his wife was out. He
shook his head indulgently as he thought of her, and began to realise how
foolish he had been to entrust such a delicate mission to a woman. The Ancient
Order of Camels wanted a man to talk to them--a man who knew the world and
could assail them with unanswerable arguments. Having applied every known test
to make sure that the cask was empty, he took his cap from a nail and sallied
out into the street.
Old Mrs. Martin, a neighbour, saw
him first, and announced the fact with a scream that brought a dozen people
round her. Bereft of speech, she mouthed dumbly at Mr. Blows.
"I ain't touch--touched
her," said that gentleman, earnestly. "I ain't-- been near 'er."
The crowd regarded him wild-eyed.
Fresh members came running up, and pushing for a front place fell back hastily
on the main body and watched breathlessly. Mr. Blows, disquieted by their
silence, renewed his protestations.
"I was coming
'long----"
He broke off suddenly and,
turning round, gazed with some heat at a gentleman who was endeavouring to
ascertain whether an umbrella would pass through him. The investigator backed
hastily into the crowd again, and a faint murmur of surprise arose as the
indignant Mr. Blows rubbed the place.
"He's alive, I tell
you," said a voice. "What cheer, Jack!"
"Ullo, Bill," said Mr.
Blows, genially.
Bill came forward cautiously,
and, first shaking hands, satisfied himself by various little taps and prods
that his friend was really alive.
"It's all right," he
shouted; "come and feel."
At least fifty hands accepted the
invitation, and, ignoring the threats and entreaties of Mr. Blows, who was a
highly ticklish subject, wandered briskly over his anatomy. He broke free at
last and, supported by Bill and a friend, set off for the Peal o' Bells.
By the time he arrived there his
following had swollen to immense proportions. Windows were thrown up, and
people standing on their doorsteps shouted inquiries. Congratulations met him
on all sides, and the joy of Mr. Joseph Carter was so great that Mr. Blows was
quite affected.
In high feather at the attention
he was receiving, Mr. Blows pushed his way through the idlers at the door and
ascended the short flight of stairs which led to the room where the members of
the Ancient Order of Camels were holding their lodge. The crowd swarmed up
after him.
The door was locked, but in
response to his knocking it opened a couple of inches, and a gruff voice
demanded his business. Then, before he could give it, the doorkeeper reeled
back into the room, and Mr. Blows with a large following pushed his way in.
The president and his officers,
who were sitting in state behind a long table at the end of the room, started
to their feet with mingled cries of indignation and dismay at the intrusion.
Mr. Blows, conscious of the strength of his position, walked up to them.
"Mr. Blows!" gasped the
president.
"Ah, you didn't expec' see
me," said Mr. Blows, with a scornful laugh "They're trying do me, do
me out o' my lill bit o' money, Bill."
"But you ain't got no
money," said his bewildered friend.
Mr. Blows turned and eyed him
haughtily; then he confronted the staring president again.
"I've come for--my
money," he said, impressively-- "one 'under-eighty pounds."
"But look 'ere," said
the scandalised Bill, tugging at his sleeve; "you ain't dead, Jack."
"You don't understan',"
said Mr. Blows, impatiently. "They know wharri mean; one 'undereighty
pounds. They want to buy me a tombstone, an' I don't want it. I want the money.
Here, stop it! Dye hear?" The words were wrung from him by the action of
the president, who, after eyeing him doubtfully during his remarks, suddenly
prodded him with the butt-end of one of the property spears which leaned
against his chair. The solidity of Mr. Blows was unmistakable, and with a
sudden resumption of dignity the official seated himself and called for
silence.
"I'm sorry to say there's
been a bit of a mistake made," he said, slowly, "but I'm glad to say
that Mr. Blows has come back to support his wife and family with the sweat of
his own brow. Only a pound or two of the money so kindly subscribed has been
spent, and the remainder will be handed back to the subscribers."
"Here," said the
incensed Mr. Blows, "listen me."
"Take him away," said
the president, with great dignity. "Clear the room. Strangers
outside."
Two of the members approached Mr.
Blows and, placing their hands on his shoulders, requested him to withdraw. He
went at last, the centre of a dozen panting men, and becoming wedged on the
narrow staircase, spoke fluently on such widely differing subjects as the
rights of man and the shape of the president's nose.
He finished his remarks in the
street, but, becoming aware at last of a strange lack of sympathy on the part
of his audience, he shook off the arm of the faithful Mr. Carter and stalked
moodily home.
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